Benjamin Britten in London - 27 November, 1930
from Diary of Benjamin Britten, Nov 27 1930, page 57:
Practice Pft afternoon, no Madrigals write letters bet. tea & early din. Go to Philharmonic concert. Ov. Schwanda amusing. Rubenstein in Brahms concerto no. 2. He is really superb. His playing & the heavenly music makes me feel absolutely hopeless. After that the Schubert 7th symphony, disappointing although it's vandal to say so; this symph annoys me with its ceaseless repetitions. Beautiful in parts but 1000 times too long. Orchestra not too good, but L Goossens adorable; the man's a marvel. Back at 10.55. Hendersons out to theatre.
cite as
Benjamin Britten, Diary of Benjamin Britten, Nov 27 1930. In John Evans (ed.), Journeying boy : the diaries of the young Benjamin Britten 1928-1938 (:London), p. 57. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1396015554694 accessed: 30 October, 2024
Listeners
Listening to
hide composers
Concerto No. 2
written by Brahms |
performed by Nikolai Rubinstein |
Polka and Fugue from Weinberger's fantasy opera, Schwanda the Bagpiper.
written by JaromÃr Weinberger |
|
Symphony No. 9
written by Franz Schubert, Beethoven |
Experience Information
Date/Time | 27 November, 1930 |
Medium | live |
Listening Environment | in the company of others, indoors, in public |
Notes
Britten refers here to the 'Great' C major Symphony of Schubert, D944, finished in 1826 and now numbered as the Ninth, but commonly referred to at this time as the Seventh, before the modern renumbering of the symphonies took into account the incomplete E major Symphony, D729, (sketched in 1821 and chronologically the seventh of the series), and the B minor 'Unfinished' Symphony, D759, dating from 1822.
Originally submitted by Simon Brown on Fri, 28 Mar 2014 14:05:55 +0000