Bunnyears
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2004
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Quote:
Yes, that is it precisely; they are sooo fast!
I don't mind the speed in the general sense so much except that it all begins to blur together after a while. Details go by so quickly that as soon as I notice something, it's gone. I actually prefer the faster tempos to the slower ones; as a comparison I put on Goebel's Brandenburgs and they seemed to creep at snail's pace. It was the same feeling that I get after I get off a highway where I've been doing 65 or 70 mph (trying to observe speed limits
) and then have to drive through a town at 30 mph. The traffic seems exaggeratedly slow and I feel as if the roads are still moving after I've rolled to a stop. I agree that for Fasolis it is quite a tour de force. His fingers are working so hard and fast in the trills, that they really do become a blur.
Have you had occasion to hear the recording? I read on some website when searching for the best price for the cds that despite being in SACD, the sound quality is not particularly great. That would be a great pity, as these are some or the most fun Brandenburg's I've heard.
Meanwhile, have you managed to download them onto your laptop? I've not figured out how to burn them from the video files nor how to put them as a video on my ipod, which is a great pity.
And the files are unprotected, too.
Originally Posted by Masolino /img/forum/go_quote.gif Dear Bunnyears, But I love it...! Particularly when I saw DF end his long cadenza in concerto V with a flourish/glissando, I couldn't but think this is one the most iconoclastic/fun interpretations of the piece that I know of. Same thing about his choice of generally fast tempi. I don't think I really understand it when you say, "as soon as music gets interesting, it's over." Perhaps you use it only as a metaphor, meaning you think it is too fast? To me, the music IS interesting right from the start, and faster tempi only make me listen more keenly to what is happening. Take MAK's pioneering "fast" Brandenburgs for example. People used to complain loudly about its "lack of breath" due to the "breakneck" tempi used, but that seems to have changed over the years. I now see in internet forums and online reviews far more positive responses than negative ones about Goebel's set. What happened? Maybe people have finally "got it." I think it's a bit like doing (musical) aerobics, in which breathing does get easier as one gradually sets into the exercise routine. ![]() |
Yes, that is it precisely; they are sooo fast!
I don't mind the speed in the general sense so much except that it all begins to blur together after a while. Details go by so quickly that as soon as I notice something, it's gone. I actually prefer the faster tempos to the slower ones; as a comparison I put on Goebel's Brandenburgs and they seemed to creep at snail's pace. It was the same feeling that I get after I get off a highway where I've been doing 65 or 70 mph (trying to observe speed limits

Have you had occasion to hear the recording? I read on some website when searching for the best price for the cds that despite being in SACD, the sound quality is not particularly great. That would be a great pity, as these are some or the most fun Brandenburg's I've heard.
Meanwhile, have you managed to download them onto your laptop? I've not figured out how to burn them from the video files nor how to put them as a video on my ipod, which is a great pity.
