What are you listening 2 now?

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

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Der lächelnde Schatten

#129340
Last work for the night --- Britten String Quartet No. 1 in D, Op. 25

"To send light into the darkness of men's hearts - such is the duty of the artist." ― Robert Schumann

Madiel

Nielsen: Three Piano Pieces (2 different recordings)



Okay, I have to admit, these are not pieces I immediately warm to. I prefer hearing Nielsen working through a structure. And while these pieces undoubtedly are structured, my current feeling towards them is that they're more at the "oh, a piano is a percussion instrument and we can really BASH it" end of Nielsen's output. Not terrible, but not as appealing to me as the big middle-period works for piano.
Every single post on the forum is unnecessary. Including the ones that are interesting or useful.

steve ridgway

Ligeti - Trio For Violin, Horn And Piano

The music player's giving me Ligeti today. This is fine but was preceded by a piece from 1950 I don't like so have deleted.


Madiel

Nielsen: Little Preludes for organ



Not bad as far as organ works go (not a favourite genre of mine). Each prelude really is quite little, about 2 minutes at most and many of them are less than 1 minute.
Every single post on the forum is unnecessary. Including the ones that are interesting or useful.

steve ridgway

Koenig - Funktion Blau

Gently grating electrical gear.




steve ridgway

Varèse - Hyperprism


Que


Harry

Ostinato.
See back cover for details.
Ars Antiqua Austria & the Salzburg Lute Consort, Gunar Letzbor.
Recording: Altomonte Saal, Stift St. Florian, (Austria), 2021.
Cover picture: "Documents of the Amsterdam Treasury" by Cornelis Brizé (1656).


This performance is a bit salt & sweet. Letzbor lets more antics running a free reign as he normally does, with results that are not always pleasing or historically justified. But okay, there is still enough to enjoy. Good choice of composers, and I like the combination with the Salzburg Lute consort, for they are responsible for producing the more interesting bits in the performance as a whole. The recording is clear, detailed and pleasing for the ear.



I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and a eccentric bear He is a great British institution and emits great wisdom with every growl. Of course I have Paddington at home, he is a member of the family, sure he is from the moment he was born. We have adopted him.

Traverso

Bach

Vol.5  CD 3




Traverso


foxandpeng

"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

vandermolen

#129351
Nielsen: Symphony 5 RSNO Alexander Gibson

PS I like all Gibson's Nielsen and Sibelius recordings.
This is a fine performance of Nielsen's Symphony No.5
Although the anarchic side-drummer is not as manic as some (try Barbirolli or Horenstein) it is still very effective and moving in context.
"Courage is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm" (Churchill).

'The test of a work of art is, in the end, our affection for it, not our ability to explain why it is good' (Stanley Kubrick).

Harry

#129352
Joseph Lauber.
Symphony No. 4 & 5.
World Premiere Recordings.
Sinfonie Orchester Biel Solothurn, Kaspar Zehnder.
Recorded: at the Diaconis Kirche Bern, 9.–14.August 2021.


This composer is neglected by most classical music lovers, At GMG there was one member who said, "Music of no consequence". I beg to disagree vehemently. For me he is a true master in the most literal sense. And that goes for all his 6 Symphonies, which are luckily for me recorded. I am truly amazed, that no one would pick this up. Lauber surprises in both works: with odd time signatures, exotic instrumentation (xylophone, tambourine, etc.), a wealth of melodic ideas—and he even includes a carillon melody. A symphonist between worlds and cultures—a Frenchman in his sound, German in his motivic interpretation, and thoroughly Swiss in his emotional interiority. They found the manuscripts of Lauber's work in the Lausanne University Library, under dust and negligence. Superb recording and performance.
I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and a eccentric bear He is a great British institution and emits great wisdom with every growl. Of course I have Paddington at home, he is a member of the family, sure he is from the moment he was born. We have adopted him.

Harry

Otto Nicolai.
Orchestral Works, Volume I.
Symphony No.WoO in D major.
Südwestfälische Philharmonie, David Stern.
Recorded: April 1997, Hilchenbach.


For most people Otto Nicolai is a great unknown, and again a composer of no consequence, which in a sense I understand, but since I have an incurable weakness for neglected composers, I nevertheless like him for his sheer optimism, and his ability to make music with a message even out of tiny morsels of inspiration. This Symphony is just such a work, which you either like, or will heavily dislike. Well I am in the first camp. The performance is acceptable, for this Orchestra tries to make it sound like a masterwork, which it is clearly not, but still. MDG almost always makes good recordings, well this is not one of them, it's just so so.
I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and a eccentric bear He is a great British institution and emits great wisdom with every growl. Of course I have Paddington at home, he is a member of the family, sure he is from the moment he was born. We have adopted him.

Der lächelnde Schatten

Now playing Ligeti Violin Concerto

"To send light into the darkness of men's hearts - such is the duty of the artist." ― Robert Schumann

Harry

#129355
Victor Bendix (1851–1926)
Symphonies 1 & 3.
Malmö Symphony Orchestra, Joachim Gustafsson.
Recorded at Malmö Live Concert Hall, on 7–10 June 2022.


This is also an unknown composer for me. If I am right Brian played this a couple of days ago, and he was not negative about it. I just started listening to it, and I like his musical stance to start with.  I am in the process of burning a power cable in my system and it is resisting me at times, but it's slowly getting there. What I clearly hear though is that this live recording is quite decent, but a bit out of balance, there is some smearing in the brass and some details are clearly lost in the acoustics. I know that this venues can do better. I will in a later stadium post more of my impressions.

I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and a eccentric bear He is a great British institution and emits great wisdom with every growl. Of course I have Paddington at home, he is a member of the family, sure he is from the moment he was born. We have adopted him.

Spotted Horses

Finished my revisit of Weinberg String Quartet No 4.

Years ago I had acquired the Danel Quartet cycle on cpo and failed to get through it. I returned to the 4th quartet in the Danel cycle and again found it unsatisfying. But then I discovered there is another (almost) complete cycle from the Arcadia Quartet on Chandos. DavidW pointed out that the Silesian Quartet also have a cycle. I tried both and found much enjoyment in both, the Arcadia a bit more expansive with more reverberant sound, the Arcadia more brisk with a drier recording perspective. The audio in the cpo set sounds congested and unpleasant to my ears, and it was a barrier to appreciating the music. And the music itself? I'd characterize it as acerbic and intense.


Formerly Scarpia (Scarps), Baron Scarpia, Ghost of Baron Scarpia, Varner, Ratliff, Parsifal, perhaps others.

Der lächelnde Schatten

Continuing on with the Arnold symphonies --- now playing Symphony No. 8, Op. 121

"To send light into the darkness of men's hearts - such is the duty of the artist." ― Robert Schumann

Cato

I just finished listening to the Martin Scherber Symphony #3:


It may be something of an acquired taste: it is certainly conservative, in that you will not hear much innovation in harmonic or polyphonic techniques.

But the style (which Scherber called "metamorphosis") is certainly intriguing enough to keep you listening!

I am enthusiastic about this work and want to hear the first two: sadly, the information is that Scherber suffered for a very long time from tuberculosis, as well as suffering under the Nazis and then the post-war situation, with Communists controlling the Russian sector of Germany.

As a result, his output was not what it might have been.

But...give this work a chance!
"Meet Miss Ruth Sherwood, from Columbus, Ohio, the Middle of the Universe!"

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