Originally posted by Bryn
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Prom 68: Berlin Philharmonic & Kirill Petrenko (II) – 2.09.18
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Originally posted by mathias broucek View PostYou could hear that the band wasn't especially large
Seemingly ‘on the edge’ and at the same time brilliantly, scarily channelled by Kirill Petrenko, this must be the most memorable live Beethoven 7 I have heard.
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My first memory of Beethoven's Seventh is right back in 1935.
I remember sitting with my parents listening on the wireless to the slow movement of Beethoven 7th as the radio announcer informed listeners that the King (George V ) was slowly edging towards death.
I was only 4 years old and, believe it or not, Beethoven's 7th has always had a special place in my heart since that day, I am sure that I could draw a picture of the scene in our sitting room that evening.
I really enjoyed the two Strauss Tone poems and thought that the BPO had really found a good replacement for Sir Simon Rattle.
A mockery of a performance given to an audience largely (I suspect) uneducated in the treatment required of one of the World's finest composers.
Sir Thomas Beecham would have a single word to describe both the performers and the listeners:
Savages!Savages!"Last edited by Hornspieler; 04-09-18, 10:21.
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostMy first memory of Beethoven's Seventh is right back in 1935.
I remember sitting with my parents listening on the wireless to the slow movement of Beethoven 7th as the radio announcer informed listeners that the King (George V ) was slowly edging towards death. . . .
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I was in the hall for this but had been allocated a seat in a loggia box at the very rear of the RAH where it all sounded very dim and distant. The balcony overhang is deadly to the sound and strings were barely audible. Surely, the worst seat in the house? Not happy at spending £67 on a concert that sounded so disembodied and very different to the side stalls seat I prefer. Forumites may remember that I had card payment issues when booking and this was the result.
Might as well have stayed at home and listened on R3!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI was in the hall for this but had been allocated a seat in a loggia box at the very rear of the RAH where it all sounded very dim and distant. The balcony overhang is deadly to the sound and strings were barely audible. Surely, the worst seat in the house? Not happy at spending £67 on a concert that sounded so disembodied and very different to the side stalls seat I prefer. Forumites may remember that I had card payment issues when booking and this was the result.
Might as well have stayed at home and listened on R3!
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI was in the hall for this but had been allocated a seat in a loggia box at the very rear of the RAH where it all sounded very dim and distant. The balcony overhang is deadly to the sound and strings were barely audible. Surely, the worst seat in the house? Not happy at spending £67 on a concert that sounded so disembodied and very different to the side stalls seat I prefer. Forumites may remember that I had card payment issues when booking and this was the result.
Might as well have stayed at home and listened on R3!
....and you, of all much-travelled concertgoers, will soon hear why...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostDo seek it out on iplayer, little puppet... it was absolutely extraordinary...
....and you, of all much-travelled concertgoers, will soon hear why..."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI was in the hall for this but had been allocated a seat in a loggia box at the very rear of the RAH where it all sounded very dim and distant.
For this concert I stood bang in the centre of the arena (for the others at the weekend I was closer) and the sound was ideal to my ears. After four long unsupported stands (Mahler 3 being the longest and without an interval) the backache was beginning to tell. Still feeling elated.
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