The critics over there are the same worth as over here:
NOTHING. (very few exceptions producing a constructive
critic.)
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Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2006 4:43 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Interesting horn reference


The following was excerpted from a review of a performance
of Shostakovich's 7th Symphony by one the Juilliard School's
orchestras (presumably their A-team, though this is not
specified):


This anonymous percussionist toiled away in the middle of
the back row, with one timpanist on either side for
punctuation. But at one point, when the strings had achieved
close to maximum crescendo, a set of four previously hidden
battery mates stood with the precision of an Air Force drill
team. Like the horns standing at the end of Mahler's First
Symphony, this was a thrilling effect.


For once, a critic (Fred Kirshnit) gets it. It's all visual
and it is exciting (I would use a different adjective -
unnerving, most prominently - from my perspective as a
player remembering numerous times that I have played the
piece [Mahler, that is]) though there is no discernible
difference from perspective of audibility. I have been
thinking a lot lately about my relationship with music,
performance, recordings and concerts and how they relate to
each other and this little example is further food for
thought.


Peter Hirsch

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