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#1
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Live performance!
Hello folks,
Just a little note to tell you that I just came back for a Piano concert performed by kids aged from 5 to 17 at the Vincent-D'indy Music College in Montréal and it was pure joy. The acoustic of the room was great and all the kids played on a beautiful Steinway grand Piano. It was cute to see small kids fighting with the piano;-) but there was a couple of 16-17 years old girls that give a very good performance on Bach and Haydn. Nothing beat a live performance even if they are just kids. It is just the of "being there" that is special. No LP or CD can beat that. Bye Jocelyn |
#2
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I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening
to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Jim Jocelyn Major wrote: Hello folks, Just a little note to tell you that I just came back for a Piano concert performed by kids aged from 5 to 17 at the Vincent-D'indy Music College in Montréal and it was pure joy. The acoustic of the room was great and all the kids played on a beautiful Steinway grand Piano. It was cute to see small kids fighting with the piano;-) but there was a couple of 16-17 years old girls that give a very good performance on Bach and Haydn. Nothing beat a live performance even if they are just kids. It is just the of "being there" that is special. No LP or CD can beat that. Bye Jocelyn |
#3
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"Jim Cate" wrote in message
... I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Jim Thanks, Jim. I've got my new AMD Athlon XP machine outputting through my bedroom stereo, so it might be fun to stream it in and see what it sounds like. |
#4
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Jim Cate wrote:
I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Congrats to both of you. That's just marvelous! |
#5
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If any of y'all are in the San Francisco area and want to
hear some exceptional live music, my wife's quartet is performing this weekend in Alameda. They are an "early music" group consisting of baroque violin, transverse flute, viola da gamba and harpsichord. The program will be: J.J. Quantz, Trio Sonata in C Major G.P. Telemann, Duo for Flute and Violin Marais, Suite for Viola da Gamba G.P. Telemann, Concerto II from the Paris Quartets C.F. Abel, Quartet #3 D'Anglebert, Suite for Harpsichord Le Clair, Recreation #2 Date: Sunday, June 5th, 2005 Time: 7:00 PM First Presbyterian Church 2001 Santa Clara Avenue Alameda, California This is not a garage band. These people are all busy professional level players living here in the San Francisco area. They're so busy playing the regular orchestral and wedding gigs, that they very rarely have the chance to spend the time to prepare a performance of the kinds of chamber music they love. Coolness, Russ |
#6
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"Harry Lavo" wrote in message
... "Jim Cate" wrote in message ... I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Jim Thanks, Jim. I've got my new AMD Athlon XP machine outputting through my bedroom stereo, so it might be fun to stream it in and see what it sounds like. Well, Jim...I just finished listening to a marvelous performance of Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto by 25 yr old Sa Chen of China. Must say I much prefer her playing to Lang Lang, with whom she apparently competes as a peer in the orient. How many people are in the finals..five? Sound was okay, picutures also okay. Most of the time I was streaming at 300kps. Listened first on my tiny Koss headphones plugged directly into the computer. They sounded as good as they ever had. Then listened on my good Koss Pro 4aa's driven by the Onkyo 401 integrated headphone amp, which is an absolutely excellent headphone amp. Here the limitations of the stream were readily apparent, but not enough to prevent enjoyment of the music and performance. Thanks for the tip. I encourage others here to "tune in". I'm certainly glad I did, and will doubtless do it again before Sunday is over and the series ends. |
#7
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Harry Lavo wrote:
"Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Jim Cate" wrote in message ... I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Jim Thanks, Jim. I've got my new AMD Athlon XP machine outputting through my bedroom stereo, so it might be fun to stream it in and see what it sounds like. Well, Jim...I just finished listening to a marvelous performance of Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto by 25 yr old Sa Chen of China. Must say I much prefer her playing to Lang Lang, with whom she apparently competes as a peer in the orient. How many people are in the finals..five? 6 finalists. Sa Chen is really not a competitive peer of Lang Lang. The latter has been studying in Philadelphia since 1997. Sa Chen was a peer of the brilliant Yundi Li. Chen placed 5th in the finals when Li won the Chopin Competition in 2000. Lang and Li are the two top young pianists from China, and Chen is a distant 3rd. Sound was okay, picutures also okay. Most of the time I was streaming at 300kps. Listened first on my tiny Koss headphones plugged directly into the computer. They sounded as good as they ever had. Then listened on my good Koss Pro 4aa's driven by the Onkyo 401 integrated headphone amp, which is an absolutely excellent headphone amp. Here the limitations of the stream were readily apparent, but not enough to prevent enjoyment of the music and performance. Thanks for the tip. I encourage others here to "tune in". I'm certainly glad I did, and will doubtless do it again before Sunday is over and the series ends. Here's a news article: http://news.com.com/Blogging+classic...3-5728377.html |
