Can see why that may struggle for further performances.
Prom 1: First Night of the Proms - 19.07.19
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Zosha Di Castri's Long is the Journey - Short is the Memory - a memorial piece for the first successful Moon Landing, was scored for soli, small (professional) chorus and orchestra augmented by exotic percussion. The work had a strong propulsion with brass and rhythm sections to the fore. It was attractive in a 'crossover' style ( but style might be better expressed as eclectic). I need to hear it again, but whilst I do not want dismiss it out of hand, neither do I rush to embrace it as 'significant'.The world premiere performance under Canellakis was confident.Last edited by edashtav; 19-07-19, 19:21.
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Within the limitation of listening through headphones, the ZdC definitely has a movie-music kind of feel. Mixed bag from the one hearing, but will give it another go later on proper speakers off the home laptop.
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostAgreed. She has a tremendous rapport with the BBCSO too, witness last seasons' Rachmaninov Symphonic Dances. And it's significant that she's been handed the First Night.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostZosha Di Castri's Long is the Journey - Short is the Memory - a memorial piece for the first successful Moon Landing, wasbscored for soli, small (professional) chorus and orchestra augmented by exotic percussion. The work had a strong propulsion with brass and rhythm sections to the fore. It was attractive in a 'crossover' style ( but style might be better expressed as eclectic). I need to hear it again, but whilst I do not want dismiss it out of hand, neither do I rush to embrace it as 'significant'.The world premiere performance under Canellakis was confident.
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Dvorak's Golden Spinning Wheel has become Karina's visiting card. The work is prolix- Dvorak's son-in- law, Josef Suk, chopped 10 minutes from it but that was a doomed idea since the work is an early example of setting the rhythm, line by line, of the poem that the composer used as his inspiration. Poems and music do not often use the same structural elements. As a gloss on a gory story, this piece is colourful, naïve, and full of incident.
Karina Canellakis drew wonderful lines from her orchestra … gosh she's so flexible and musical … and I soon forgot how the work rambles. I know the work tolerably well. Have I heard a better, more cogent performance? No, I haven't! Dvorak, like Schubert, can beguile and blunt one's critical faculties. You spun me yard after yard of yarn, Karin and I swallowed the lot: hook, line and sinker. The Proms are a Festival and rescuing almost lost causes is their speciality. (Should I reveal that I consumed half a bottle of a rich Chilean Red before settling down to hear the first half of this Prom?)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWell, judging by recent years' record, the usual forgettable First Night of the Proms fanfarey-type thing that shows a "commitment" to commissioning "new" Music, whilst providing nothing too long or "inaccessible" to scare off the punters.
But that is a definition of "prejudice"
The Dvorak waffles along from one stock Bohemian idea to another pleasantly enough, but I'm impatient for the Janacek.
Creme de menthe, Rodney; creme de menthe ...[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostKC getting some nice playing out of the BBC strings - maybe it was all that warming up with the B and Q sandpaper ?
It just occurred to me that the first two nights this season have a very strong Czech thread, very Jiri B.. He would have been pleased.
As luck would have it, I have a book by Xiaolu Guo on the shelf, waiting to be read. One of these days...
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post... my guess is that, barring the end of civilization before then, with KC on the podium now, you're looking at the next chief conductor of the BBC SO.
I just hope that this won't reduce Ms Canellakis' appearances with the Hallé or Ms Stasevska's with the Orchestra of Opera North up here![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Lovely Dvorak, yes, full of warmth, colour, rhythmic and dynamic subtlety and variety (genuine, very soft pps...) but above all conveying a vivid sense of story-telling wonderfully well. But I could have used more power and punch.
Via the usual 320 aac stream on BBC Sounds, balance a little dry, 2-D and constricted tonight...perhaps partly due to the absorptive packed house effect.
It's OK, but I have heard better from the RAH.
(I can't compete with Ed's pre-concert preparations.... I'm tentatively sipping a brandy and apple....)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 19-07-19, 19:49.
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