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JEleazarian
Trad climber
Fresno CA
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Jun 12, 2015 - 01:35pm PT
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Well, Reilly has gotten me going on a Mass kick. Been listening to quite a few lately. This one's not bad at all.
Agreed, Gary. The Kyrie from the Nelson Mass, in particular, has always resonated with me. I first heard it on an Easter Sunday sometime before my tenth birthday. It is one of the two choral pieces where I still vividly remember the first time i heard it (the other was the Hallelujan Chorus, which I also heard for the first time in church).
The trend of modern Protestant churches toward musical illiteracy deeply saddens me. As moving as spontaneity can be, I just don't think it can reach the depth of expression that comes from disciplined formalism.
John
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Ksolem
Trad climber
Monrovia, California
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Jun 26, 2015 - 10:30am PT
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Here ya go. Two of the most magnificent female voices of our time, at their prime...
Joan Sutherland and Marilyn Horne, conducted by Sutherland's husband Richard Bonynge. Imagine riding downhill on a bicycle going faster and faster without speeding up.
[Click to View YouTube Video]
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Ksolem
Trad climber
Monrovia, California
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Thanks Gary. Beautiful. Rossini doesn't get enough attention.
Speaking of Sir Georg Solti, I used to make a point of attending when Chicago Symphony visited New York at Carnegie Hall (this was through the 1970's.) The New York Phil had already moved up to that barn at Lincoln Center. At Carnegie the best seats were center, front row balcony. The concert which I'll never forget was the Mozart Jupiter and Mahler's 5th. The Mozart was sublime, Then came the Mahler, and they just plain blew the roof of the place. That was the best brass section I've ever heard.
An interesting bit of trivia, the tuba layer in that section was Arnold Jacobs. He had lost a lung in a car crash years before. It didn't handicap him at all, in fact you'd think he had an extra lung by the sound of it. If Ed Viesturs had played tuba...
I took some master classes with Hurseth, the principal trumpet. OMG I've never been so intimidated in my life. Nothing in climbing even compares. It was like being called up before God for judgement.
Check out the Mahler 5 embedded in this page. Brings tears to my eyes.
https://mahlerfest.wordpress.com/2013/04/16/remembering-adolph-bud-herseth/
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Gary
Social climber
From A Buick 6
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^^ Nice.
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JEleazarian
Trad climber
Fresno CA
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Excellent music, Kris. And thanks for the anecdote about the master class.
Master classes have a way of instilling humility. The closest climbing analogy I can draw was when Robbins would visit Indian Rock while I was an undergrad at Berkeley. Bouldering with that audience was intimidating, indeed.
John
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SteveW
Trad climber
The state of confusion
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Okay, I hope this hasn't been added to the thread--but I'm not going through
470 posts to find out. . .
[Click to View YouTube Video]
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SteveW
Trad climber
The state of confusion
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Sorry Marlow, wrong vid the first time. It's the
correct one now. . . my bad!
(the entire recording is great, has 2 concerti and
English Suite #3).
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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SteveW
The first Dinnerstein vid you posted worked on this side of the pond. The new one doesn't, but now I can find my way...
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Gary
Social climber
From A Buick 6
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That Aria is haunting. It was this thread that turned me onto Maria Yudina, she's now a favorite.
[Click to View YouTube Video]
She was a bit of nut, but an uncompromising nut.
One of the people of modern times whose heart was radiantly pure was the Russian pianist Maria Yudina. I have come to know her indirectly through the memoirs of her friend and one-time classmate, composer Dimitri Shostakovich, and also through Tatiana Voogd, a member of our parish who knew Yudina personally and has slept under her piano -- "the most sheltered place in her apartment," she tells me.
It was Maria Yudina's fate to live through the Russian revolution and its aftermath, seeing many of her dearest friends and colleagues disappear into the Gulag. A fearless Christian, she wore a cross visibly even while teaching or performing in public -- an affirmation of belief at a time when the price of a display of religious faith could be one's work, one's freedom, even one's life. She lived an ascetic life, wearing no cosmetics, spending little on herself, and dressing simply. "I had the impression that Yudina wore the same black dress during her entire long life, it was so worn and soiled," said Shostakovich.
For Maria Yudina, music was a way of proclaiming her faith in a period when presses were more carefully policed than pianos. "Yudina saw music in a mystical light. For instance, she saw Bach's Goldberg Variations as a series of illustrations to the Holy Bible," said Shostakovich. "She always played as though she were giving a sermon."
She not only performed piano works but paused during concerts to read the poetry of such writers as Boris Pasternak, who were unable to publish at the time.
She was notorious among friends for her inability to keep anything of value for herself. "She came to see me once," Shostakovich recalled, "and said that she was living in a miserable little room where she could neither work nor rest. So I signed a petition, I went to see various bureaucrats, I asked a lot of people to help, I took up a lot of people's time. With great difficulty we got an apartment for Yudina. You would think that everything was fine and that life could go on. A short time later she came to me again and asked for help in obtaining an apartment for herself. 'What? But we got an apartment for you. What do you need another one for?' 'I gave the apartment away to a poor old woman.'"
Shostakovich heard that friends had made a loan to Yudina of five rubles. "I broke a window in my room, it's drafty and so cold, I can't live like that," she had told them. "Naturally, they gave her the money -- it was winter. A while later they visited her, and it was as cold in her room as it was outside and the broken window was stuffed with a rag. 'How can this be, Maria Veniaminovna? We gave you money to fix the window.' And she replied, 'I gave it for the needs of the church.'"
