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#1
Op. 106

#2
Penderecki: St Luke Passion

#3
The Diner / Re: What game are you playing?
Last post by LKB - Today at 09:30:28 PM
Still plugging along in Diablo IV.

Supposedly huge changes coming next season, which could make many of Blizzard's customers very happy. The major content creators seem to be cautiously optimistic, anyway.

But l don't trust Blizzard completely until they deliver, so well see.
#4
Quote from: Madiel on Today at 12:49:01 PMIt's taken me 4 days to find out you don't know what "mostly" means.  :laugh:

"I only know what he said because you quoted it."

It didn't take me four days to understand what was written. But don't imagine I'm bragging that I'm an instant thinker, unlike you. God forbid. ;)
#5
Quote from: Herman on Today at 06:14:14 PMI wasn't even aware of these things, the deletions and bans. I don't read the comment section to his videos much, since they tend to consist of the usual adulatory and / or emotional tributes that are usual on youtube. I guess he wants it this way. This guy is even sicker than I thought.
what I meant with vehemence etc is the tone of his videos; the screaming anger at musicians who do not do it his way. This is why I rarely watch his stuff.


Agreed. There was a scathing review of Klaus Mäkelä's Sibelius cycle, but when one listens to the recordings one finds that Mäkelä's versions hardly have the faults Hurwitz ascribes to them. My main problem is Mäkelä is the difficulty in finding those Finnish diacritics to spell his last name. Recently there was a video on 10 underperformed symphonic works (several of which BTW I have encountered in live performance myself). But because conductors supposedly do not perform some of the music Hurwitz wants them to, these conductors are "lazy," only programming the tried and true. Of course much of the point about live performance is moot, since most of us get most of our music from recordings and a concert attended by maybe a few thousand people in a city most of us can't get to hardly matters at all. But that doesn't prevent Hurwitz from waxing apoplectic about these "lazy" conductors.
#6
The Diner / Re: What are you currently rea...
Last post by hopefullytrusting - Today at 08:19:53 PM
Have a cache of pulp arriving soon:

Crichton: Congo
Cussler: Spartan Gold
McDermott: The Hunt for Atlantis
McDevitt: Ancient Shores & Polaris
Preston/Child: The Relic
Reilly: Seven Deadly Wonders
Rollins: Excavation
Stevenson: Treasure Island
#7
GMG News / Re: Missing Members
Last post by Florestan - Today at 08:09:04 PM
Quote from: Maestro267 on Today at 10:46:20 AMI was kinda hoping the new forum software would make threads easier to ignore by having them not show up at all.

Have you read my previous reply to you?

#4463

If you do what I advise you to do, you'll never again see that thread.
#8
The Diner / Re: The Key of Imagination
Last post by Karl Henning - Today at 07:44:30 PM
In large part thanks to Gladys Cooper owning the central role, Richard Matheson's "Night Call" is one of my favorite shows of the series. 
#10
Listening to both discs of this new arrival

Besides the five concertos (K 207/211/216/218/219), it includes the Rondo in C K 373 and the Adagio in E K 261.