Re: New MP2 encoder test "results"



In message <+of80YHD3nxEFw35@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
tony sayer <tony@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

In article <d4f7184c4e.usenet@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Richard L
<usenet@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes
In message <1hj1ahg.12f1pnmrc31gN%giuseppe.dm@xxxxxxxxx>
giuseppe.dm@xxxxxxxxx (Giuseppe) wrote:

The fans of "museum music" are the typical classical fans, listening
almost exclusively to music that's over 100 years old.

...which shows how much _you_ know. Take a look at what's in this
week's Proms and you may be surprised at the large amount of music
that's much less than 100 years old.


Yep like Belshazzers feast composed in 1931 and sounds very modern and
Jazzy in parts and I'm sure a few film composers were influenced by that
in parts, and last Sunday nites prom managed to pack the Albert hall and
they were a few museum pieces around in the audience but everyone
standing didn't look that old.

Fantastic performance all the same, despite the heat!!!.

So if you were in there, Tony, you won't have wondered why the
presenter of the interval talk on R3 pronounced Belshazzar throughout
with the stress on the final syllable -- despite all her contributors
pronouncing it in the ordinary way. Maybe the heat is getting to them.
Last night's announcer kept referring to "L'elisir d'Amor" instead of
"L'elisir d'Amore" and also came out with GraNAdos. 'Twould not have
happened in Cormac Rigby's time.

--
Richard L.
.