Originally posted by Heldenleben
View Post
Prom 8 (5.08.21) - Gražinytė-Tyla Conducts the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
Collapse
X
-
I found Part One rather heavy going..... militaristic side-drumming marches, alongside more lyrical or atmospheric episodes, whether English-Romantic or bittersweet....
First time for both here, and two substantial symphonies are never going to reveal their secrets on a single hearing. I wondered though, if there weren't a lack of contrast between them in a concert context, despite the stylistic divide. Perhaps MGT chose them for related reasons.....
Whilst hardly compelled, I found the continuous evolution through the 8 intricately tempo-indicated Gipps sections intriguing; might give the Chandos another go later.... ......but I guess I enjoyed that last Adès Waltzes movement best, with its post-Mahlerian-scherzo fade-out in wisps and whispers...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostWatching the delayed BBC FOUR version of the Prom, now. Rather a lot of rather pained faces among the orchestra during this Adès thing.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI found Part One rather heavy going..... militaristic side-drumming marches, alongside more lyrical or atmospheric episodes, whether English-Romantic or bittersweet....
First time for both here, and two substantial symphonies are never going to reveal their secrets on a single hearing. I wondered though, if there weren't a lack of contrast between them in a concert context, despite the stylistic divide. Perhaps MGT chose them for related reasons.....
Whilst hardly compelled, I found the continuous evolution through the 8 intricately tempo-indicated Gipps sections intriguing; might give the Chandos another go later.... ......but I guess I enjoyed that last Adès Waltzes movement best, with its post-Mahlerian-scherzo fade-out in wisps and whispers...
I agree re the first half. Ruth Gipps’ hectoring side-drums and her clipped, fat-free, rather grumpy music put me in mind of Havergal Brian.
The CBSO were in fine fettle and I thoroughly enjoyed their well-characterised performance of my Brahms symphony
I need to return to Adès mongrel symphony before commenting upon it.
Comment
-
-
Watched/listened on BBC4. The sound was SO bad I switched off half way through the Brahms, which is a shame because I thought there was a good performance happening. Is that box in the middle some sort of graphics equaliser? Or haven't the BBC got enough bandwidth to broadcast a quality sound on an HD channel with sound coming through a sound bar? I don't want to sound like a nerd, but it was a real disappointment
Comment
-
-
The Brahms 3rd left an equivocal impression. The quality and character of this orchestra was clear, but the reading itself felt uncertain, a touch cautious, as if they had not played it together very often before.
Despite a good realisation of a Brahmsian orchestral sound, the inner parts and woodwind solos lacked some colour and presence; they were not completely inside the music, and some of MGT’s interpretive manoeuvres seemed over-obvious: the poco allegretto, so very slow and drawn out through some whisper-soft pianissimos. All a little too beautiful, perhaps; a little too discrete, symphonically speaking. Nor did the finale ever quite catch fire….so there was a general sense of a reading which hadn't quite matured; that lack of an eagle's-eye grasp of the whole subtle structure.
Not a terrible Brahms 3rd, far from it, but despite some admirable sonorities, a shade anonymous, something of a work-in-progress…(a telling comparison with the 4th from the BBCNOW and Ryan Bancroft a few days before - Bancroft knew exactly what he wanted, and realised his personal vision vividly with his faithful orchestral collaborators....)
The CBSO had sounded a deal livelier, more individual and more assured in the two far less familiar works matched together for the concert’s first half; but of course in Brahms, and especially given the fine, spacious and natural sound balancing on R3 AAC, there’s nowhere to hide.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 18-08-21, 23:07.
Comment
-
-
I’m not sure scheduling three symphonies in a row really works - unless they are all of the very highest quality e.g. Mozart 38,39,40 or the Vaughan Williams 4,5,6 ( I think it was ) Prom some years back. Pitting two competent if ever so slightly uninspired works against one the giants of the repertoire is almost cruel . I heard most of the recent COTWs on Ruth Gipps and also Robert Simpson’s . I think his work is perhaps more deserving of an outing. Presumably the Ades is a reworking of material from the opera . I didn’t think the opera a success and I don’t think the material stood up as an orchestral experience. After those phenomenal early works he seems to have gone off the boil a bit. I’m not sure living in Los Angeles is a good choice creatively.
Comment
-
Comment