(Listening to Beethoven's fourth movement of the 9th.
![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
Moderator: Edi
Ok let me let these winblows updates finish before I log on though.IRG CommandoJoe wrote:Aha....ok I'll log on AIM and contact you. My sn is the same as it is here.
Sorry about that.. will have to catch you tomorrow on that. -growls at other people-IRG CommandoJoe wrote:What happened?I've been waiting waaay too long. I'm off to play some DoD.
Suuuuure....just like Vladimir Horowitz would immediately cave in to the conductor.Baron Scarpia wrote:You guys are delusional...I don't care who the pianist/instrumentalist is, nobody--and I mean, nobody--is telling Furtwangler, Von Karajan, Toscanini, Bernstein, Reiner, Klemperer, etc. what to do about tempos.
Face it... Conductor = God.
Umm...do you mean David Helfgott?jenat-lai wrote:however this doesn't work if your soloist is David Healthcott... cos he changes tempo at a whim, and has the communications skills of an ape.
It's one of my favourites. It may be a bit repetitive at first, but I never had trouble to "sit through" it.Baron Scarpia wrote:Bolero is a musical travesty. How anyone can sit through it in concert is beyong me.
See, Americans are stupid and don't know how to spell. I didn't know that.Dahak wrote:And ver, it is "Händel" (or if you're limited to american keyboards, Haendel)
And, again, while some soloists may be big enough to do this, very few can get away with this and expect to continue to be invited to perform with leading conductors. Sure, Kathleen Battle can be a controlling bitch when she's working with conductor Joe Schmoe, but when it's Claudio Abbado, she'd better reign herself in and follow his lead or get canned.jenat-lai wrote:with a concerto, the soloist gets to change tempo at their own discrescion. If the conductor doesn't like it, then he will have to listen in horror as there becomes two distinct tempi. If the soloist is a vocalist, he will then listen as the singer simply stops and does not start again untill he stops.
In performance, depending on instrument which is solo... piano most commonly. the tempo WILL change at some point and there's nothing anyone can do about it. The soloist will usually (not so much in piano) be the melodic drive. Melody drives tempo. Accompianment follows. no professional orchestra will be unmusical enough not to follow a soloist. Especially the way Karrijan conducts, 2 seconds ahead of the orcestra's pulse. He can suggest tempi, but if the soloist doesn't follow, there's nothing he can do about it.
Of course behind closed doors away from the orchestra, Karrijan or any other good conductor has already been with the soloist, and will conduct what the soloist has demonstrated he already does. in effect due to alot of conferencing, and listening to that performer, the conductor already knows how the soloist wants it... however this doesn't work if your soloist is David Healthcott... cos he changes tempo at a whim, and has the communications skills of an ape.
I know.jenat-lai wrote:affirm. Yes where not all bull headed blasters, we do actually listen to what the other people do on occasion, at least the good ones do
Ah, then I just don't have the experience you do.jenat-lai wrote:it's all great to listen to trombones for bottom up tuning, but they don't play much, I tend to listen to the strings for alot of stuff, simply because they play alot of stuff. You need more than a millionth of a beat to get in time with something. Trombones only play as much as trumpets do, sometimes less. Hard to get anything out of silence
It's probably because they picked pieces where everyone had something to play...which really annoys the crap out of me since there are many great works that don't fully implement the whole orchestra. But then again, the students have to be graded, right? Eh...verilon wrote:Ah, then I just don't have the experience you do.In most of the pieces that I played with the youth orchestra at least, the trombones played generally along with the basses. -shrugs- Go figure.