Originally posted by wenotsoira
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Prom 19: Alina Ibragimova plays Bach (31.07.15)
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Originally posted by wenotsoira View PostI do think you are ALL very old fashioned in your tastes and views, more like 1715 than 2015!
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wenotsoira
Originally posted by french frank View PostRoger must have overseen this year's Proms - the programme has to be fixed years ahead.
Taste: this cannot be applied to matters of intonation or the professional level of competence.
However, if all the professional violinists in the entire world agreed on the imperfect professional standards of a performer, while a majority of non professional, non violinists were admirers, the professional violoinists have to take comfort in the fact that, though a minority, they do know better than your average joe.
But on taste - a work may admit of many interpretations, and performers will always seek to find something new to say. Some, if they know a work well, will prefer one, others another, but criticism should be based on more than personal preference.
Criticism should be based on technical competence and musical intentions. Whereas one can disagree about musical intentions, technical incompetence is obvious to those professionals who specialise in certain instruments. A lack of a secure technique is counter to tone production and possible musical outcomes.
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wenotsoira
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI hope you aren't including yours truly in this. There's evidence to suggest vibrato was common enough in 1715, etc. But it was interesting to hear it played otherwise.
The lack of vibrato was no problem. It was the lousy sound, bad intonation and unmusical phrasing (or lack of any phrasing) that got me.
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wenotsoira
Originally posted by french frank View PostNathan Milstein died in 1992. No disrespect whatever to a wonderful violinist - but 2015 he isn't.
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wenotsoira
I would say that there is one young player who I have recently discovered and who excites me a lot. Her name is Patricia Kopatchinsjaka. You can her her on Youtube with a superb pianist (Fazil Say) playing the Beethoven Kreutzer sonata. There is also a fine performance of the Stravinsky violin concerto with a German orchestra (very fine too) and she is also featured there somewhere playing unnacompanied Bartok. She has a level of commitment and artistry as well as technical prowess that in formidable. She also uses vibrato artistically and sometimes sparingly, but with excellent sound and intonation. She plays on a Giovanni Francesco Pressenda fiddle of about 1840, and in my opinion sounds better on that instrument than most players these days on Strads or Guarneri old masters.
But then I suppose my opinion is counter to most people on this forum. I can't think why?
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Originally posted by wenotsoira View PostI would say that there is one young player who I have recently discovered and who excites me a lot. Her name is Patricia Kopatchinsjaka. You can her her on Youtube with a superb pianist (Fazil Say) playing the Beethoven Kreutzer sonata. There is also a fine performance of the Stravinsky violin concerto with a German orchestra (very fine too) and she is also featured there somewhere playing unnacompanied Bartok. She has a level of commitment and artistry as well as technical prowess that in formidable. She also uses vibrato artistically and sometimes sparingly, but with excellent sound and intonation. She plays on a Giovanni Francesco Pressenda fiddle of about 1840, and in my opinion sounds better on that instrument than most players these days on Strads or Guarneri old masters.
But then I suppose my opinion is counter to most people on this forum. I can't think why?
Her recording with her dad are well worth seeking out, too.
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wenotsoira
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wenotsoira
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Originally posted by wenotsoira View PostSydney and I grew up together ...
P S I thought you did know better ...
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostStrange personal tastes folk have in your world, wenotsoira: like an old maid... well ... a first year student who only just made the grade.
I've heard Alina live ( in a concerto first performance) and frequently via R3. I think her playing is superb, wonderfully in-tune - a necessary quality if a player dispenses with vibrato, a great comand of and insight into "line" and with an electrifying presence. Already a fine player - I see her at the top of her profession in 10 years time.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostI did hear these concerts live -- from a seat in the circle, & couldn't disagree more with Ariosto's comments = A pure & engaging sound, INCREDIBLE bow control, faultless intonation, musically alive -- & heard in rapt silence by an attentive audience. ( Yes, I love Milstein, too -- & Grumiaux even more, but in 2015 I'd prefer Alina to many others in these astonishing works )
I too love and respect Milstein, Grumiaux, Oistrakh and - perhaps above all - the utterly magnificent Heifetz; but that's just not the point here.
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