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hangos Subscriber

Joined: 28 Aug 2009 Posts: 20
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Posted: Mon Aug 31, 2009 12:01 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks,Pete!
I think I'll invest in that double CD soon
Yes, Ormandy did the whole Lemminkainen suite in 1951 with the Philadelphia, and it's available on play.com (mp3 downloads) for only £1.99 - thrilling stuff ( I have quite a few downloads now, and with even a cheap interconnect to my amp I can really enjoy good sound quality - it doesn't feel quite the same as "owning" a CD, but the main thing is it's instant and often cheaper _________________ Martin |
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hangos Subscriber

Joined: 28 Aug 2009 Posts: 20
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Posted: Mon Aug 31, 2009 12:11 pm Post subject: |
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Pete,
The downloads are not on play.com, but on ;
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and tap in "Sibelius Ormandy" in the search box
Sorry about the false trail! _________________ Martin |
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kullervopete Conductor in Residence


Joined: 08 Jun 2007 Posts: 1121 Location: Bury Lancs UK
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Posted: Tue Sep 01, 2009 1:37 pm Post subject: |
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No problems Martin, some interesting stuff on that site. I'm wondering if much of the Ormandy 1950's material including the Four Legends are taken from live concerts, broadcasts etc. Some are certainly new to me. Certainly worth investigating, thanks-kp _________________ Peter Frankland |
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kullervopete Conductor in Residence


Joined: 08 Jun 2007 Posts: 1121 Location: Bury Lancs UK
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Posted: Thu Nov 12, 2009 9:28 am Post subject: |
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A comment here by Mr. Tim Page on Tapiola. 'Reminiscent of Valse triste at times, contains subtle hints of Rimsky Korsakov in the exquisite, playful orchestration'.
In fifty years of listening to Sibelius's marvellous tone Poem, it can still reveal new insights, but has anyone else also noticed Mr. Page's observations? --kp _________________ Peter Frankland |
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Tapkaara Soloist


Joined: 04 Jan 2007 Posts: 725 Location: San Diego, CA
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Posted: Thu Nov 12, 2009 1:23 pm Post subject: |
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| kullervopete wrote: |
A comment here by Mr. Tim Page on Tapiola. 'Reminiscent of Valse triste at times, contains subtle hints of Rimsky Korsakov in the exquisite, playful orchestration'.
In fifty years of listening to Sibelius's marvellous tone Poem, it can still reveal new insights, but has anyone else also noticed Mr. Page's observations? --kp |
I don't see the Valse triste connection unless there is something very subtle going on that I have not noted.
Rimsky-Korsakov? Hmmm, not sure about this either. Again, what am I missing?
And I don't like the term "playful" to describe its orchestration. I understand what he's getting at, but that word just does not fit Tapiola. I'd say "prismatic orchestration" instead. _________________ "Music is not philosophy."
-- Akira Ifukube
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kullervopete Conductor in Residence


Joined: 08 Jun 2007 Posts: 1121 Location: Bury Lancs UK
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Posted: Thu Nov 12, 2009 2:16 pm Post subject: |
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| Tapkaara wrote: |
And I don't like the term "playful" to describe its orchestration. I understand what he's getting at, but that word just does not fit Tapiola. I'd say "prismatic orchestration" instead. |
I tend to agree with Tapkaara, certainly in the seventh symphony, Sibelius seems to look back to Valse triste at one point, but I have never detected any particular influence of this exquisite little piece in Tapiola. A Russian influence in Tapiola? in the form of Rimsky Korsakov, well experts on orchestration may or may not find something--but I have never heard it! I also think that 'playful' is not a term that I would use with regard to Tapiola. Those woodsprites might be having fun in the forest gloom, but they terrify the living daylights.
Thats another brilliant quote from Tapkaara 'prismatic orchestration' --kp _________________ Peter Frankland |
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David Revilla Subscriber

Joined: 29 Sep 2009 Posts: 14 Location: Valladolid (Spain)
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Posted: Sat Nov 14, 2009 8:17 pm Post subject: |
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Sibelius said: "Tapiola is a sonata form".
Anybody does it see it? Really are there anything in order to afirm this?
I can hear a perfect variations form, like all the scholars said. Is it a joke, a absent-mindedness? _________________ I'm sorry, my english isn't quite good! My blog about Sibelius in spanish:
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kullervopete Conductor in Residence


Joined: 08 Jun 2007 Posts: 1121 Location: Bury Lancs UK
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Posted: Sun Nov 15, 2009 11:41 am Post subject: |
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David, we are in treacherous waters's here! I think that JS's remark can only be found in the Finnish edition of Santeri Levas's book 'Jean Sibelius, memories of a great man' [1986] Of course Sibelius adapted sonata form to his own requirements and musicologists have come up with some remarkably varied descriptions regarding the musical processes at work in many of his compositions. For example looking at the first movement of the fifth, Abraham suggests that the 'second part' can be seen as scherzo and trio with repeat and recapitulation. Whereas Simon Parmet see's it as a toccata, and I could go on with many more examples. The truth is that Sibelius approached composition with a mixture of powerfully calculated logic combined with an unfettered imaginitive instinct, thus his music does not submit readily to analysis. I would guess that if JS did make this comment with regard to Tapiola and sonata form, he may have been reacting to the wonderful and weird formula's being dreamt up by musicologists. After all, some authorities contend that Tapiola is in fact a fully fledged symphony. Amid the discerptions of his sixth symphony, Sibelius described it as a poem.--kp _________________ Peter Frankland |
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Andrew B Soloist


Joined: 12 Oct 2006 Posts: 684 Location: Brighton, England
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Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 10:20 am Post subject: |
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Treacherous waters indeed. In most late Sibelius the form is determined by the content and this is undeniably the case here. As there can be any number of possible analytical views of these works, I take a 'live and let live' attitude here: find a description that you believe in, and stick to it. (And ideally keep it to yourself unless you want to be contradicted by everybody else.) _________________
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kullervopete Conductor in Residence


Joined: 08 Jun 2007 Posts: 1121 Location: Bury Lancs UK
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Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 10:51 am Post subject: |
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As usual Andrew B talks good sense here. I would say that in works such as Tapiola, we have to go back to the late Quartets of Beethoven and the variation form that he had developed. Beethoven strips the theme right down to its basic underlying shape, and this stays constant while everything else--tempo, orchestration, rhythm and mood varies round it. Interestingly that respected Sibelius expert Veijo Murtomaki sees Tapiola as opening out both through the application of Sonata form and also via the principle of variation.--kp _________________ Peter Frankland |
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