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Author Topic: Howdy do, Fitzwilliam!  (Read 468 times)
richard barrett
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« Reply #15 on: 11:52:40, 10-09-2007 »

I think you'll find that, though there is a new work by quartertone in that festival, it doesn't form part of Ian's recital.
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time_is_now
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« Reply #16 on: 12:23:23, 10-09-2007 »

Yes, I did think I remembered Ian saying he wasn't one of the pianists in qt's new piece.

I still think it would be funny if quartertone was Horatio Radulescu.


PS We should add that the Festival isn't for another few weeks (Ian's recital is on the 27th, according to Bryn's link). Which takes it into birthday territory for me.
« Last Edit: 12:30:34, 10-09-2007 by time_is_now » Logged

The city is a process which always veers away from the form envisaged and desired, ... whose revenge upon its architects and planners undoes every dream of mastery. It is [also] one of the sites where Dasein is assigned the impossible task of putting right what can never be put right. - Rob Lapsley
increpatio
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« Reply #17 on: 13:52:01, 10-09-2007 »

Warmest welcomes Fitzwilliam!
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Ian Pace
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« Reply #18 on: 17:16:51, 10-09-2007 »

and do let us know if both grab you at the same moment.

In an off-topic sort of way I notice that Ian has not been seen lately in these here parts. I hope he is well and is being grabbed by a nice something somewhere.

Ian is back (which may not be welcomed by everyone!), been away in Germany for the last week-and-a-bit recording and rehearsing. Leuven festival is late next month (I have several other concerts and recordings before then, as well as my book to finish, so probably won't be so active on here) - the new pieces are by Horatiu Radulescu, Gordon Downie and Bert Van Herck, as well as Richard's lost (which was commissioned by TRANSIT three years ago). The piece by qt is in another concert, with members of Ensemble SurPlus. Whether or not one wants to hear either of these concerts, I recommend this festival in general - it's got a really distinctive flavour under the programming of Mark Delaere, far from being yet another festival that features the same pieces and performers that are doing the rounds everywhere else.

And welcome Fitzwilliam!
« Last Edit: 17:53:02, 10-09-2007 by Ian Pace » Logged

'These acts of keeping politics out of music, however, do not prevent musicology from being a political act . . .they assure that every apolitical act assumes a greater political immediacy' - Philip Bohlman, 'Musicology as a Political Act'
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