Applause....I know, I know..........
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post...you could miscalculate & find yourself finishing rather earlier than you thought, in which case you would have to have plenty of encores ready, or be prepared to meet your disgruntled (& unimpressed) audience in the bar...
I remonstrated with him, but he refused to stop because he feared the programme was too short and the applause would spin it out a bit.
(That really happened.)
Another time, at a concert of unaccompanied music, unexpected applause quite threw the singers so that they lost the note they needed to continue.
(So did that.)
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think that works. Where there has been a universal tradition which has become the 'social norm' (i.e. is universally respected), I would say that deliberately going against that is either 'anti-social' or - more forgiveably - ignorance (as in this case frequently seems to be the case).
I don't agree that 'social' in this sense implies, necessarily, general civility/politeness either.
Bertie Wooster goes to his first symphony concert:
"I say! I've never been to one of these classical dos before, but I did rather enjoy the way they played that piece. Let 'em know that their endeavours haven't been in vain!"
... not quite what Hobbes was thinking of? Closer to Aristotle, perhaps?
Not doing something which 'society' has, by tradition, ruled impolite respects the social norm. Doing something which a group considers/has ruled to be 'the polite thing to do' can be anti-social.
I would argue this to be the case here.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostNo but . . . maybe that does [Ed: clapping at Sinatra Prom].
What I am interested in is this apparent 'rule' that it's NOT OKAY to yelp 'Bravo' before the music ends ; but not being allowed to clap between movements is one of those stupid old rules .
As for Stephen Hough - and Gongers and his symphony - stop press: performers and composers like audience adulation
PS I don't go to live performances of any kind now so I'm only pursuing this as dialecticIt 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 french frank View PostAs for Stephen Hough - and Gongers and his symphony - stop press: performers and composers like audience adulation
One choir I sing in always tells the audience not to applaud until the very end of the programme, and they do as they're told. I suppose if they didn't make up for their earlier reticence at that point I'd be a bit perturbed, but they always do. And that is as it should be.
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For me, there is a bit of slippery slope in all of this. If it becomes more widespread then the audience might feel obliged to do it because it is expected of them (rather like a standing ovation seems to have become the norm at the end of every performance of every West End musical) . Also will it end at applause -how about it being seen as also acceptable to resume a conversation (or more likely, a row) you were having earlier or to noisily unwrap a sweet or flick through the programme.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI'm happy to chuck that in as Gongers' 'context' - what happens at jazz concerts too? Different strokes …
What I am interested in is this apparent 'rule' that it's NOT OKAY to yelp 'Bravo' before the music ends ; but not being allowed to clap between movements is one of those stupid old rules .
As for Stephen Hough - and Gongers and his symphony - stop press: performers and composers like audience adulation
PS I don't go to live performances of any kind now so I'm only pursuing this as dialectic
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSpot on kipperkid
The assumption that people clap (that's CLAP) in between movements because they are either
1: Exhibitionists
or
2: Ignorant plebs who need to be taught the rules
is nonsense.
Last time I wrote a symphony people clapped between movements and I found it rather comforting.
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I remember a performance of Mahler 9 conducted by Abbado some years ago which no one applauded until long after it was over - because they just couldn't; surely those composers and performers who desire adulation after a performance of one of their works could not have hoped for better "applause" than this "sound of no hands able to clap"?...
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Every so often in the course of these discussions I remember that
A ban on applause used to be standard practice for performances of Bach's St Matthew Passion...Vaughan Williams, who helped fix the work at the heart of the British choral tradition in the 1930s...thought little of shedding bits he didn't like, yet he would stomp off stage in anger if anyone dared break the clapping taboo.
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