Perhaps we need to be more tolerant of new music rather than less, and to accept that a) new music may be harder for us to acclimatise to, and b) new music has not gone through the sieve of time, so there will probably be some "duds" among the "gems".
Televised Proms
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Originally posted by Lento View PostPerhaps we need to be more tolerant of new music rather than less, and to accept that a) new music may be harder for us to acclimatise to, and b) new music has not gone through the sieve of time, so there will probably be some "duds" among the "gems".
"We" ?
I don't by the "sieve of time" argument at all.
Longevity isn't necessarily a mark of quality.
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Thank you Caliban for the link to such and interesting - and scary - piece.
It would be instructive, I think, to compare the quantity of music by living vs. dead composers played in the 1964 Proms, against 2014. I suspect the decline on the "living" side would not succeed in shaming the brood of time-servers, marketing suits and mediocrities currently paid to bully the long-suffering R3 employees into populist submission.
The idea of "public service broadcasting" is in really serious trouble.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostLongevity isn't necessarily a mark of quality.
But I do think it's important that when new work is being performed, it is absolutely necessary to give it proper attention - moreso than 'classic' works that have already 'passed the test of time'.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostLongevity isn't necessarily a mark of quality.
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........ so just to recap. - "new works" have been televised, is that right? at least that seems to be the case looking at this two-page list. However most have time-expired.
The world's greatest classical music festival - live from the Royal Albert Hall. Stunning performances, unique collaborations and the sheer joy of music bringing people together.
EDIT - bit confused now - Sonance Severance was available for 12 days from 20 August, so should have expired ......... but hasn't Caroline Mathilde available for 8 days from 15 August - but apparently still there.Last edited by mercia; 06-09-14, 08:01.
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I think it may be more confusing than that, mercia. Some new works have been broadcast on TV, e.g. the Adams Saxophone Concerto which was on the live broadcast the other day, but some AFAIK have been recorded as part of a TV broadcast and not actually broadcast during the TV programme but available to watch on iplayer (like the Birtwhistle Sonance Severance).
Still confused? So am I.......
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Originally posted by mercia View PostEDIT - bit confused now - Sonance Severance was available for 12 days from 20 August, so should have expired ......... but hasn't Caroline Mathilde available for 8 days from 15 August - but apparently still there.
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looks like there was an article, to which presumably the letters are responding
Composers left disappointed by broadcaster's decision to cut works out of televised versions as BBC blames scheduling
Letters: Serious questions about the programming of uncompromising ‘contemporary’ music require more thoughtful evasion than the BBC spokeswoman is capable of
oh well, they seem to have put all the 'contemporary' in one place
Last edited by mercia; 06-09-14, 14:06.
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Blotto
A pleasant TV oddity here, compiled from three different shows - BBC Proms Masterworks: Maxwell Davies and Birtwistle.
I can't find a list of the pieces anywhere so they're itemised below. All of the pieces are introduced fairly quietly by Tom Service; the PMD pieces are from the stage with the composer while the HB (from 57") are from the studio with Gillian Moore.
Maxwell Davies:
Ebb of Winter - 3' 30"
Strathclyde Concerto No 4 for clarinet - 24' 45"
Birtwistle:
Sonance Severance 2000 - 1hr 1' 45"
Night's Black Bird - 1hr 12' 30"
Maxwell Davies:
An Orkney Wedding with Sunrise 1hr 26' 45"
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Originally posted by maestro267 View Postthat still doesn't change the shameful stance BBC TV took during the previous weeks of the season.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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