
Two of the best String Quartets that I know of; magnificent music that makes for compulsive listening.
Thanks Fergus. It is one to keep. I will watch it again as soon as I have the home cinema system to myself, one needs uninterrupted peace and quiet to do so, JEG's passion for Bach's music is infectious. JEG has assembled a marvellous ensemble.fergus wrote:Seán wrote:This evening I watched last night's Prom broadcast twice, it is hugely enjoyable:
J. S. Bach
Easter Oratorio 38'
Ascension Oratorio 32'
Hannah Morrison soprano
Meg Bragle mezzo-soprano
Nicholas Mulroy tenor
Peter Harvey bass
Monteverdi Choir
English Baroque Soloists
Sir John Eliot Gardiner conductor
I am delighted that you liked it Seán.
Oh now Fergus, that does get my attention, is it on vinyl? I have the Talich SQ playing four Beethoven Quartets and they are splendid. I do not have any of Janáček's chamber music and that does look very interesting indeed.fergus wrote:
Two of the best String Quartets that I know of; magnificent music that makes for compulsive listening.
Every year I relive the JEG Cantata Pilgrimage and it is just a very handy way to pinpoint exactly where you are and what is appropriate e.g. today is the twelfth Sunday after Trinity and the appropriate Cantatas for today are BWV35, 69a and 137....Jared wrote:
well, our Fergus sent me a Bach calendar, so that I could listen to the right cantatas at the appropriate time of the year... not that i've ever paid the heed to it that I should...
Seán wrote:Oh now Fergus, that does get my attention, is it on vinyl? I have the Talich SQ playing four Beethoven Quartets and they are splendid. I do not have any of Janáček's chamber music and that does look very interesting indeed.fergus wrote:
Two of the best String Quartets that I know of; magnificent music that makes for compulsive listening.
mcq wrote: It is worth noting that Beethoven retained this quote of Friedrich Schiller's framed underneath the glass of his writing table: "I am all, what is, what was, what will be; no mortal man has ever lifted my veil." When you listen to the serene, tranquil calmness of this Holy Song of Thanksgiving that represents the peace of God descending on Beethoven's brow, it is surely not too fanciful a thought that we are being granted a chance furtive peek under that most diaphanous of veils, so immediate is the impression that we, as listeners, are eavesdropping on something of the profoundest consequence.
mcq wrote:Thank you, Fergus, that 's very kind. I think the reference to the lifting of the veil is analogous to our own experience as listeners to the great music. Close and repeated listening to a favourite piece of music over an extended length of time should never really be about a musical deconstruction of the piece but, rather, it should take us ever closer to the emotional heart that beats at its very centre and the truths that we thereby intuit when we are privileged with a furtive glimpse behind the veil of accreted layers of musical substrata that temporarily obscure our view.