#8
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"Chung" wrote in message
... Harry Lavo wrote: "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Jim Cate" wrote in message ... I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Jim Thanks, Jim. I've got my new AMD Athlon XP machine outputting through my bedroom stereo, so it might be fun to stream it in and see what it sounds like. Well, Jim...I just finished listening to a marvelous performance of Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto by 25 yr old Sa Chen of China. Must say I much prefer her playing to Lang Lang, with whom she apparently competes as a peer in the orient. How many people are in the finals..five? 6 finalists. Sa Chen is really not a competitive peer of Lang Lang. The latter has been studying in Philadelphia since 1997. Sa Chen was a peer of the brilliant Yundi Li. Chen placed 5th in the finals when Li won the Chopin Competition in 2000. Lang and Li are the two top young pianists from China, and Chen is a distant 3rd. Sound was okay, picutures also okay. Most of the time I was streaming at 300kps. Listened first on my tiny Koss headphones plugged directly into the computer. They sounded as good as they ever had. Then listened on my good Koss Pro 4aa's driven by the Onkyo 401 integrated headphone amp, which is an absolutely excellent headphone amp. Here the limitations of the stream were readily apparent, but not enough to prevent enjoyment of the music and performance. Thanks for the tip. I encourage others here to "tune in". I'm certainly glad I did, and will doubtless do it again before Sunday is over and the series ends. Here's a news article: http://news.com.com/Blogging+classic...3-5728377.html Thanks, Chung. |
#9
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Chung wrote:
Harry Lavo wrote: "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... "Jim Cate" wrote in message ... I had a similar experience last week. - I spent some 50 hours listening to live piano and piano-string quartet performances at the Van Cliburn piano competition in Fort Worth. There were some great performances and great music, and it gives one a reference from which to judge the response of audio gear relative to an actual performance. (All in all, I'm still happy with the sound of my Maggie M3.6s, with sub. - Not too far from the actual concert sound at two of three locations in the hall.) Incidentally, the finals are in progress this week and can be seen and heard live in streaming video on www.cliburn.org Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. CST, in case anyone is interested. Jim Thanks, Jim. I've got my new AMD Athlon XP machine outputting through my bedroom stereo, so it might be fun to stream it in and see what it sounds like. Well, Jim...I just finished listening to a marvelous performance of Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto by 25 yr old Sa Chen of China. Must say I much prefer her playing to Lang Lang, with whom she apparently competes as a peer in the orient. How many people are in the finals..five? 6 finalists. Sa Chen is really not a competitive peer of Lang Lang. The latter has been studying in Philadelphia since 1997. Sa Chen was a peer of the brilliant Yundi Li. Chen placed 5th in the finals when Li won the Chopin Competition in 2000. Lang and Li are the two top young pianists from China, and Chen is a distant 3rd. Sound was okay, picutures also okay. Most of the time I was streaming at 300kps. Listened first on my tiny Koss headphones plugged directly into the computer. They sounded as good as they ever had. Then listened on my good Koss Pro 4aa's driven by the Onkyo 401 integrated headphone amp, which is an absolutely excellent headphone amp. Here the limitations of the stream were readily apparent, but not enough to prevent enjoyment of the music and performance. Thanks for the tip. I encourage others here to "tune in". I'm certainly glad I did, and will doubtless do it again before Sunday is over and the series ends. Here's a news article: http://news.com.com/Blogging+classic...3-5728377.html For those who have not seen Yundi Li play, here is where you can download a video clip of him playing a Chopin Scherzo: http://www.deutschegrammophon.com/ar...s?ART_ID=LIYUN It's a big file (36MB), very good quality of 1 Mbps real media video. You can also see the new approach to selling classical music: get musicians with appeal to the young generation, and package it a la MTV. |
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