Stokowski interviewed by Deryck Cooke (1965)

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 7

  • @adam28xx
    @adam28xx  17 дней назад

    This interview is included in a 6CD 'BBC Legends' Box recently issued by ICA Classics. It features 'live' broadcasts by Stokowski that include several great symphonies, starting with Mahler's 2nd "Resurrection," and various works by Beethoven, Brahms, Berlioz, Britten, Falla, Franck, Klemperer, Novacek, Prokofiev, Ravel, Shostakovich and Vaughan Williams. These concert performances show Stokowski at his best, so click this link for the set's full details ... ICA Classics ICAB 5180 -
    ruclips.net/video/yl96Kv0XPvI/видео.html

  • @johninman7545
    @johninman7545 2 дня назад

    OMG ABBEY ROAD!

  • @tedatwork2343
    @tedatwork2343 Год назад

    Love the way you've illustrated their conversation with photos of the people and places discussed.
    Dunno if you have an upload of that Mahler premier, but if you do you ought to link it in this video's description.

    • @Gorboduc
      @Gorboduc Год назад

      Stokowski's premier of Mahler 8 was in February of 1916, so there are a few photos but alas no recording.

  • @antoniboleslawowicz8095
    @antoniboleslawowicz8095 5 лет назад +3

    Stokowski was wrong about one thing: “I don’t have much mind.” He had a very agile mind which served him very well over many years. But he is right that people generally do not listen much and talk too much -- truer today than even in 1965. His affinity for Mahler, too. He did, luckily, make a superb recording (with the LSO) of Mahler No. 2 toward the end of his life. He has some great insight into Carl Nielsen, too. Stokowski is a truly “representative man” (in the Emersonian sense) of the first half of the twentieth century. In my views, that was perhaps the most colorful and unusually diverse period of creative music-making. Stokowski may not have been a composer, but he understood creative musicians.

    • @paullewis2413
      @paullewis2413 5 лет назад +2

      For obvious reasons we no longer have people who had direct links with the great 19th/early 20th c. composers. Leopold Stokowski was one of the last of those and I feel privileged that as a very young man I saw him in London in the late 60`s, I think it was the Philharmonia orchestra but can`t be sure. Interesting he should have been an admirer of Nielsen at a time when he was seldom heard, one of my favourite symphonic composers!

    • @johninman7545
      @johninman7545 2 дня назад

      The Irish say self praise is no praise