What are you listening 2 now?

Started by Gurn Blanston, September 23, 2019, 05:45:22 AM

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Florestan



The most beautiful and moving SM ever penned, perfectly balanced between intimate feelings and their theatrical expression. This version is outstanding.
"Great music is that which penetrates the ear with facility and leaves the memory with difficulty. Magical music never leaves the memory." — Thomas Beecham

Que


Harry

#127802
New release.

An English Pastoral.
Gurney · Finzi · Venables · Bliss.
See back cover for details.
CHU-YU YANG, Violin & ERIC McELROY, Piano.
Recording: St Mark's Church, St Marylebone, London, 13 & 14 April 2024.


This is a lovely CD, with some unknown composers for me like Venables, what a deeply pastoral piece he wrote, and Gurney of which I practically heard nothing, apart from a few tiny compositions far in my past. I love the title of this CD and the meaning it has for me. It is well recorded and played.


Award-winning Taiwanese violinist Joe Chu-Yu Yang is a passionate advocate of British music and founder of the British Music Festival in Taiwan.
I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and eccentric. He is a great British institution, and emits great wisdom with every growl.

André



I rarely give in to picking a piece because of a special occasion or date, so when I put the disc in the player I looked more closely at the booklet and saw that the main work here is Solberg's 1948 Good Friday Meditation for mezzo, baritone, chorus and organ. It is prefaced on the disc by the imposing Fantasy and Fugue on a Folk tune for organ. The orchestral pieces are very fine and show off Solberg's sill in orchestration. An enjoyable selection of a very little-known Norwegian composer.

foxandpeng

Quote from: Harry on Today at 03:09:13 AMNew release.

An English Pastoral.
Gurney · Finzi · Venables · Bliss.
See back cover for details.
CHU-YU YANG, Violin & ERIC McELROY, Piano.
Recording: St Mark's Church, St Marylebone, London, 13 & 14 April 2024.


This is a lovely CD, with some unknown composers for me like Venables, what a deeply pastoral piece he wrote, and Gurney of which I practically heard nothing, apart from a few tiny compositions far in my past. I love the title of this CD and the meaning it has for me. It is well recorded and played.


Award-winning Taiwanese violinist Joe Chu-Yu Yang is a passionate advocate of British music and founder of the British Music Festival in Taiwan.

Added to the playlists. Thank you.
"A quiet secluded life in the country, with the possibility of being useful to people ... then work which one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one's neighbour — such is my idea of happiness"

Tolstoy

Traverso

Beethoven

Symphony No.6
What a beautiful start to this "Pastoral" soulful that shows a Beethoven that comes to us fresh with a string sound that is not too heavy. This set with Jansons is really a bull's eye and even though I have not heard all the symphonies yet it is clear that it will be on the list of favorites. You hear passages that you think Beethoven certainly sang at passages when he conceived the work. That is what Jansons tries to convey, at least in my experience.
 


Cato

"But, microtonal music just sounds so wrong!"

"Then you obviously need to listen to this!"  😇


Giacinto Scelsi's Three Sacred Songs!


"Meet Miss Ruth Sherwood, from Columbus, Ohio, the Middle of the Universe!"

- Brian Aherne introducing Rosalind Russell in  My Sister Eileen (1942)

Madiel

#127807
Dvorak: Armida

(So far, the first two Acts out of four)



Um. It's okay. There are a few things going against it to be honest. One is that this is a live recording (when most of the others in this Albrecht series apparently aren't). At times the singing and/or the balance just leaves a little to be desired. The singers don't come through as much as they might in a studio version.

The plot is also not the greatest (and indeed, there's information on that good Dvorak website that the composer eventually settled for it because he didn't think he was going to get anything better). The cast consists of Muslims (also magicians) in Damascus and Christian Crusaders. So far it hasn't been too culturally insensitive for 1904, but I'm a touch wary. The opening scene had a bit of middle Eastern scene setting in the music, after that not so much. But the bigger problem is that there seems to be scarcely any reason for Armida to be madly in love with a Christian knight she hasn't even met. Apparently she glimpsed him on a gazelle hunt, or something. I've heard of love at first sight but somehow this is a very unconvincing example of it.

