I'm glad that others, as well as me, found that this Rite failed to engage. I have in the past always found that it comes up fresh every time, contemporary - despite being more than 100 years old. So a disappointment last night.
Prom 6: The Rite of Spring - 22.07.19
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostI wonder if they’d played it many times together before tonight’s performance, considering the Atlantic separates them. A stunning young persons’ performance of the Rite was the NYO of GB a few years ago which clearly benefitted by having several public performances before their Prom.
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Nevilevelis
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThere are so many nutters around in this country right now it could have been about any number of things.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI think that's a little unfair....As I said above, I already heard the last part twice, and it is a supreme, intense, wonderful performance in fine sound.....
Maybe listen again, if your time allows.....?
It really is one of those that sounds better the more you hear of it (but I thought this from the first tutti really...)...
(Please, people, don't be too hard on the guy who cried out.... with the original moaning sounds, it reminded me of some cerebral palsy sufferers I've encountered, including one or two in concert halls. It did not sound completely wilful. Go easy now.)
(BTW - Those woods & fields were lovely in the dusk....!)
I've been attending concerts for fifty years and reporting from concerts for over 15 years and the violin performances that have stuck in the mind have been from Henning Kraggerud, Nikolaj Znaider, Lisa Batiashvili and Pinchas Zukerman. Of course much is down to my own personal taste.Last edited by Stanfordian; 23-07-19, 09:24.
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Forgive my slight diversion, but the first version that I ever heard of the Rite was Bernstein's - played repeatedly as a young teenager.
If you look at him on YouTube , at about 11mins 55 secs in the Ritual of the Rival Tribes, between sections 58 and 59 on the score he makes an emphatic rallentando like a mini-climax for the horns (da da da daaaaa). Nobody else seems to do this (for example 17mins 50 on Bryn's video above, 10.55 for Adès), and in last night's performance.
Looking at the score, until that point the bars are 2/4, 3/4, 4/4. But for this phrase it is 3/2, a time signature rarely used in the score.
So is Bernstein correct and are the others wrong? I do hope so, because that's how it's imprinted in my brain.Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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Originally posted by Flay View Post
Many conductors show little regard for what Stravinsky actually wrote, in terms of where and when to make tempo changes, and that very much includes Boulez. It's an old bugbear of mine.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBut did you hear this Britten? It was very, very involving... I've heard most of it twice, and would be happy to do so again...
Lovely, detailed sound quality too - I listened on headphones.
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