A local reviewer wrote in the newspaper that the popular Tchaikovsky piano concerto was the audience's reward for sitting through the baleful and turgid Prokofiev Third Symphony. Other words he used to describe poor Prokofiev's music were vehement, hysterical, muddy, and sheer unrestrained violence. Also rebarbative. Well, he made up that word. But baleful we should use more often. It means: something that is menacing or foreshadows evil. As in, a baleful look.
But soon it was over, and Hough was on the stage. I've never been to a performance of Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto when the audience didn't jump up at the end for a standing ovation. In Seattle, they usually they clap after the first movement, too. Everyone loves it and the melodies are so familiar.
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It was a nice afternoon, marred only by the automated parking machine that charged John $9.58 and refused to give him a receipt. It was one of those November days where it feels like a gray, cold blanket is wrapped around Seattle. You couldn't even see across Elliot Bay. Goodness, it felt good to get safely home through the murk, open the wine and eat pasta and meatballs for dinner.
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