Dvorak's final work has never really had a happy history, the first production was apparently a bit of a shambles and the rehearsal process stressed Dvorak a great deal. Since then it's not been performed all that often even in the Czech Republic, and possibly only once elsewhere. But even so, it's Dvorak.
Every single post on the forum is unnecessary. Including the ones that are interesting or useful.

Harry

Edvard Grieg.
Complete Orchestral Works, Volume I.
See back label for details.
WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln, Eivind Aadland.
Recorded: 2010.


Apart from the fact that I find this highly satisfying performances, the sound needs a warning, Because of the exceptional wide dynamic range of the recordings some attention to volume settings may be necessary. And that is good advice, for the recordings are very bright. My two cents is that they did not record it in the proper way, for this brightness may scare away many a Grieg enthusiast. And that is not only my opinion. The detail however is amazing, and reveals much one has never heard before.
I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and eccentric. He is a great British institution, and emits great wisdom with every growl.

foxandpeng

Eduard Tubin
Symphony 1
Neeme Jarvi
Swedish RSO
BIS


Tubin entered my view almost 30 years ago, which I fund bizarre. Such a long time ago. He made a massive impact on me then, and he holds a particular place in my affections.
"A quiet secluded life in the country, with the possibility of being useful to people ... then work which one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one's neighbour — such is my idea of happiness"

Tolstoy

Mookalafalas

It's all good...

VonStupp

#127811
Granville Bantock
Serenade 'In the Far West'
Scenes from the Scottish Highlands

SWCO of Pforzheim - Douglas Bostock

I didn't catch the 'Far West' as being US based until Swanee River appeared in the 2nd mvt., and I think it is Yankee Doodle in the 4th. The Scottish Scenes are more apparent in their musical locales.
VS


foxandpeng

Eduard Tubin
Symphony 5
Neeme Jarvi
Swedish RSO
BIS


Looking like a Tubin afternoon in the soft leather of a comfy wingback, a decent Old Government Java on the go, and a volume of Berkouwer's Systematics.

Tubin works well on slightly grey and overcast days. Not sure why, but it does. Always has. Probably a patterned choice and a comfortable habit. A bit like Pettersson in the rain, or Rautavaara's Vigilia in the small hours.

Small contentments, I guess.

Hope you are having a pleasant Easter weekend!
"A quiet secluded life in the country, with the possibility of being useful to people ... then work which one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one's neighbour — such is my idea of happiness"

Tolstoy

Que


foxandpeng

Eduard Tubin
Symphony 2, 'Legendary'
Neeme Jarvi
Swedish RSO
BIS


Nice
"A quiet secluded life in the country, with the possibility of being useful to people ... then work which one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one's neighbour — such is my idea of happiness"

Tolstoy

JBS

Quote from: Madiel on Today at 04:19:21 AMDvorak: Armida

(So far, the first two Acts out of four)



Um. It's okay. There are a few things going against it to be honest. One is that this is a live recording (when most of the others in this Albrecht series apparently aren't). At times the singing and/or the balance just leaves a little to be desired. The singers don't come through as much as they might in a studio version.

The plot is also not the greatest (and indeed, there's information on that good Dvorak website that the composer eventually settled for it because he didn't think he was going to get anything better). The cast consists of Muslims (also magicians) in Damascus and Christian Crusaders. So far it hasn't been too culturally insensitive for 1904, but I'm a touch wary. The opening scene had a bit of middle Eastern scene setting in the music, after that not so much. But the bigger problem is that there seems to be scarcely any reason for Armida to be madly in love with a Christian knight she hasn't even met. Apparently she glimpsed him on a gazelle hunt, or something. I've heard of love at first sight but somehow this is a very unconvincing example of it.

Dvorak's final work has never really had a happy history, the first production was apparently a bit of a shambles and the rehearsal process stressed Dvorak a great deal. Since then it's not been performed all that often even in the Czech Republic, and possibly only once elsewhere. But even so, it's Dvorak.

If I read the Wikipedia article correctly, Armida falls in love with him because she saw him in a dream.

The ultimate source is Tasso, so any absurdities can be laid at his door. The tragic ending certainly was his.

