Elisabeth Schwarzkopf singt Ich hab' in Penna
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Oh, indeed....But I appreciate how she turned toward the pianist as she would say :"If they are not listening, I am listening, and I am very sad that they behave like this". She behaved as she was embarrassed by the insensitive reaction of the people. She took no pride in it...It's normal, thought today maybe not so much so.
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@Lieder83 ... and it shows complete ignorance for the music and the composer's idea.
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What is even worse is how eager they are to applaud such awful singing.
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@Emlomor Yes, I agree. It just shows how unbelievably ignorant the masses are of the music! Absolutely rude for the pianist in this piece with the brilliant ending.
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All the work the pianist put into the tricky postlude and NO ONE COULD HEAR IT...at least Schwarzkopf was very sympathetic.
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It's so disturbing when the audience is of such level that automatically they believe the song has finished when the singer shuts up. The ending of this Lied is so difficult and so stressful to play, and NO ONE heard a note of the piano. Astonishing, and frustrating.
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does it matter? she is making music!
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Nope. There's a quarter rest in the bar before the A. But I know what you mean. I'm performing this piece in April and I often feel like I'm "late", but it's just the fast pace and lots of words in short amounts of time. lol
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was she late because of that breath before the last high note?
I hate when the people applauses before the ending of piece!!
It ' very ugly for the pianist!
Lieder83 3 years ago 14
Yes !! Especially in this Lied with a brillant ending by the piano...
Emlomor 3 years ago 7