The chronicles of Ruin, continued.
Call me Ishmael said....intelligence is knowing what to do when you don't know what to do.
Anonymous said... When I don't know what to do,I come here.
10 September 2009 22:59
Friday, 23 April 2010
SEGOVIA, GAVOTTING AT MIDNIGHT, PROBABLY HIS BEST KNOWN BACH PIECES.
8 comments:
mrs narcolept
said...
Utterly astonishing, what some people can do with a guitar.
By the way, that Ry Cooder, what was it he was playing? Channelling so much through what looked to me like a tin ukelele, as if he would have exploded without it.
Segovia plays Bach was the first guitar record I bought, mrs n, back in the day.
I believe it was a form of mandolin and yes, the energy level was frightening. Cooder is one of those, the touched ones, connected.
As mr elby said, he is a walking library of ethnic American musical forms, the Rolling Stones major albums and thus their forty year career are just a shameless rip-off of an open tuning which Cooder showed them in the studio, unknown to him they recorded it, worked it up into Honky Tonk Women and have never looked back. Or forward.
Does anyone else remember the late-at-night white-dot BBC2 (?) piano preludes? There were countless of them - spare and beautiful - various known and unknown pianists. I cannot find them anywhere.
Funny, mr m. it was a choice between the Segovia and the Rostropovich, the former had the better sound and vision quality. I think those bits were written for the lute, anyway, weren't they?
BBC 2 was, quite recently, a year or two back, doing similar, spare and beautiful, unknown virtuoso performances; broadcast last thing at night they were recorded in fabulous, European Baroque buildings and broadcast without any comment from twittering arts presenters; I am sure they will be back.
Sometimes the bBC does intervene between the audience and the Art to great purpose - the Baroque series with Waldemar Jabberwocky and the recent Spanish and Russian Arts series, for istance - but often, particularly at the Proms, they just provide an opportunity for someone's niece or mistress or rentboy to show off.
I think they had a fortepiano then, as well as the plucked harpsichord and the pipe organ, the piano as we know it is more recent.
8 comments:
Utterly astonishing, what some people can do with a guitar.
By the way, that Ry Cooder, what was it he was playing? Channelling so much through what looked to me like a tin ukelele, as if he would have exploded without it.
Segovia plays Bach was the first guitar record I bought, mrs n, back in the day.
I believe it was a form of mandolin and yes, the energy level was frightening. Cooder is one of those, the touched ones, connected.
As mr elby said, he is a walking library of ethnic American musical forms, the Rolling Stones major albums and thus their forty year career are just a shameless rip-off of an open tuning which Cooder showed them in the studio, unknown to him they recorded it, worked it up into Honky Tonk Women and have never looked back. Or forward.
I wish I could play the clarinet like that.
I wish I could play the clarinet like that.
Playing Bach on a guitar? Jeez, ye savages, ye!
Does anyone else remember the late-at-night white-dot BBC2 (?) piano preludes? There were countless of them - spare and beautiful - various known and unknown pianists. I cannot find them anywhere.
Funny, mr m. it was a choice between the Segovia and the Rostropovich, the former had the better sound and vision quality. I think those bits were written for the lute, anyway, weren't they?
BBC 2 was, quite recently, a year or two back, doing similar, spare and beautiful, unknown virtuoso performances; broadcast last thing at night they were recorded in fabulous, European Baroque buildings and broadcast without any comment from twittering arts presenters; I am sure they will be back.
Those are the beasts, Mr Ishmael. No nonsense - title on screen, then pianist plays it, end.
Organist wasn't he, Bach? Did they have pianos then? Maybe they didn't.
Sometimes the bBC does intervene between the audience and the Art to great purpose - the Baroque series with Waldemar Jabberwocky and the recent Spanish and Russian Arts series, for istance - but often, particularly at the Proms, they just provide an opportunity for someone's niece or mistress or rentboy to show off.
I think they had a fortepiano then, as well as the plucked harpsichord and the pipe organ, the piano as we know it is more recent.
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