an attempt at a general "What are you currently digging re. classical music" thread

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I'd vote, but my ballot would be pretty gauche.

Not Simone Choule (Eric H.), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:00 (ten years ago) link

And also mostly piano music.

Not Simone Choule (Eric H.), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:01 (ten years ago) link

Thread needs more gauche IMO!

2 huxtables and a sousaphone (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:05 (ten years ago) link

Also what'd you play at your recital
?

2 huxtables and a sousaphone (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:05 (ten years ago) link

Debussy, 3 gauche selections from Children's Corner

Not Simone Choule (Eric H.), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:14 (ten years ago) link

Only because my Chopin etude was nowhere near performance ready

Not Simone Choule (Eric H.), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:14 (ten years ago) link

currently going through Weill's "Lost in the Stars" and "The Witness Cantata" by Swanee Hunt for an upcoming performance

they are either militarists (ugh) or kangaroos (?) (DJP), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:14 (ten years ago) link

Xpost étude pour le main gauche

2 huxtables and a sousaphone (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 20:42 (ten years ago) link

it's the 100th anniversary of the premiere of The Rites of Spring and a radio station - QXR? not sure - was playing nothing but versions of that all day & Mrs. Aero had that goin' to the living room speakers so I took in two versions: one arranged for solo piano (tremendous), one orchestral - man oh man that conclusion. Always worth really listening to. In between versions, much talk about the premiere, of course, how accurate the legend is, etc. But idk, it doesn't really matter, having the excuse to take one piece of music that came along at a time of new ideas being put forward and really look hard at it, listen to it, and to do so via radio instead of sitting down with my records & CDs and curating my own experiement...really cool. Also aero jr. seemed to really enjoy the orchestral version and banged on stuff.

Yeah! I can see Le Sacre being diggable for a kid.

2 huxtables and a sousaphone (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 21:37 (ten years ago) link

I saw a dance piece based The Rite... last night with only a few bits of it played at the end.

Always been much keen on Pierrot Lunaire (if we want to the whole Schonberg - Strav fite again, which we don't). Kind of want to see a perf @ the Proms in July. The Proms are usually not that good - the Albert Hall is such a stuffy venue - so I'll see if I'll bother with this.

Marais, in the Sophie Watillon versh. The piece I'm linking is something I've falled hard for today.

Pisendel's Violin Sonantas (Steck & Rieger)

Nono's Risonanze Erranti. Chamber music, indeed.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 1 June 2013 19:52 (ten years ago) link

Working through more French Baroque chamber, played by Musica Antiqua Koln (Le Parnasse Francais) - you can see why they were legendary. The playing has such an energy to it, and I love how they pick on fairly obscure composers not just Bach (really the reverence for the man is so offputting), gives a much needed overview, and there is enough that it shows how the Renaissance flows into the Baroque, these aren't self-contained eras.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 2 June 2013 11:49 (ten years ago) link

I was listening to some classic electronic and EA stuff at work over the last week or two. I had Kontakte in my regular rotation. I've always appreciated it but it really clicks with repeated listening, eh? Such a great piece. Pulled out Parmegiani's La Creation du Monde too: so great and satisfying.

It's not electronic but I was also listening to John Luther Adams' The Light that Fills the World, described here: http://www.allmusic.com/album/john-luther-adams-the-light-that-fills-the-world-mw0000133211
Not a challenging piece but very nice post-minimal music, almost like ambient orchestral music. Warm and pleasant feel.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 9 June 2013 21:19 (ten years ago) link

Ack, ambient chamber music, really. Don't know why I said "orchestral".

EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 9 June 2013 21:21 (ten years ago) link

Loooove Kontakte. Would play it right now if I were alone.

2 huxtables and a sousaphone (Jon Lewis), Monday, 10 June 2013 00:22 (ten years ago) link

Just discovered that Kodaly's Sonata for solo cello (1915) is about 27 times more engaging than I thought it might be. Mostly know his orchestral works, which are often likeable but feel like very distant relations tone and texture-wise.

Nag! Nag! Nag!, Wednesday, 12 June 2013 08:15 (ten years ago) link

ok I'm sure have heard this work a double-digit number of times before and found it A Fine Work For Sure, but suddenly something clicks next-level and I'm absolutely FLOORED and AWED by the first Schoenberg string quartet.

anatol_merklich, Tuesday, 18 June 2013 17:07 (ten years ago) link

it's like this handful of ideas which is spun into a million ideas which are juggled and spun with ridiculous facility

anatol_merklich, Tuesday, 18 June 2013 17:15 (ten years ago) link

that is a good descriptor all early schoenberg, which is continually the most interesting a.sch. period for me.

clouds, Tuesday, 18 June 2013 17:52 (ten years ago) link

I'm sure have heard this work a double-digit number of times before and found it A Fine Work For Sure, but suddenly something clicks next-level and I'm absolutely FLOORED and AWED

god I LOVE when this happens. I suppose it's also the reason CM will never be massively popular but w/e

folsom country prism (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 18 June 2013 17:56 (ten years ago) link

