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Date: | Sat, 12 Feb 2000 17:15:40 -0500 |
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Richard Pennycuick writes:
>...Felix Draeseke (1835-1913) ....played by the Wuppertal Symphony which
>is hardly a world- renowned outfit, but we've got used to good performances
>from lesser-known orchestras.Perhaps Denis or another lister who lives in
>Germany knows a little more about the music or the orchestra or both?
I'm glad Barry Brenesal beat me answering this one because I would have
had to have recourse to my music encyclopaedia. I own not a single
recording by Draeseke, and haven't heard one even on the radio in years.
As I remember his sound, it's of a style of its own, but rooted in the
Romantic tradition. The firm of Musik Dabringhaus & Grimm (MDG), despite
its lawyerish name is legit music. As for the Wuppertal orchestra, it's
not to be sneezed at, but distinctly provincial. The last time I looked,
and that was long ago, I recognized some names familiar from work in some
serious and well-known groups in Cologne. The orchestra used to be
generously endowed by the government of the Land Northrhine-Westphalia and
by the DGB, the Federation of German Labor--in the cause of Ruhr Kultur.
Maybe it still is. It used to play regularly in various auditoria in the
Ruhr and at summer festivals in the region. But I must admit that I
haven't followed it lately, and never closely.
Denis Fodor Internet:[log in to unmask]
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