They’ve just played a snatch of Feldman’s Rothko Chapel in the interval break. I think quite a few of the new Proms commission composers over the last week could learn a lot from that piece . You don’t need a lot of notes to make an impact .
Prom 33: Holst’s The Planets (10.08.22)
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View PostT&V / D&T just completed. It was OK, everything in place, but IMHO, lacking a bit in Richard Strauss-ian swagger. It reminded me of the reaction in the other thread on RW's appointment to the BBC SSO.
Ed noted, as Andrew McGregor had pointed out, the connection to the Richard Strauss Vier letzte Lieder from yesterday, in terms of programming. David Pickard may have just a little bit to do with that, given all the brickbats that he gets from so many sides for his programming choices .
PS: From just the one listen to Matthew Kaner's Pearl, it sounds very 'safe' and audience-friendly. Full marks to Roderick Williams for his very fine delivery of the text, though (but then that's par for the course for him).
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThey’ve just played a snatch of Feldman’s Rothko Chapel in the interval break. I think quite a few of the new Proms commission composers over the last week could learn a lot from that piece . You don’t need a lot of notes to make an impact .
(Who said, “A composer’s best friend is his rubber”?
As an aside, I recall someone wrote of the American song-writer, Jerome Kern who attempted to compose a song a day, that his final acid test was to tap out the rhythm of a song’s tune using only the eraser end of his pencil.)
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Heard from a good seat in the stalls, Kaner's piece didn't make a great impression on me. But then such a largely slow and quiet piece hardly could in that vast space. My hearing loss didn't help, naturally. I'll have to give it a try on BBC Sounds.
I very much enjoyed the Holst, so familiar yet never boring. The Strauss I enjoyed almost as much, even though it's not my favourite piece of his.
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Am I alone in wishing that Ryan had left his vibrato at home? The orchestration for Pearl was shimmeringly gorgeous and the words were well wrought, (I'm a huge fan of the Pearl poet!), but I felt that a purer voice would have made more musical sense. I really did have to force myself to listen.
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Originally posted by Bertilak View PostAm I alone in wishing that Ryan had left his vibrato at home? The orchestration for Pearl was shimmeringly gorgeous and the words were well wrought, (I'm a huge fan of the Pearl poet!), but I felt that a purer voice would have made more musical sense. I really did have to force myself to listen.
It reminded me strongly of Britten's Curlew River, which I used to think a masterpiece, but now I'm put off by the all-male thing... But as with Feldman and Anderson in the other thread, perhaps Kaner could learn from Britten about economy and concision.
Welcome, Bertilak, by the way!
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostSo am I, but this was Simon Armitage, or at least his version! Philip Gross in his interval response talked, at first, as if it was set in the Middle English, with his view of an 'out of this world' theme for this concert, saying it was in a 'lost' form of English, which did not become our English...made me wish Kaner had set the original...
It reminded me strongly of Britten's Curlew River, which I used to think a masterpiece, but now I'm put off by the all-male thing... But as with Feldman and Anderson in the other thread, perhaps Kaner could learn from Britten about economy and concision.
Welcome, Bertilak, by the way!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI couldn’t believe it when Philip Gross said that about Middle English being a “lost” form of English. It’s not as clear cut as that . Our English is directly descended from it .You don’t have to know much Middle English to follow the poem - though you can get caught out by words that have changed meaning . If he’d said Anglo Saxon he might have been closer to the truth.
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I listened to this Prom live and thought the Strauss was superb! I've always liked this composer and the Planets (Holst) was very good too, although was a more demanding piece to listen to. The Kaner world premier didn't really "do it" for me, but I suspect I need to learn more about contemporary composers before criticising too much!Major Denis Bloodnok, Indian Army (RTD) Coward and Bar, currently residing in Barnet, Hertfordshire!
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostThat's arguable, surely: our English is 'directly' descended from Chaucer's, that 'dialect', rather than that of the more northern 'Gawain poet'? But this is rather off thread!
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostThat's arguable, surely: our English is 'directly' descended from Chaucer's, that 'dialect', rather than that of the more northern 'Gawain poet'? But this is rather off thread!
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostSo am I, but this was Simon Armitage, or at least his version! Philip Gross in his interval response talked, at first, as if it was set in the Middle English, with his view of an 'out of this world' theme for this concert, saying it was in a 'lost' form of English, which did not become our English...made me wish Kaner had set the original...
It reminded me strongly of Britten's Curlew River, which I used to think a masterpiece, but now I'm put off by the all-male thing... But as with Feldman and Anderson in the other thread, perhaps Kaner could learn from Britten about economy and concision.
Welcome, Bertilak, by the way!
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostIt reminded me strongly of Britten's Curlew River, which I used to think a masterpiece, but now I'm put off by the all-male thing... But as with Feldman and Anderson in the other thread, perhaps Kaner could learn from Britten about economy and concision.
Are you equally put off by Billy Budd? Both use the soprano voice, of course - Curlew River to stunning effect, in reserving it for the work's climax. That's where the economy and concision you rightly praise really draws blood.Last edited by Master Jacques; 12-08-22, 07:14.
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