A short history of the Aldeburgh Festival and the Britten-Pears legacy, made by Lippy films in 2004. Find out more about the Festival and our other events and projects at brittenpearsarts.org/
Пікірлер: 18
@mckavitt11 жыл бұрын
I now recognise the voice, it is that of John Evans, a colleague of Donald Mitchell's, a musicologist, a professor (in the US), & a fixture at Aldeburgh & the Britten-Pears Music Centre, Library...He writes & co-writes about Britten. A real Britten expert.
@leitfie357914 жыл бұрын
Straightforwardly interesting.
@jamdo2313 жыл бұрын
@aldeburghmusic fantastic video and very well said about the sightly blinkered comments about their relationship
@222Gregorius12 жыл бұрын
The fear of being inappropriate does not necessarily mean that you are homophobic. It means that you are protecting yourself from others who ARE homophobic. The insult is that anyone should have to be afraid of talking about it, gay or straight.
@271250cl12 жыл бұрын
(Part 2!) It's impossible to understand much of BB's music without knowing about his sexuality. "Peter Grimes", "The Turn of the Screw" and "Death in Venice" were all, all sprang, in their different ways, from his deepest emotional and sexual preoccupations. Incidentally, this thing I find most hard to take about BB is how spiteful he was about Vaughan Williams! :o)
@271250cl12 жыл бұрын
Co-incidentally, I put together a short KZfaq film recently about BB and, though my effort is a little longer that this (a little shy of 9 minutes) I did feel I had a duty to mention Britten's homosexuality and - even more importantly - his lifelong preoccupation with adolescent boys. To ignore these things, even in a very short item like this, invites the sort of accusations of dishonesty which this film has attracted. (Part 2 coming up!)
@ellandelachapelle12 жыл бұрын
This speaking voice resembles the voice of Britten! By the way, did you know that Nobel Laureate 2011 poet Tomas Tranströmer´s summer house on Runmarö is called The Blue House? (I´m a friend of his.)
@mckavitt132 жыл бұрын
Britten's voice was MUCH deeper & plummy. A real basso.
@222Gregorius12 жыл бұрын
I'm not trying to imply that the people from the Aldeburgh festival are homophobic for not mentioning Britten and Pear's relationship. I'm sure they're not. But I am implying that there seems to be a reluctance to mention these things for fear of seeming inappropriate. It's not like they would have needed to go into great detail about their relationship in order to convey that they were partners - one word.
@Servatia12 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I thought: Oh God, that man sounds like him.
@bratschekind12 жыл бұрын
If a full length documentary about Britten didn't mention his personal life, I would find that strange. But a 6 minutes video? This video was made by the Aldeburgh Festival and to say that they left it out because it was a gay relationship and it's an insult to the gay community but you're not calling them homophobic? What are you saying? Btw, if's not exactly a secret that Britten way gay and I don't think anyone at the Aldeburgh Fest. has a problem with that or is trying to cover that up.
@mckavitt12 жыл бұрын
I can't hear it at all and i don't think so. Britten's voice was much deeper, a real basso voice. Also, the accent is not Britten's.
@bratschekind12 жыл бұрын
That's fine & I'm sure you don't care what I think, but looking for insults or slights where they clearly don't exist is a bit silly. The people at the Aldeburgh Festival have dedicated their lives to promoting Britten & I imagine they're pretty comfortable with his sexuality & I doubt they feel a need to protect (?) themselves from homophobes. Really what would they need to protect themselves from? He wrote fantastic music & I don't think anyone is bothered that he was gay. Have a great day
@222Gregorius13 жыл бұрын
It was a good documentary but leaving out the nature of their relationship was an insult to their memories and to the gay community. If they were man and women it would have been mentioned.
@Nai61a13 жыл бұрын
Not a single mention of the nature of the relationship between Britten and Pears which was central to both their lives. Shame on you.