Ok, at the risk of sounding like a heretic, I wanted to put this out there -- Would it really be so blaphemous and terrible to put on a Nineth concert with the Ode to Joy in ENGLISH? I'm sure it's feasible given the familiarity of this work with so many musicians. Has no one attempted it?
Or what about this even -- have a backdrop screen show each word of the Nineth as its sung (whether in German with Translation or straight English). You can think of it as a kind of Grand "Karaoke" screen with the words being easy to follow by the audience.
All this certainly goes against convention (just one more "lunatic" idea for the "Beethoven World Tour"), but the fact is most people do not even know a single phrase from B's arrangement of Schiller's "Ode to Joy." Would it really be so bad to try something that would bring his music closer to lay-people -- pique their interest and understanding? After all, how many concert-goers really bother to bother with a densely-written program? Not to mention the fact that many programs these days are terribly written -- at least that's the case here in San Diego. I think we all know how distracting it is to have to figure out a program while listening to music at the same time. The kind of back-drop screen I'm talking about would remove the problem entirely. (Not to mention that it would show CLOSE-UPS of conductor/players and display CGI effects and so on...)
Speaking for myself, the difference between knowing what the words meant and not knowing them was huge. As an adult I now revel in how Beethoven pulled off his musical arrangement, simply sublime! -- when I was younger I still loved it but had NO idea what exactly was being said or repeated or emphasized.
Or what about this even -- have a backdrop screen show each word of the Nineth as its sung (whether in German with Translation or straight English). You can think of it as a kind of Grand "Karaoke" screen with the words being easy to follow by the audience.
All this certainly goes against convention (just one more "lunatic" idea for the "Beethoven World Tour"), but the fact is most people do not even know a single phrase from B's arrangement of Schiller's "Ode to Joy." Would it really be so bad to try something that would bring his music closer to lay-people -- pique their interest and understanding? After all, how many concert-goers really bother to bother with a densely-written program? Not to mention the fact that many programs these days are terribly written -- at least that's the case here in San Diego. I think we all know how distracting it is to have to figure out a program while listening to music at the same time. The kind of back-drop screen I'm talking about would remove the problem entirely. (Not to mention that it would show CLOSE-UPS of conductor/players and display CGI effects and so on...)
Speaking for myself, the difference between knowing what the words meant and not knowing them was huge. As an adult I now revel in how Beethoven pulled off his musical arrangement, simply sublime! -- when I was younger I still loved it but had NO idea what exactly was being said or repeated or emphasized.
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