What are you listening 2 now?

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

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Harry, Mandryka, brunumb (+ 1 Hidden) and 37 Guests are viewing this topic.

Symphonic Addict

Sallinen: Horn Concerto and Concerto for clarinet, viola and chamber orchestra

The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied.

Florestan

Quote from: Wanderer on July 31, 2025, 06:27:49 AMParerga (πάρεργα) is plural for πάρεργον (parergon), which means secondary work. You may also remember the word from R. Strauss's Parergon zur Symphonia Domestica.


Initially, I thought that the French paralipomènes is rather incorrectly constructed with respect to the original Greek, because by analogy with elektron which is rendered as electrons in plural, it should have read paralipomenons --- but then I remembered that phenomenon is rendered as phénomènes in plural and I realized that paralipomènes is actually correct.

If I understand you correctly, in common Greek parlance paralipomena means ommited (plural form), so that "We have omitted the files" translates in Greek as "[Greek for we have] paralipomena [Greek for the files]", not necessarily in that order --- is that right?

"Ja, sehr komisch, hahaha,
ist die Sache, hahaha,
drum verzeihn Sie, hahaha,
wenn ich lache, hahaha! "

Lisztianwagner

Bohuslav Martinů
The Epic of Gilgamesh

Lucy Crowe (soprano), Andrew Staples (tenor), Derek Welton (bass-baritone), Jan Martiník (bass), Simon Callow (narrator)
Prague Philharmonic Choir
Manfred Honeck & Czech Philharmonic Orchestra


"You cannot expect the Form before the Idea, for they will come into being together." - Arnold Schönberg

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Bloch: Voice In the Wilderness · János Starker · Israel Philharmonic Orchestra · Zubin Mehta.





Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Quote from: Karl Henning on July 30, 2025, 05:34:41 PM



Sounds rather nice! Reminds me of Charlie Bird Parker a little.

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

De Falla. Tres Picos.





Symphonic Addict

Mozart: Divertimento for string trio
Reger: Piano Trio, op. 102

This time the Mozart didn't hit me as much on previous occasions, but I still regard it as a masterful piece. The Reger, on the other hand, was a most compelling listen. There's something subdued and somber about it that caught my attention with real interest.

The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied.

Que


André

Question : is there a thread devoted to Debussy's string quartet ?

I looked but didn't find any 🤨

Linz

Anton Bruckner Symphony No. 8 in C Minor, 1887/90 Mixed Versions. Ed. Robert Haas
Munchner Philharmoniker, Günter Wand

Daverz

#133490
Quote from: Symphonic Addict on July 31, 2025, 01:02:48 PMMozart: Divertimento for string trio
Reger: Piano Trio, op. 102

This time the Mozart didn't hit me as much on previous occasions, but I still regard it as a masterful piece.


I had the same reaction to this recording.  It didn't grab my attention the way the old Stern/Zukerman/Rose recording did.  Though maybe I just wasn't in a receptive mood.

Quote from: Dry Brett Kavanaugh on July 31, 2025, 12:55:58 PMDe Falla. Tres Picos.



Getting aboard the Frühbeck train:



From the Australian Eloquence Frühbeck box.

Symphonic Addict

Lambert continues delivering the goods. I especially enjoyed The Rio Grande with its invigorating originality.

The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied.

Symphonic Addict

Quote from: Daverz on July 31, 2025, 02:01:01 PMI had the same reaction to this recording.  It didn't grab my attention the way the old Stern/Zukerman/Rose recording did.  Though maybe I just wasn't in a receptive mood.

I think that both the recording and my mood at the moment influenced my reaction.
The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied.

Dry Brett Kavanaugh

Quote from: Daverz on July 31, 2025, 02:01:01 PMI had the same reaction to this recording.  It didn't grab my attention the way the old Stern/Zukerman/Rose recording did.  Though maybe I just wasn't in a receptive mood.

Getting aboard the Frühbeck train:



From the Australian Eloquence Frühbeck box.



That's a great recording! You have the box set? I'm waiting for the price to come down a little.

kyjo

#133494
Quote from: Mister Sharpe on July 08, 2025, 04:30:12 AMI've gone too long without listening to some Bax, my second-favorite composer. I'll start with a work, In Memoriam,  that just overwhelms me, so emotionally-charged is it, and I sure wish it had the acceptance, the popular status, say, of a tear-inducing Rachmaninoff piece.  Wishes and fishes.  Extensive background to this compelling work here:  https://www.arnoldbax.com/the-background-to-in-memoriam/

Totally agree with you about In Memoriam! A stunningly beautiful, heartfelt piece with an unforgettable main theme. I won't deny that it often brings me to tears whenever I hear it! I love many pieces by Bax, but In Memoriam affects me more deeply than pretty much anything else he wrote.

