Unsung Composers

The Music => Recordings & Broadcasts => Topic started by: mikehopf on Thursday 05 July 2018, 23:57

Title: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: mikehopf on Thursday 05 July 2018, 23:57
Ernest Pingoud was a Finnish composer 1887 - 1942 who , like Goring Thomas and Mme Bovary, threw himself under a train.

On Lithuanian Radio LRT Klasika on Sunday night


SPECIAL PROGRAM: Pasaulio koncertų salėse. Suomijos radijo simfoninio orkestro koncertas Helsinkyje. Solistė G. Schultz (sopranas). Diriguoja J. Storgårds. Programoje E. Pingoudo ,,Didmiesčio veidas", W.A. Mozarto arijos ir J. Adamso ,,City Noir". (2 hrs.)

NB I'm behaving myself... no jokes about penguins!
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: mikehopf on Friday 06 July 2018, 00:04
Erratum: Anna Karenina not Emma Bovary
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: eschiss1 on Friday 06 July 2018, 00:33
Pangolins would seem more a propos anyway. Auk!
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: JimL on Friday 06 July 2018, 01:23
Wasn't Pingoud a bit on the avant-garde side for this forum's remit? At least towards the end of his career, IIRC.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: mikehopf on Friday 06 July 2018, 08:27
I think that this is the work that is being broadcast:


Pingoud's last two works La face d'une grande ville and La flamme éternelle were heard in Helsinki at the end of the 19305. La face d'une grande ville is the first Finnish example of urban industrial romanticism. The seven movements are The Forgotten Street, Factories, Monuments and Fountains, Neon Lights, The Procession of the Unemployed, Unsleeping Houses, and Thee Dialogue of the Street Lights and the Morning Glow. The Forgotten Street paints an impressive picture of the silent, empty streets of the sleeping city. In Factories the machines pound away as a bruitist ostinato. Even more intensive are the repeated throbbing rhythmic figures in Neon Lights, where the performers are given the directions "sempre automaticamente". The grim passage of the unemployed is written as a Mahler-like funeral march. Unsleeping Houses features two dances, an oriental tango and a slow waltz. The movement ends with a piano solo, summoning up visions of a tired jazz improvisation in a smoky restaurant around closing-time.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: Alan Howe on Friday 06 July 2018, 08:39
Just a gentle reminder: it's best to run posts such as this past the moderators first...
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: M. Yaskovsky on Friday 06 July 2018, 10:23
Avant garde, modernistic or not, I hope a commercial recording will be made!
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: Gareth Vaughan on Friday 06 July 2018, 10:38
Just listened to this work on YouTube. I think it's very much within our remit - and, incidentally, very beautiful (IMHO). I too hope a commercial recording will be made.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: M. Yaskovsky on Friday 06 July 2018, 13:17
Robert Enke R.I.P.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: Alan Howe on Friday 06 July 2018, 17:34
Thanks, Gareth, for your 'steer'. Could you supply a link to the performance, please? Thanks!
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: Gareth Vaughan on Sunday 08 July 2018, 12:43
Certainly (sorry it's taken a little time) - here you are: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzfO4E03Ino (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzfO4E03Ino)
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: FBerwald on Sunday 08 July 2018, 13:33
Never heard of this composer so I looked him up and the stunning 2nd Piano Concerto is imho a must-hear!
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: Gareth Vaughan on Sunday 08 July 2018, 14:49
I agree. It's really lovely.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: eschiss1 on Sunday 08 July 2018, 15:39
We used to have his La face d'une grande ville (1936-37) (uploaded 2011) in our old downloads section, (haven't checked the link to make sure it still works...) so don't forget to include looking him up within this site (which Google won't catch.)

note: which it doesn't. sigh. YouTube has it, though, from a link that's equally 7 years old, coincidentally he jokes.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: Gareth Vaughan on Sunday 08 July 2018, 17:56
Yes. That's the link I posted above.
Title: Re: Pingoud: Didmiescio
Post by: eschiss1 on Monday 09 July 2018, 00:44
Ah. Sorry about that- right.