Originally posted by cloughie
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Prom 74 (12.09.20) Last Night of the Proms
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI agree with you about Nicola and Gullda’s voice but why the need to show the scenes of the four nations, much rather see Nicola! However, that arrangement of Jerusalem was dreadful!
Much of this evening's concert I found very moving, for various reasons, and I'm glad I watched/listened. The applause from the park worked I thought - it would have been a bit too much to have no reaction at all to the music and the talking heads on the TV would have been no substitute. Being able to hear the sea shanties without audience input was wonderful - the fiddle and flute in the hornpipe a joy, Tom Bowling without the drone.
On the minus side I did not like the arranged Jerusalem, all credit to Golda Schultz that it did not sound even worse, and felt that the microphone that seemed to have been attached to the harp in the Elgar was a mistake - prominent repeated chords blurred everything else that was going on and sounded most odd.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostRe #169 and #170, two counties with particular reason to celebrate the singing of Thompson and Arne's Rule Britannia. The routing of Barbary pirate slavers by the then-new Royal Navy saved many Kernow and Devon coastal residents from being taken by those slavers.
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Parts of it were very moving, I thought. I enjoyed both of the soloists and the beautifully enthusiastic conductor: I would actually have liked to see and hear her deliver the traditional speech, even to an empty hall: the audience, as we were told and anyway could see for ourselves, was spread far beyond the walls of the RAH.
As usual, I didn't find the talking heads adding to my enjoyment, though also as usual if any one of them had come out with a comment that was even a touch less than wholly enthusiastic at some point, I would have revised my opinion.
Oh, and I missed Auld Lang Syne at the end. That would have been fitting.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostParts of it were very moving, I thought. I enjoyed both of the soloists and the beautifully enthusiastic conductor: I would actually have liked to see and hear her deliver the traditional speech, even to an empty hall: the audience, as we were told and anyway could see for ourselves, was spread far beyond the walls of the RAH.
As usual, I didn't find the talking heads adding to my enjoyment, though also as usual if any one of them had come out with a comment that was even a touch less than wholly enthusiastic at some point, I would have revised my opinion.
Oh, and I missed Auld Lang Syne at the end. That would have been fitting.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostI struggle to get used to this new usage of the word "curate".
Can’t stand it!
Fast-forwarded through much of the LNOTP, failed to engage (and the manufactured enthusiasm of the chat bits was cringeworthy... only Rev. Richard Coles raised the level above dire)... although the soprano soloist is a bit special, I thought, mainly from her first appearance (the Strauss didn’t quite work)."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I missed all of this as I was out listening to live music - Beethoven, Chausson - for the first time in six months at our local Chamber Music Festival*; and Mozart and Faure the night before!
Wondering, on the basis of above posts whether to bother looking in on LNOTP on iPlayer. Seems moot. (I generally have avoided it over the years.) Might dip into the first half.
*by Primrose Piano Quartet
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