P.S. I'm referring to the tone poem with this title - he wrote a chamber work of the same name which is also very fine.
"Music is enough for a lifetime, but a lifetime is not enough for music" - Sergei Rachmaninoff

Cato

Bulgarian composer Dimitar Nenov: Rhapsodic Fantasy from 1938-1940.

The opening is rather dark, moody, even bleak (check the years of composition), but the ending will remind you (somewhat) of Rimsky-Korsakov!




Also:

Franz Schreker: Prelude to a Drama




...and...


Tchaikovsky: The Tempest

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

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

André

#133496


This performance of Ysaÿe's 6 sonatas is quite different from any other I've heard. Stobbe is the concertmaster of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra and a violin builder and restorer. His approach to the works is analytic rather than virtuosic.

He clearly sees it his task to elucidate the structure of the sonatas. In the multi-movement works (nos 1, 2 and 4) the pause between movements is longer than usual, as if he wanted the listener to appreciate the complexities of the music (it works). Since he is also the record producer and booklet notes writer I assume this is part of his concept. Stobbe is as much a music thinker as a performer.

Time and again I noticed how organic his performances were. His way with the sonatas is not showy, rhapsodic or intuitive. Lest that sound dry or academic, I should add that he quickly drew me into his journey with the music. Ysaÿe's sonatas are unlike any other solo violin works in the repertoire. In it are distilled the structural complexities of Bach's partitas and Paganini's unique palette of colours and impossibly difficult pyrotechnics. I am endlessly fascinated by them and listen to as many versions as I can. They present a mix of amazing coloristic gestures and intellectually challenging originality.

I repeated a few of the sonatas to appreciate the originality of his approach. Needless to say the violinistic difficulties are met head on. His tone is not sweet (Ehnes) but big, 'fleshy', with a very pure intonation.

André



Hoddinott's music invariably intrigues and satisfies. He never attempts to 'be original', but there's no denying his is a very singular voice. Excellent performances by top rate soloists. All the recordings are in excellent sound.

Mister Sharpe

Quote from: kyjo on July 31, 2025, 03:00:12 PMTotally agree with you about In Memoriam! A stunningly beautiful, heartfelt piece with an unforgettable main theme. I won't deny that it often brings me to tears whenever I hear it! I love many pieces by Bax, but In Memoriam affects me more deeply than pretty much anything else he wrote.

P.S. I'm referring to the tone poem with this title - he wrote a chamber work of the same name which is also very fine.

Thanks, kyjo, grateful to ya'.  It's enough for me to know that someone feels that work as strongly as I do!! And to think that In Memoriam had to wait until 1998 for its first public performance!   
"There are no wrong reasons for liking a work of art, only for disliking one."  E.H. Gombrich

JBS

Quote from: Wanderer on July 31, 2025, 06:12:08 AMThe Greek word Παραλειπόμενον (Paraleipómenon) translates to "Paralipomenon" in English. It derives from the Greek verb παραλείπω (paraleípō), meaning "to omit" or "to leave aside" and is often used in the plural, Παραλειπόμενα (Paraleipómena), meaning "things omitted" or "things left out". In literature or scholarship, Paralipomena refers to supplementary or additional material omitted from a main work, such as appendices, addenda, or complementary writings.

The Paralipomènes à la Divina Commedia is the very first version of Liszt's Après une lecture du Dante: Fantasia quasi Sonata (the Dante Sonata) - the term Paralipomènes (French plural of Paralipomenon) denotes "things left out", an appendix, a supplemental or complementary piece to Dante's Divina Commedia.

Παραλειπόμενον/α may be a philological term in English and French but it is also an everyday word in Greek - it's the present passive participle of the verb παραλείπω (to omit, to leave aside, to pass over); its noun, omission, is παράλειψις (paraleipsis).

It is thus related to the word ellipsis

QuoteLatin, from Greek elleipsis ellipsis, ellipse, from elleipein to leave out, fall short, from en in + leipein to leave

That's from Merriam Webster, which says its first known use was in 1540.  Oddly, the first use of the geometrical term ellipse in English was not until 1743.

Hollywood Beach Broadwalk