Vivaldi's Four Seasons

Does anyone have information on Herrmann Scherchen's arrangement of this? I'm searching for its original first recording, which I'm guessing was sometime in the 1950s. I would just keep googling until I get an answer, but it's not easy to quickly find classical info.

billstevejim, Friday, 21 June 2013 19:45 (ten years ago) link

I guess lots of classical stuff is like this, but digitally recorded versions intended for CD usually sound weak compared to a recording played on creepy-sounding old vinyl.

billstevejim, Friday, 21 June 2013 20:09 (ten years ago) link

anatol_merklich, which recording are you listening to?

All four Schoenberg string quartets are great but #2 and #3 are my favourites. I listened to #1 and #2 (Schoenberg String Quartet recording) at work tonight. 2 is heart-stopping for me.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 24 June 2013 06:27 (ten years ago) link

Going to go to sleep to Sonatas and Interludes for Prepared Piano (Cedric Pescia).

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 24 June 2013 06:51 (ten years ago) link

Now I'm remembering how much better the Fred Sherry SQ's recording of Schoenberg's 3rd is than SSQ's.

(Pescia's recording didn't really do it for me, not last night, at least.)

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 24 June 2013 14:58 (ten years ago) link

anatol_merklich, which recording are you listening to?

Let's see... it's the New Vienna String Quartet with Evelyn Lear in #2, on Philips.

--
o

anatol_merklich, Tuesday, 25 June 2013 20:35 (ten years ago) link

lol at usual email signature creeping in there

anatol_merklich, Tuesday, 25 June 2013 20:51 (ten years ago) link

I actually forgot that I have the LaSalle Quartet's DG recording of it on vinyl. I'll try to listen to that tonight.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 25 June 2013 22:47 (ten years ago) link

Yeah, SQ1 really comes to life in that version imo. I completely get where you're coming from when I listen to it. I've been thinking that performances make a huge difference for me when it comes to Schoenberg. I'm not entirely sure yet why it is that any professional-calibre performance of e.g. a good Mozart piece will sound fine to me but a great performance of Schoenberg will sound like the best thing ever while a different performance might not connect.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Wednesday, 26 June 2013 05:33 (ten years ago) link

I've been digging John Tavener's The Protecting Veil (the original recording) a lot, I wonder if you recommend other pieces like this, modern stuff that's droney but pretty, and not atonal (don't really know how else to describe it). I know Pärt has some compositions that are kinda similar, but I'm looking for something less austere. The other Tavener stuff I've listened to is his choral music, I like that too, but it doesn't have the same droney quality. Are the some other non-choral pieces by Tavener that would sound the same? Or by other composers?

Tuomas, Thursday, 27 June 2013 10:48 (ten years ago) link

Happy Canada Day:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvvaZlP_utE

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:08 (ten years ago) link

(Er, it's still July 1 in four provinces.)

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 2 July 2013 04:09 (ten years ago) link

Less Grisey more Vivier in London venues please! :)

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 2 July 2013 22:15 (ten years ago) link

Liszt

Romantic sovereign of the piano. Creator of the religious piano piece. Chronicler of musical pilgrimages. Ceaseless practitioner of transcriptions and paraphrases. Radical precursor of the modern. Musical source of Franck and Scriabin, Debussy and Ravel, Messiaen and Ligeti.

Familiarity with Liszt’s piano works will make it evident that he was the piano’s supreme artist. What I have in mind is not his transcendental pianistic skill but the reach of his expressive power. He, and only he, as a “genius of expression” (Schumann), revealed the full horizon of what the piano was able to offer. Within this context, the pedal became a tool of paramount importance.

Liszt’s uncertain standing as a composer can be traced back to a number of reasons: the variable quality of his works (with few exceptions, his finest achievements can be found in his piano music); the stylistic panorama of his compositions, which shows the influence of German and French music, Italian opera, the Hungarian gypsy manner, and Gregorian chant; and finally the fact that Liszt’s music is dependent like no other on the quality of the performance. To use an aphorism by Friedrich Hebbel, music here “only becomes visible when the correct gaze is focused on the writing.”

Liszt’s outstanding piano works, among which I would only like to mention the B-Minor Sonata, Années de pélérinage, the Variations on “Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen,” La Lugubre gondola, and the finest of the Etudes, are for me on a par with those of Chopin and Schumann. His B-Minor Sonata surpasses, in originality, boldness, and expressive range, anything that has been written in this genre since Beethoven and Schubert.

According to Lina Ramann, his first biographer, we should see Liszt above all as a lyrical tone poet, “rhetorician, rhapsodist, and mime.” She demands from the Liszt player “the grand style,” inwardness (Innerlichkeit), and passion.

