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Bayesian

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Posts posted by Bayesian

  1. On 18/2/2024 at 4:30 AM, Miguel Andrade said:

    https://www.discogs.com/release/29790961-Bernstein-Williams-James-Ehnes-Saint-Louis-Symphony-Orchestra-Stéphane-Denève-Serenade-Violin-Conc

     

    This might actual come from a live recording from November 2019, with Williams in attendance. If that's the case, the original concert line up included Barber's Adagio and Saint-Saens' Organ Symphony.

    Of course, until more info is out, they might have the recorded the concerto during the rehearsals. 

    Thanks for sharing this! It's nice that the first concerto still gets some attention. Although Discogs has pics of the album, it doesn't appear on Amazon or even Pentatone's website. Anyone have any luck finding it for sale?

  2. On 12/2/2024 at 6:59 AM, LSH said:

    Competing tornado hunter teams, with one of them led by a brash, cocky SOB.... barrels filled with round metal tornado sensors... "we got twins!"... tornadoes that get bigger and badder each time...  

     

    I appreciate the originality of the filmmakers here. I mean, they really went out of their way to find new directions to take this story. Who says Hollywood is a soulless, dying, creatively bankrupt bottom-feeder??

     

     

     

  3. I’m looking forward to this one! My main hope is that the plot is a little more complex than the usual mandalorian episode or season. I also wouldn’t mind if the mandalorian’s dialogue was a little less second grade reading level, but I’ll take whatever they give us. 

  4. So I’ve come the realization—far too late, but better than never—that Ridley Scott makes wonderful movies. You see, I always liked Gladiator and Alien and appreciated the craft in Hannibal and black hawk down and the last duel. But after hyping myself up for Napoleon and having my sky-high expectations almost completely satisfied, I started to look at the rest of his oeuvre. All the Money in the World: phenomenal. House of Gucci: Masterfully entertaining. The Duellists: A brilliant debut. American gangster: Fantastic. Still need to watch body of lies, the counselor, g.i. Jane and a few others, but I don’t expect to be disappointed.

     

    Anyone else feel the love for this director? He’s giving Tim Burton a real run for his money as my favorite director after Spielberg. 

  5. 23 hours ago, Chen G. said:

    No, no, no, no!

     

    We were talking about food!

     

    Salad ain't food!

    Unless it's a big salad. You know, big lettuce, big carrots, tomatoes like volleyballs. The kind of salad you deserve to get credit for when you buy one for your friend.

  6. 1 hour ago, Falstaft said:

     

    I've been summoned!

     

    Exact definitions differ between theorists of course, but there is a pretty stable consensus concerning what's genuinely fugal, what's canonical or imitative, and what's just polyphonically busy. For a fugue, it's all about that incremental feeling. One voice introduces the fugue's main idea ("subject") in full, then another comes in repeating it while the first offers a countermelody ("answer"), and so on. Traditionally, these need to be at quite specific tonal levels -- the second either in ("real") or on ("tonal") the key of the dominant.  And back and forth it goes until all seperate contrapuntal strands are introduced, usually 3-4 voices in total. I'm simplifying a lot, though it's worth pointing out that Williams almost never writes fugues by completely by the "book." The key thing is that feeling of accretion, of rising intricacy, of one melodic subject chasing another, 

     

     

    As breathtaking as it is, I'm afraid there's nothing fugal in the Asteroid Field. March of the Resistance's middle section includes definite but quite unconventional fugal exposition that modulates up by fifth three times, from F to D, and doesn't have a consistent countersubject. 

     

    A few years ago I gave a talk on all things neo-Baroque in Williams, which included transcribing all of his fugues, fugatos, and canonic passages. It's a marvelous thing to behold. In any case, my vote is for Black Sunday

     

    Black Sunday.jpg

    Monsieur le professeur, would you be able to share that talk with us?? Slide deck with annotated score snippets would be just darling, but we’d take talking points scribbled on a cocktail napkin if that’s all you had in your archives. I guarantee you wouldn’t find a more captivated or grateful audience!

  7. Ooh, so much delicious ear candy to choose from, it's basically impossible to select just one favorite. I went for Setting the Trap because it has strong nostalgic associations from the first time I watched the scene that it was scored for. But Shark Cage Fugue and Quidditch Yr 3  are close runner-ups.

  8. 7 hours ago, karelm said:

     

    ...so the trombone is not a major instrument?  :blink:

    Sorry, I forgot about the trombone! A trombone concerto would be lovely too.

     

    Is that it, then, for major instruments? He's written concertos or similar for violin, viola, cello, horn, trumpet, tuba, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, flute, harp, wind ensemble, brass ensemble, and string ensemble.

     

    Now that piano's on its way, that leaves, yes, trombone, as well as double bass, percussion, organ, saxophone, English horn, guitar, and jazz ensemble. Oh, and piano duo and piano four hands. And piano for the right hand, for symmetry with Ravel's concerto for the left hand. And orchestra, to match up with Bartok.

     

    Whew, that's a lot of concertos left to write!

  9. I am so excited for a JW piano concerto. It’s the last major instrument he hasn’t written a concerto for. 
     

    How did Emanuel Ax get this honor, I wonder. I’ve listened to his recordings since the early 90s and always liked his sound, although I don’t think I could identify anything particular about his performance style. (ASM’s concerto was written to her particular brand of virtuosity, and I imagine the same is being done for Ax.)

  10. I couldn’t afford to attend any of JW’s European concerts (and even if I could have, getting tickets would’ve been impossible), but if he really does intend to revisit the hallowed halls of classical music, I’ll need to figure out a way to make my in-person attendance a reality. I will not miss out a second time. 

  11. 4 hours ago, Tallguy said:

     

    Very well thought out departure from conventional wisdom. Although "the last hour or so" in a two hour movie should be a respectable percentage. 

    Thanks for appreciating my ranking, @Tallguy! It’s been a long time since I watched it, but thanks to Disney+, I can confirm that I start really liking TESB only once they get to cloud city, with only 43 min remaining. 
     

    In another dose of contrarianism, my high esteem for TLJ stems from the fact that it’s an eminently rewatchable Star Wars movie, second only to ANH. And it’s great fun to watch Kylo lose his shit on crait. (Mind you, the less said about seeing Rey use the force to lift four thousand tons of rocks like it was nothing, when Luke could barely free his lightsaber from a snowbank three episodes earlier, the better…)

  12. 1 hour ago, Tallguy said:

    But sure. That would be very cool. OTOH, one of my favorite movies of the last 10 years is The Martian: A very faithful adaptation of a book.

    Ah, yes, the Martian. A great Ridley Scott movie. You know, since Thanksgiving, almost all of my music and motion picture entertainment discoveries (outside of LLL’s Hook) are due to my newfound fascination with Sir Scott. After Napoleon came out, I realized I really didn’t know the man’s work outside of his biggest four or five films. By way of Napoleon, I learned about the Duellists (great movie)—and the terrific music of Howard Blake— and about Bondarchuk’s Waterloo from 1970, and then about other movies featuring Napoleon, including, just today, Count of Monte Cristo. Which then led me to learn about the music of Ed Shearmur. It’s been an interesting and rewarding few weeks.

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