The Digital Concert Hall
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Guest repliedI keep trying to download the flash player latest needed. I then find I can't register on their silly site, and it tells me I need the flash player. Stupid technology does not work. I give up. back to good old CD's and DVD's.
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Guest repliedA rare and extensive selection of concerts, operas, ballets, documentaries and master classes. Exclusive events streamed live on medici.tv, available afterwards on replay.
I have to say it takes some getting use to! I preefare the iPhone app but streaming via apple tv doesn't seem to work on it.
Youll have to upgrade your flash player. When you start playing a concert if you put it in full screen all the writing etc will disappear after a while. I've plugged the laptop into tv via hdmi. Looks stunning on my tv and sound is great.
You need an account but it's free and there's alot of free concerts on there, I might take out a subscription eventually once I get more use to it.
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I had been very tempted to sign up for this, having seen Semyon Bychkov make the Alpine Symphony sound like the masterpiece which it isn't, so the above comments have made me glad that I didn't. And I share Cellini's aversion to the 'trailer'. While I suppose one could close one's eyes, it kind of makes it all a bit pointless. As I type, I am listening to Andris Nelson's Pathetique streamed vis the Concertgebouw's internet radio station. Now that is in excellent sound (320 kbps), it's free and one can happen upon some wonderful performances. That, alas, is also one of its downsides - the seeming random-ness of the programming can be a bit disconcerting and the fade-in over the end of the previous work, presumably to stop illicit copying, can get a bit grating. But, to be able to listen to such a wonderful orchestra in its glorious home at the click of a mouse seems pretty good to me.
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Guest repliedMedici
Originally posted by Threni View PostI'm having lots of fun on Medici now I have discovered it. Mozart requiem at moment, very nice :-)
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Guest repliedI'm having lots of fun on Medici now I have discovered it. Mozart requiem at moment, very nice :-)
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Originally posted by Spatny View PostHmm unable to login with this message ---
We're very sorry
The website is slow
We're experiencing a lot of demand at the moment.
Please be patient and refresh this page. Thank you.
Won't be bothering again.
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Guest repliedHmm unable to login with this message ---
We're very sorry
The website is slow
We're experiencing a lot of demand at the moment.
Please be patient and refresh this page. Thank you.
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Guest repliedI tried their test video and (1) it was all out of sync and (2) I could not stomach all those sick making close ups of Rattle. So I think its out for me.
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i think it is a brilliant idea, partly for salymap's reasons but also because the jazz audience is small and dispersed, and it could provide a wonderful access to the new young jazz ensembles across the globe who will get few opportunities for live performances in the uk
the potential for this approach to enable access to music making in many different domains is stunning - schools, choirs, colleges to pick the obvious ... much better than amateur videos on youtube eh ....
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Guest repliedOriginally posted by Petrushka View PostAs for recording it I will resort to the headphone jack-to-phono cable-into-my-DVD-hard-drive solution and capture the audio only. I think the best thing you can do, Uncle Monty, short of cancelling all your engagements tomorrow night is to carch it on the archive in a few days time.
I'm sure my conductor tonight would love it if I emailed him to say, "Sorry, can't do the concert, I've got to watch the computer"
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Originally posted by Uncle Monty View PostI'm very strongly tempted to shell out to watch tomorrow evening's Mahler 3 from Berlin, but -- just a small problem -- I won't be here!
(Goes into spiv mode, whispering behind hand)
Anyone found a way to download the concerts on the BPO DCH site?! Using the free stream of Rattle rehearsing a splendid youth orchestra, I've hit it with every bit of technology I possess, but it won't have it
Wireshark and Hidownloader don't seem to touch it. It looks to me as if it's not a stream in the normal sense, but what sort of protocols are operating here, I don't know.
I hate to be beaten by these things :cool2:
As for recording it I will resort to the headphone jack-to-phono cable-into-my-DVD-hard-drive solution and capture the audio only. I think the best thing you can do, Uncle Monty, short of cancelling all your engagements tomorrow night is to carch it on the archive in a few days time.
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Guest repliedI'm very strongly tempted to shell out to watch tomorrow evening's Mahler 3 from Berlin, but -- just a small problem -- I won't be here!
(Goes into spiv mode, whispering behind hand)
Anyone found a way to download the concerts on the BPO DCH site?! Using the free stream of Rattle rehearsing a splendid youth orchestra, I've hit it with every bit of technology I possess, but it won't have it
Wireshark and Hidownloader don't seem to touch it. It looks to me as if it's not a stream in the normal sense, but what sort of protocols are operating here, I don't know.
I hate to be beaten by these things :cool2:
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Guest repliedDigital HD
I haven't bothered to register here since the BBC3 Messageboard closed, but have been lurking from time to time. This topic prompted me to finally register. Thanks, Mahlerei, for posting this, which is something I've been flogging for several years on the now-deceased board as well as in various messages to BBC management, etc., thus far to no effect. I too have investigated the BPO web site and watched/listened to some of their samples, as well as the Metropolitan Opera, who have a similar system. Although I've been tempted to subscribe to one or the other I haven't done so yet, but it's very possible that I will eventually give it a try. I've had season tickets to my local Philharmonic Orchestra for more than 20 years and plan to continue attending for as long as possible, but as has been pointed out in this thread, time is marching on, and there will come a time when I am unable and/or unwilling to deal with the traffic and inconvenience of parking, etc., and that is when I expect to take advantages of the opportunities described here.
If BBC3 were to offer a similar audio/video HD service that would be available to foreigners like me, even just for the Proms, here is one listener who would jump at the chance, and I strongly suspect that the response from around the world would bring a huge amount of much-needed cash into their coffers. I hope that someday before it's too late for me that they will do so, but for my part I have no interest in listening to a 48 kbps feed when there are so many more 128, 256 and 320 kbps options available. I cannot but believe that they are missing a great opportunity by failing to do so.
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Guest repliedOriginally posted by Mahlerei View PostWell, flossie, I'm sorry you're so sniffy about all this. I only posted this link because I felt it was worth sharing. Obviously I was wrong.
BTW, during the interval do you ever dash to the bar for a drink or to the loo for a pee? Or do you sit alone in your seat, legs tightly crossed, soaking up the 'live' atmosphere?
Jeez, some people.
"A point that no-one has raised is that we all get too old or infirm to get to live concerts, I know that from personal experience. I don't have the spare cash or wish to try this new thing, good luck to those who do have both"
I think this is quite legit. But when it is possible to get there it is nice to soak up the atmosphere which is often that of high expectations and electryfying excitement (which of course often causes a need for the loo in the interval).
As mentioned elswhere a very good friend joined us in a concert only the other night and commented on how attentive and knowledgeable the audience was, and this was coming from a professional musician who has been playing live to audiences for about 40+ years. On this occasion we got there early and had a drink before the concert. All part of the wonderful expierence of concert going which I have been doing for over 55 years (since I was 6 months old).
Yes, it is great to have audio/visual opportunities which are very high quality - but the live element is very important too. And I think performers can only be judged accurately on their live concerts - and not on CD's and Videos where too much "improvement" can be added or arranged too easily.
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A point that no-one has raised is that we all get too old or infirm to get to live concerts, I know that from personal experience. I don't have the spare cash or wish to try this new thing, good luck to those who do have both.
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