TD

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

Dry Brett Kavanaugh


Madiel

Quote from: JBS on Today at 06:52:49 AMIf I read the Wikipedia article correctly, Armida falls in love with him because she saw him in a dream.

The ultimate source is Tasso, so any absurdities can be laid at his door. The tragic ending certainly was his.

Well, a dream is also a possibility, but one of the problems is that the libretto really doesn't explain properly. The Dvorak site goes with previously glimpsing him. She certainly sees him in a vision a bit after singing about hunting and before genuinely meeting him. But she recognises him in that vision.

As for Tasso: yes, but also the Czech librettist didn't follow the source material slavishly. So the blame is shared a bit. Dvorak went for a few of these "olden days" stories that are notionally historical but not really - Saint Ludmila, Vanda - and none of them hold up that well in modern times. My vague memory is that Vanda was reasonable, but Saint Ludmila is easily my least favourite major Dvorak work. Armida is somewhere in the middle.
Every single post on the forum is unnecessary. Including the ones that are interesting or useful.

ritter

More Debussy from the Inghelbrecht box. CD4 combines two LPs, with the Nocturnes, Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, Marche écossaise, La Mer, and Ibéria. All with the French National Radio Orchestra (billed as "Orchestre du Théâtre des Champs-Elysées" in the last two works), plus the ladies of the Chorale Marcel Briclot in Sirènes.



 « Et n'oubliez pas que le trombone est à Voltaire ce que l'optimisme est à la percussion. » 

André



The 1987 Chandos recording brings Richard Hickox, the LSO chorus and soloists Arthur Davies and Felicity Palmer against their own selves in that 1983 live recording (with Hickox already conducting the chorus). This Melodiya release is the concert of the Russian premiere of the work. The bass soloist is different (Gwynne Howell in London vs Norman Bailey in Moscow) and of course the Melodiya issue boasts a russian orchestra.

This recording has been commented on at length in MusicWeb. The orchestra does sound distincly russian whenever the brass are playing - more pungent trumpets and a more open, vibrato-laced horn sound. Svetlanov is extremely attentive to every nuance of the score. I don't know how much of the words he knew and if he related to the highly personal religious experience described in Newman's poem, but everything sounds as it should. There are a couple of moments that do sound singled out for effect, most notably the crescendo, pause and orchestral clash before Take Me Away (more percussion than usual ?). Also, the quiet ending to Part I and the concluding Amen are drawn out to telling effect.

The Dream of Gerontius has a multi-faceted vocal personality. There are quite a few characters: Gerontius (in part I)/the Soul (part II), the Angel, the Priest (Baritone) and the Angel of Agony (bass), a chorus of angels, a chorus of demons and the full chorus. Most recordings boast only 3 soloists. Gerontius and The Soul must have a distinct vocal character, but they are sung by the same tenor. Most of the time the same bass-baritone sings the Priest and the Angel of Agony but again, an adequate vocal characterization must make clear they are different characters.

Arthur Davies' Gerontius has a firm, strong, heldentenorish sound that carries. I found him a bit stentorian (we're talking of a dying man who receives the last rites in part 1, then his immortal soul in part 2 once he's breathed his last). There's no denying the thrilling upward extension when he goes full throttle in the big moments. Felicity Palmer has a big, pungent mezzo sound at her service. And lots of character, too: listen to the way she goes full Klytemnestra in part 2. Her final Alleluia is a thing of wonder, the High A absolutely thrilling.  Bass Norman Bailey was a great Wotan and he brings huge authority (and volume) to his singing.

What's missing here maybe is a degree of vulnerability and fear from Gerontius in part I and tenderness, reverence and compassion from the Angel and the Angel of Agony (the angel who was with Jesus at Gethsemane) in the second part. Subtlety of charaterization in other words.

The sound is not exactly SOTA but very good nonetheless and Svetlanov brings plenty of details I had not noticed (contrabassoon, pizzicato double basses). There's no denying the sense of ardent advocacy heard here, all the more surprising considering the kind of work - openly, cloyingly religious - and the audience, certainly not used to overt displays of religiosity.

Next: Hickox' Gerontius with the same chorus and 2 of the same soloists.