Originally posted by Heldenleben
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Prom 18: Currentzis conducts Beethoven – 28.07.18
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostRe the subject of BBC hype, I'm considering not including these decriptions on the Proms OPs.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostReplying to Alpie and Bryn: yes, please!
For more than half of my 'professional musical life' ( about 37 of 73 years) I have played in period instrument concerts and recordings of Beethoven conducted by e.g. (alphabetically) Gardiner, Goodman, Hickox, Hogwood, Norrington and Pinnock. Maybe I am mis-remembering but I don't recall anything that I 've ever participated in which brutalised, savaged and grotesquely 'over-interpreted' the music to the extent that we heard tonight.
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Originally posted by Tony View PostWhy oh why do 'period instruments' have to sound so UGLY?
For more than half of my 'professional musical life' ( about 37 of 73 years) I have played in period instrument concerts and recordings of Beethoven conducted by e.g. (alphabetically) Gardiner, Goodman, Hogwood, Norrington and Pinnock. Maybe I am mis-remembering but I don't recall anything that I 've ever participated in which brutalised, savaged,
and grotesquely 'over-interpreted' the music to the extent that we heard tonight.
* Hmm. Not Martin Handley, so perhaps it was sid durting the Proms Extra porgramm on BBC2.
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Originally posted by Tony View PostWhy oh why do 'period instruments' have to sound so UGLY?
For more than half of my 'professional musical life' ( about 37 of 73 years) I have played in period instrument concerts and recordings of Beethoven conducted by e.g. (alphabetically) Gardiner, Goodman, Hickox, Hogwood, Norrington and Pinnock. Maybe I am mis-remembering but I don't recall anything that I 've ever participated in which brutalised, savaged and grotesquely 'over-interpreted' the music to the extent that we heard tonight.
However, orchestra and conductor did adjust better in the fifth symphony and the finale of the Seventh was a great success, with some careful balancing that revealed often concealed figures as important structurally to the orchestral debate. Currentzis is no charlatan and his orchestra is very malleable in his hands. Together they are.. Things to Come.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 29-07-18, 08:08. Reason: Comments on Prom 17 moved to relevant Thread
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostHaving heard a number of peirod perfs, I'm truly at a loss to explain why this was made such an event by the BBC.
As such perfs go, not sure this was all that remarkable, was it?
No, it wasn't - yet another example of Beeb overkill. For readily available Symph 5, give me this one any time over what we've just heard https://www.concertgebouworkest.nl/e...-symphony-no-5 , even if the trombone placements are, err ... a tad eccentric.
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Originally posted by pilamenon View PostThat was my impression, too, of the 2nd - and I love many period Beethoven performances - Anima Eterna's, and Bruggen's, for example.
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I'm afraid that the over-excited and sometimes frankly ridiculous hyping of some Proms concerts this year has resulted in my not bothering to listen and/or watch, since there's a distinct possibility that any expectations raised by them will not be met or will prove to have been hopelessly unrealistic or egregiously misleading. Counter-productive trails ultimately do nobody (including the artistes) any favours.
As it happens, I did hear the last 30 minutes or so of last night's Beethoven, and thought that it was very well played but in no way remarkable. Perhaps there was 'stuff' going on the platform which may have added to the experience of those present, who, to judge from the reaction at the end, clearly enjoyed the concert.
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I wondered if the rest of the audience at the RAH had been reading up about Historic Performance practices - and decided to clap after every movement. I'm not sure if such clapping would have been historically correct. Do we know about how much applause there was in some of the performances in, say, Vienna? It didn't bother me too much either, but if not an attempt at verisimilitude, misplaced or not, it would suggest that many in the audience actually liked the performances. Certainly the applause was sufficient to generate an encore - though that might well have been part of the plan.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI wondered if the rest of the audience at the RAH had been reading up about Historic Performance practices - and decided to clap after every movement. I'm not sure if such clapping would have been historically correct. Do we know about how much applause there was in some of the performances in, say, Vienna? It didn't bother me too much either, but if not an attempt at verisimilitude, misplaced or not, it would suggest that many in the audience actually liked the performances. Certainly the applause was sufficient to generate an encore - though that might well have been part of the plan.
Incidentally, it matters not to me whether applause between movements is historically correct or not; I deplore the dim-witted compulsion to clap after each and every movement. It is one reason why I haven't bothered booking tickets for any Proms over the past couple of years.Last edited by Nachtigall; 29-07-18, 07:55.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI was not in the hall, so am relying purely on a comment made in the introduction to tonight's broadcast*, i.e.that the brass and wind appeared to be period, but the strings "normal". I will check back to make sure I did not mishear. If anyone here attended, perhaps they might comment.
* Hmm. Not Martin Handley, so perhaps it was sid durting the Proms Extra porgramm on BBC2.
I didn't find the sound ugly, even with the occasional distortion from my speakers(as previously mentioned)
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI'm afraid that the over-excited and sometimes frankly ridiculous hyping of some Proms concerts this year has resulted in my not bothering to listen and/or watch, since there's a distinct possibility that any expectations raised by them will not be met or will prove to have been hopelessly unrealistic or egregiously misleading. Counter-productive trails ultimately do nobody (including the artistes) any favours.
As it happens, I did hear the last 30 minutes or so of last night's Beethoven, and thought that it was very well played but in no way remarkable. Perhaps there was 'stuff' going on the platform which may have added to the experience of those present, who, to judge from the reaction at the end, clearly enjoyed the concert.
Tonight’s concert seemed to be the composer coming a distant second to the conductor, in contrast to last night’s with MB on the podium. (Glad to fully agree with Tony about tonight and that Ed should actually listen to the ‘hype’ about VW’s Pastoral to know it’s far away from any cow-pat.)
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