Comments

From Linda Lerskier
Posted from 24.189.238.186 on September 20, 2006 at 6:17 PM (GMT)
AHH! French horn!
From bill Pratt
Posted from 208.164.50.154 on September 20, 2006 at 10:44 PM (GMT)
Hey, that looks like the violin Kevin got from John Thornton!
From Emily Grossman
Posted from 209.112.220.164 on September 21, 2006 at 4:50 AM (GMT)
What, are they suspended in blue jello?

Hmm. I have an idea.

From Pauline Lerner
Posted from 70.108.125.168 on September 21, 2006 at 9:41 AM (GMT)
Those are good pics, Bram. The Concertgebouw, like many old concert halls in Europe, is well known for good acoustics. What are the acoustics like in the watery concert hall? Since I don't care much for contemporary music, I think it's entirely appropriate to have a smaller concert hall for it.
From Bram Heemskerk
Posted from 84.246.30.146 on September 21, 2006 at 10:33 AM (GMT)
Hi Pauline,The first 2 pics I copied from the website of the watery concerthall, the last 3 pics are scans from the scanner of my work, I make during the lunch-break. The acoustic of this modern hall is very good, as I remember, and the knowledge about to make the akoustic of a hall better have been improved the last years because of more research and modern techniques. Neverthelees the akoustic of the Concerthall, and old hall, is also very good. Carla Leurs even consider it better than Carnegy Hall. I have played in Rudolphium in Prague, Czech Republik. It was half full, but it had the akoustic of an old church with a too long reverbaration, although it is beautiful for the end-chord of an orchestra with a choir, because the last note sounds a lot longer than normally.
They also play older classical music in the watery hall, I see on the site, like a lunch-concert without paying (like in the Concertgebouw with Carla Leurs)
A stringtrio plays:
Ludwig van Beethoven Strijktrio nr. 1 in Es, opus 3

Z. Kodály Intermezzo

E. Dohnányi Serenade, op. 10