Originally posted by Bryn
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Prom 31: 7.08.16 - Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky and Stravinsky
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostHedonism in all cases. A desperate need for adulation, even at the expense of the music. And I really don't give a fig about what long dead composers expected.Fewer Smart things. More smart people.
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Originally posted by Anastasius View PostBang on the money, EA. Couldn't have put it more succinctly myself.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostSo neither of you have any respect for those who created the music you purport to be defending, eh? Poor old Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven et al. Just a bunch of hedonists, eh? The true hedonism here is that of those who take their pleasure in denigrating those who break their trumped up rules of concert etiquette. Shame on you.
Originally posted by W.A.MozartNext day I resolved not to go to the concert at all; but in the evening, the weather being fine, I made up my mind at last to go, determined that if it went as badly as at the rehearsal, I would go into the orchestra, take the violin out of the hands of M. La Haussaye, the first violin, and lead myself. I prayed to God that it might go well, for all is to His greater honor and glory; and ecce, the symphony began, Raaff was standing beside me, and just in the middle of the allegro a passage occurred which I felt sure must please, and there was a burst of applause; but as I knew at the time I wrote it what effect it was sure to produce, I brought it in once more at the close, and then rose shouts of "Da capo!" The andante was also liked, but the last allegro still more so. Having observed that all last as well as first allegros here begin together with all the other instruments, and generally unisono, mine commenced with only two violins, piano for the first eight bars, followed instantly by a forte; the audience, as I expected, called out "hush!" at the soft beginning, and the instant the forte was heard began to clap their hands.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYes! Mozart was pleased that the audience applauded during his Paris Symphony, because it meant he was having a little success at a very difficult time. But is this what you really want?
I don't think so.
It might mean attendees of the Home Concert Hall feeling a bit left out on occasion, but what the heck. I can applaud when I like....or "leave the hall" in fear & disgust. (Even while listening to a CD...).
Engagé listening - that's what we want!Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 09-08-16, 03:26.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI think you will find that this particular edition of the 1879 version was only published last year, and tonight's pianist was indeed the first to record it, being granted permission to do so in advance of its publication. This is the new critical edition. That recorded by Hoteev was made prior to the work on the critical edition. So, the BBC did get its facts right.
Apart from the arpeggiated chords at the start, which won't be new to anyone who has the Lowenthal CD of 1989, as they exactly are what he plays, it would be interesting to know precisely what the "differences" are in this "new edition" of the 1879 revision. A re-listening of the Lowenthal recording of the 1875 score suggests they'll be very minor indeed. Incidentally, the Soviets printed a massive Tchaikovsky Edition in the 1940s which published everything he ever wrote, so that would be where Lowenthal obtained his source material.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWhere does that Mozart quote come from EA? Gosh, I wish more concerts were received and responded to like that. What responsiveness, and what fun! (Maybe those who left de Leeuw's Nachtliche Wanderer before the end were running away in strigiphobic terror....)
It might mean attendees of the Home Concert Hall feeling a bit left out on occasion, but what the heck. I can applaud when I like....or "leave the hall" in fear & disgust. (Even while listening to a CD...).
Engagé listening - that's what we want!Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI must say that, personally I find it rather intrusive when members of the audience begin to applaud. But, hey ho, why not, if they feel the need too?
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostAnd if they feel the need to shout abuse at the people on the row in front, that's fine too. Neville Chamberlain tolerance never works.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Gerstein is playing this version here at the CSO Summer home , Ravinia, this weekend. I would like to go, but I 'm hampered now by a case of Cellulitis of my left lower leg, and walking the grounds of Ravinia in 90 plus heat and humidity isn't exactly what the Doctor ordered. WFMT is going to broadcast both the Proms concert and the Ravinia in the upcoming weeks.
OT, but WFMT is going to broadcast James Levine leading the CSO in Mahler 2 from late July. Levine has never commercially recorded the Resurrection, and given the fragile state of his health probably won't be doing much in the future. I am going to break out my CD recorder for this one...
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