Dave Royko
http://www.davidroyko.com is Dave Royko's site for info about:
My book "Voices of Children of Divorce" (St. Martin's Press);
Some of my music reviews & features (Chgo Trib and elsewhere);
Our Ben stories (Autism); The CSO "From The Archives" index;
The Mike Royko letters ("Royko In Love"); and plenty of Etc.
I couldn't agree more, frankly. A lot of terms come to mind when I
think of my negative reactions to her reviews, but her review of the
Pristine Audio CD of Mengelberg's Mahler 4th encapsulated the foolish
naivete, even fraud, that seemed to infuse them. I wrote about it here
last year (perhaps). To recapitulate briefly, she began her review by
writing that she'd always heard about Mengelberg's Mahler 4, but had
never heard the recording or performance before the Pristine CD. She
then went into verbose raptures about the symphony and performance.
Fine. But at the end of the immensely long review, she not only went
into raptures about the sound of the Pristine CD, but stated how it
was superior to all previous releases. She even listed the sonic
reasons why it was. But she'd said at the beginning of the review that
she'd never heard any of the previous releases. One wonders where
she'd read why and how superior the Pristine transfer was, of course.
I knew then that Ms Bayley was a sad, even foolish excuse for a
reviewer with any qualifications. Good riddance from me, too.
Don Tait
her posts in the Yahoo Toscanini group shows her to be a total phony.
I guess 2 bucks per review doesn't buy what it used to
Abbedd
I am totaly shocked, Don.
Out of your own mouth(pen) negative words about another human being.
Are you sure you don't want to delete this, Don?
TD
No.
Don Tait
Bob Harper
To state it better, yes, I'm sure.
Don Tait
I agree. I read a few of her reviews and was very negatively
impressed.
Don usually prefers to remain silent rather than to spew negative
comments.
Perhaps you didn't notice this nice distinction, Bob, as you are so
accustomed to the practise yourself.
TD
They all have feet of clay.
I am totally shattered.
TD
Why should you be "impressed" with a review in the first place? Either
she made her points or she didn't. Either you accepted those points or
you didn't. Neither really matters all that much, I would say, in the
scheme of things today. Most reviews are entirely dispensible, whether
or not one agrees or disagrees. Moreover, usually the disagreement
comes without even having the experience of the thing being reviewed,
a new book or CD, for example.
Fanfare is almost a complete waste of time, and of Canadian paper, I
think. Very few reviewers in that publication have any stature in the
music community. Covers and articles are bought and sold like chewing
gum. The writers are paid pennies. The editor doesn't bother to edit.
And so on. It is, indeed, a joke. That this woman did or didn't please
you or anyone else is neither here nor there.
What disturbs me more is that this woman, Lynn Rene Bayley, has
elicited the first negative comments from Don Tait, a man who I
thought stood above the fray, out of the mud-slinging that passes for
commentary in much of this forum.
As I said, I am totally shattered. But certainly not by Mlle Bayley,
who is just a reviewer anyway.
TD
And how is your all-too-common dismissal of other peoples' opinions
different?
In their frequency? BTW shouldn't that be "a man 'whom'"?
bl
No different at all.
My comments are utterly dispensible, Bob. You should know that. LIfe
is too short to take anyone's opinions seriously but one's own.
TD
Sorry, that's Bill, not Bob.
TD
How can "whom" be the subject of "stood above the fray".
An object as subject?
TD
You're right; I was distracted by the 'I thought'. (Inference not
intended.)
bl
Bob Harper
I agree also. I recall a review she wrote of some large Handel work
or other where she referred to one of the oratorios, I think Semele,
as an opera ! She seemed totally out of her expertise in this area
of classical music. From another review, she wrote about seeing
someone in concert way back in the 50s or 60s or something like that.
I inferred from that that she is must be in her late 50s or older, but
who knows, maybe she made up that story also.
Alan Prichard
The path to Hell is paved with good intentions, Bob. Sorry to
disillusion you.
TD
Bob Harper
Always, Bob. And you?
TD
> I agree also. I recall a review she wrote of some large Handel work or
> other where she referred to one of the oratorios, I think Semele, as an
> opera! She seemed totally out of her expertise in this area of classical
> music. From another review, she wrote about seeing someone in concert way
> back in the 50s or 60s or something like that. I inferred from that that
> she is must be in her late 50s or older, but who knows, maybe she made up
> that story also.
She doesn't live on the Isle of Man, by any chance...?
--
Matthew B. Tepper: WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
Read about "Proty" here: http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/proty.html
To write to me, do for my address what Androcles did for the lion
Opinions expressed here are not necessarily those of my employers
> Handel8 <ala...@nycap.rr.com> appears to have caused the following letters to
> be typed in news:533218a4-7bec-44e5-831d-
> d9a261...@b2g2000yqi.googlegroups.com:
>
> > I agree also. I recall a review she wrote of some large Handel work or
> > other where she referred to one of the oratorios, I think Semele, as an
> > opera! She seemed totally out of her expertise in this area of classical
> > music. From another review, she wrote about seeing someone in concert way
> > back in the 50s or 60s or something like that. I inferred from that that
> > she is must be in her late 50s or older, but who knows, maybe she made up
> > that story also.
>
> She doesn't live on the Isle of Man, by any chance...?
People were confusing her with popster Corinne Bailey Rae.
Stephen
Bob Harper
> She doesn't live on the Isle of Man, by any chance...?
In the 60s, Ralph Bakshi had a crappy cartoon series called 'The Mighty
Heroes," complete with unfunny writing, weak animation, and about a
minute of shtick where they change into costume that was used in every
single show. The characters were something like Cuckoo Man, Hurricane
Man, Diaper Man, Rope Man, and one other. A complete and utter waste of
time.
But it all became worthwhile when they made a guest appearance on
Bakshi's "Mighty Mouse" TV revival just for the sake of their having a
CPA firm called "Man, Man, Man, Man, and Man."
Not that this would induce me to watch their old cartoons again, of course.
Kip W
The "Ralph Bakshi" revival of "Mighty Mouse" was largely the brainchild of
John Kricfalusi, a/k/a John K., who is also known as the mad genius behind
"Ren and Stimpy." I was once introduced to him at Coral Caf� in Burbank,
where he and a bunch of Warner Bros. regulars occasionally hang out.
> The "Ralph Bakshi" revival of "Mighty Mouse" was largely the brainchild of
> John Kricfalusi, a/k/a John K., who is also known as the mad genius behind
> "Ren and Stimpy." I was once introduced to him at Coral Caf� in Burbank,
> where he and a bunch of Warner Bros. regulars occasionally hang out.
Well, yes, but Ralph's name was officially on it. He even directed some
individual cartoons, just to prove that he was still wretched.
Kricfalusi's work on the Beany & Cecil revival was less impressive.
Oddly enough, my favorite cartoon in the series, indeed, one of my
favorite television cartoons period, was done the season after John K
left the show: "Don't Touch That Dial," directed by Kent Butterworth.
("Aw, this show has no Prosocial Values!")
Kip W