Shostakovich, who regarded religion as superstition, didn't approve. "The church may have various needs," he protested, "but the clergy doesn't sit around in the cold, after all, with broken windows. Self-denial should have a rational limit." He accused her of behaving like a yurodivye, the Russian word for a holy fool, a form of sanctity in the eyes of the church.
Her public profession of faith was not without cost. Despite her genius as a musician, from time to time she was banned from concert halls and not once in her life was she allowed to travel outside Russia. Shostakovich remembered:
Her religious position was under constant artillery and even cavalry attack [at the music school in Leningrad]. Serebriakov, the director then, had a habit of making so-called "raids of the light brigade." . . . He realized that Yudina was a first-class pianist, but he wasn't willing to risk his own position. One of the charges of the light brigade was made specifically against her. The cavalry rushed into Yudina's class and demanded of Yudina: "Do you believe in God?" She replied in the affirmative. "Was she promoting religious propaganda among her students?" She replied that the Constitution didn't forbid it. A few days later a transcript of the conversation made by "an unknown person" appeared in a Leningrad paper, which also printed a caricature -- Yudina in nun's robes surrounded by kneeling students. And the caption was something about preachers appearing at the Conservatoire. The cavalry trod heavily, even though it was the light brigade. Naturally, Yudina was dismissed after that.
From time to time she all but signed her own death warrant. Perhaps the most remarkable story in Shostakovich's memoir concerns one such incident:
In his final years, Stalin seemed more and more like a madman, and I think his superstition grew. The "Leader and Teacher" sat locked up in one of his many dachas, amusing himself in bizarre ways. They say he cut out pictures and photos from old magazines and newspapers, glued them onto paper, and hung them on the walls. . . . [He] didn't let anyone in to see him for days at a time. He listened to the radio a lot. Once Stalin called the Radio Committee, where the administration was, and asked if they had a record of Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 23, which had been heard on the radio the day before. "Played by Yudina," he added. They told Stalin that of course they had it. Actually, there was no record, the concert had been live. But they were afraid to say no to Stalin, no one ever knew what the consequences might be. A human life meant nothing to him. All you could do was agree, submit, be a yes-man, a yes-man to a madman.
Stalin demanded that they send the record with Yudina's performance of the Mozart to his dacha. The committee panicked, but they had to do something. They called in Yudina and an orchestra and recorded that night. Everyone was shaking with fright, except for Yudina, naturally. But she was a special case, that one, the ocean was only knee-deep for her.
Yudina later told me that they had to send the conductor home, he was so scared he couldn't think. They called another conductor, who trembled and got everything mixed up, confusing the orchestra. Only a third conductor was in any shape to finish the recording.
I think this is a unique event in the history of recording -- I mean, changing conductors three times in one night. Anyway, the record was ready by morning. They made one single copy in record time and sent it to Stalin. Now that was a record. A record in yes-ing.
Soon after, Yudina received an envelope with twenty thousand rubles. She was told it came on the express orders of Stalin. Then she wrote him a letter. I know about this letter from her, and I know that the story seems improbable. Yudina had many quirks, but I can say this -- she never lied. I'm certain that her story is true. Yudina wrote something like this in her letter: "I thank you, Joseph Vissarionovich, for your aid. I will pray for you day and night and ask the Lord to forgive your great sins before the people and the country. The Lord is merciful and He'll forgive you. I gave the money to the church that I attend."
And Yudina sent this suicidal letter to Stalin. He read it and didn't say a word, they expected at least a twitch of the eyebrow. Naturally, the order to arrest Yudina was prepared and the slightest grimace would have been enough to wipe away the last traces of her. But Stalin was silent and set the letter aside in silence. The anticipated movement of the eyebrows didn't come.
Nothing happened to Yudina. They say that her recording of the Mozart was on the record player when the "Leader and Teacher" was found dead in his dacha. It was the last thing he had listened to.
Shostakovich found Yudina's open display of belief foolish, yet one senses within his complaints both envy and awe. In a time of heart-stopping fear, here was someone as fearless as Saint George before the dragon, someone who preferred giving away her few rubles to repairing her own broken window, who "published" with her own voice the poems of banned writers, who dared to tell Stalin that he was not beyond God's mercy and forgiveness. She had a large and pure heart. No wonder her grave in Moscow has been a place of pilgrimage ever since her death.
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Gary
Social climber
From A Buick 6
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eKat, TFPU! I'll spend the rest of the morning listening to this. Got to be more than one guitar...
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Gnome Ofthe Diabase
climber
Out Of Bed
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The educational value here is astounding, thank you all for
Sharing your knowledge.
And filling my home with the sounds that fill the soul.
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selfish man
Gym climber
Austin, TX
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That Aria is haunting. It was this thread that turned me onto Maria Yudina, she's now a favorite.
Hi Gary,
Glad that this thread helped you discover Maria Yudina. If you haven't found it yet, here is the recording that made her Stalin's favorite musician and likely saved her life
[Click to View YouTube Video]
and here is another of her playing Mozart...
[Click to View YouTube Video]
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Gary
Social climber
From A Buick 6
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^^ Like that Scriabin a lot. Yuja Wang played that as her encore last night at the Hollywood Bowl.
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