In a work like Vallée d’Obermann, all these qualities are evident. The improvisatory arbitrariness often associated with Liszt is contradicted by accounts of his playing in later years. It seems to me of crucial importance that, over a period of twelve years, Liszt remained in close contact with the Weimar orchestra as its principal conductor. A work like the B-Minor Sonata needs to be perceived in this context. Leo Weiner’s remarkable orchestration of the sonata can provide more essential information for the performer than the urge to whip up a succession of feverish dreams. With their metronome markings, both the Liszt-Pädagogium and Siloti’s edition of Totentanz in the Eulenburg pocket scores point to the fact that much of Liszt’s music is nowadays played at overheated speeds. The last thing Liszt deserves is bravura for its own sake. Likewise, he should be shielded from anything that sounds perfumed, or what used to be called effeminate. Wilhelm Kempff’s 1950 recording of the First Legend (St. Francis of Assisi Preaching to the Birds) presents us with poetic Liszt playing of unsurpassed quality.

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2013/jul/11/alfred-brendel-a-pianists-a-to-v/?pagination=false

I love when Brendel writes about Liszt. And his Liszt albums are some of the best records he ever made. I wish he'd recorded the Transcendantes in his early vox/vanguard virtuoso phase.

In my ears' new inability to tolerate the timbre of the piano, which after 6 months I have to assume to be a permanent state of affairs, liszt and debussy are my most mourned losses. And I have now become a collector of orchestral or ensemble arrangements of both men's piano pieces as a result. I don't have Wiener's arrangement of the B Minor Sonata. Need to see if there's a cd...

Thelema & Louise (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 9 July 2013 17:26 (ten years ago) link

aw didn't you say you could tolerate old mono recordings? i feel for you anyway

non-piano liszt is full of good things......the dante symphony is my favourite

could swear i never heard of the orchestral version of the sonata, which seems like quite an oversight

I soon discovered even mono piano still aggravated it. It's something about the decay pattern of the piano. As the note fades, my brain seems to want to fill in the fading overtone with tinnitus whine. That plus in the case of hi fi piano recordings the actual hammer strike which creates a whole stack of high information.

The old universal horror flick The Black Cat was scored with a variety of liszt arrangements including orchestral B Minor Sonata. I dunno whether that used the Weiner arrangement tho or the film composers own.

Thelema & Louise (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 9 July 2013 17:45 (ten years ago) link

there is a recent recording with a german student orchestra, on the Cavi-musik label conducted by Nicolas Pasquet. I'm almost finished listening to it on Spotify. Quite good. The album starts with a solo piano performance of the sonata before you get the orchestral version.

Thelema & Louise (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 9 July 2013 19:38 (ten years ago) link

Lir of the half tongue was the father of the gods, and of the universe. When he gave the orders for creation, the gods who executed his commands understood but half of what he said, owing to his having only half a tongue; with the result that for everything that has been created there is an unexpressed and concealed counterpart, which is the other half of Lir's plan of creation.

no 1 responded to my aida revive a couple of months ago :(

think i'm gonna go for another classic this week, maybs "die zauberflaute"

k3vin k., Sunday, 14 July 2013 16:54 (ten years ago) link

Trying out my tinnitus' tolerance for mono piano recordings again today thanks to irrepressible enthusiasm brought on by that brendel essay. Using listentoyoutube to convert a bunch of old Louis Kentner Liszt 78s to MP3.

Thelema & Louise (Jon Lewis), Sunday, 14 July 2013 17:02 (ten years ago) link

It is a Galina Ustvolskaya documentary and seeing them get together the Second Symphony while Galina sits in the birches is just great.
Please watch it, Ustvolskaya was and is my favourite of the Russians

flamboyant goon tie included, Wednesday, 17 July 2013 23:43 (ten years ago) link

two weeks pass...

On the radio I heard Verdi's string quartet, and I thought that was really good.

― Henry Frog (Frogman Henry), Thursday, 3 December 2009 21:39 (3 years ago)

Only came to know this recently myself, and must confess I was somewhat surprised that yes, it actually is.

anatol_merklich, Saturday, 3 August 2013 16:30 (ten years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Do we really not have a "Rolling Classical 2013" thread? Anyway, I heard Hilary Hahn playing a movement from Beethoven's Violin Concerto with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Sounded very good, making me think I should start exploring her playing a little more. Anyone have the full recording? Other thoughts on Hahn (or the piece)?

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 15:41 (ten years ago) link

I see that this is one of her earliest recordings, made when she was 20, and she was nominated for a Grammy for it. I'm not always that on top of recordings tbh.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 15:45 (ten years ago) link

Her disc of the Sibelius and Schoenberg violin concertos is totally killer. I have a couple other things by her but that was the first one to really light me up.

Spot Lange (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 16:15 (ten years ago) link

Whoa, did not know she played Schoenberg. Will get on it stat.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 17:18 (ten years ago) link

Even if it means interrupting my non-stop big band listening today.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 17:20 (ten years ago) link


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