Does the BBC Legelnds label still exist? I would think that the tapes are owned by the CBSO anyway (see upthread for their provenance), & they don't appear to have a record label.
Celebrating Simon Rattle: 1995 Beethoven Symphony Cycle
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostDoes the BBC Legelnds label still exist? I would think that the tapes are owned by the CBSO anyway (see upthread for their provenance), & they don't appear to have a record label.
If the CBSO wish to issue these Beethoven performances - and they should, they really should - I'm sure they have the right connections to do so."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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I found Rattle's 1995 Frankfurt account of Beethoven's 2nd rather more distinctive than his 1st...
"As per no.1" I thought as, (after a lovely, individualised flute solo in the intro) the allegro got under way, warm, swift and precise as we'd come to expect from this great team by the mid-90s; but the music-making soon seemed to burn more brightly, with a weighty, resonant wind band singing out from dashingly accented strings, and - maybe Rattle was keeping something back for the coda? Oh, you bet! It exploded with such power, brilliance and sheer joy (yet deftly recovering its poise before the end...) I could barely calm down for the andante.
This was a serene song in a sunlit meadow, poised, smiling gracefully. Not a cloud in the sky.
The scherzo played tit-for-tat and give-n-take but with a beefy punch. Then the finale had a contrasting, lighter feel, reined-in and moderately paced initially, but - the coda? I've never heard it quite so mischievously playful as this, with extremes of dynamics and tempo, daringly elongated pause and sudden attack; in the climax, those centrally-spread double basses chewing away with virtuoso, high-speed abandon!
I tend to prefer Beethoven's 1st played back towards Haydn ; but No.2 can take many approaches, and having enjoyed Gardiner's recent SDG live ORR one (superb Cadogan Hall recording, c/w No.8), I was primed to respond to Rattle's very different, but equally wonderful creation.
I just wish it was available in 24/96 resolution, like the JEG!
Fine sound, warm, dynamic & transparent to every detail, directly off the iPlayer in the small hours at 320 kbps AAC.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 22-01-15, 05:51.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostIf the CBSO wish to issue these Beethoven performances - and they should, they really should - I'm sure they have the right connections to do so.Last edited by Zucchini; 22-01-15, 13:49.
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Originally posted by Zucchini View PostMr Maddock has a complete (and magnificent) Beethoven cycle by Andris Nelsons recorded live by Orfeo and awaiting release. And it poses a tricky problem - when you're searching for a new MD maybe it's not exactly tactful to launch a major series by his immediate predecessor.
I Know, I Know, Beethoven sells .....apparently....I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Zucchini View PostMr Maddock has a complete (and magnificent) Beethoven cycle by Andris Nelsons recorded live by Orfeo and awaiting release. And it poses a tricky problem - when you're searching for a new MD maybe it's not exactly tactful to launch a major series by his immediate predecessor.
I don't see why this should be a problem as we are talking about two cycles recorded 20 years apart and Rattle's does, and I hate saying this, come under the label of 'historic' in the broadest sense of the word.
All that said, what a treat we are having this week on Radio 3. I've been looking forward with great anticipation during the day to each evening's broadcast and feel excited and enriched by what I've heard. Thanks Radio 3!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWarner's might also object?
Laurie Watt of this parish is the man to sort out this sort of tangle!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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I think that the Rachmaninoff Bells was released "purely" under the Warner label, marking the transfer of his contract. But, yes; I'm sure Laurie will be better informed.
This will be particularly pertinent if Rattle does take over at the LSO!
(Oh, and, YES! I'm finding this Beethoven cycle far more exciting than Rattle's VPO set.
Anyone else remember a South Bank Show (or similar) documentary following the even younger Rattle's very first attempt at the Eroica not long after he took up his post at Birmingham? Said then that he didn't like the metronome mark for the first movement as he thought it made the Music sound "like the keystone kops"![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Well, I'm off to bed now, but still shaking my head at the extreme, staggering brilliance of the Beethoven 4th finale in this live Rattle/CBSO cycle... how often in a lifetime does one hear an orchestra playing this well? Goodness...
Hope to say more on this later, as of the Pastoral, here a Romantic tone painting of at times heartbreaking delicacy, but with a truly barn-wrecking storm, more Caspar David Friedrich than Goethe!
Live cycles recorded across a few days can fall into the trap of interpretative uniformity, but this isn't happening here: the unique character of each symphony is being very vividly and individually realised.
And it simply must be offered as a commercial release. A CD Box, yes, but - oh go on, why not 24-bit downloads too...
(Heard directly off the iPlayer again at 320 kbps AAC.)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 23-01-15, 05:16.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWell, I'm off to bed now, but still shaking my head at the extreme, staggering brilliance of the Beethoven 4th finale in this live Rattle/CBSO cycle... how often in a lifetime does one hear an orchestra playing this well? Goodness...
(Heard directly off the iPlayer again at 320 kbps AAC.)
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostNot quite his immediate predecessor: Sakari Oramo came in between.
I would guess that the Nelsons cycle will have to be released because Orfeo must have substantial costs. The Rattle series isn't in the least bit urgent and can wait another 5-10 years if necessary.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWell, I'm off to bed now, but still shaking my head at the extreme, staggering brilliance of the Beethoven 4th finale in this live Rattle/CBSO cycle... how often in a lifetime does one hear an orchestra playing this well? Goodness...
Hope to say more on this later, as of the Pastoral, here a Romantic tone painting of at times heartbreaking delicacy, but with a truly barn-wrecking storm, more Caspar David Friedrich than Goethe!
Live cycles recorded across a few days can fall into the trap of interpretative uniformity, but this isn't happening here: the unique character of each symphony is being very vividly and individually realised.
And it simply must be offered as a commercial release. A CD Box, yes, but - oh go on, why not 24-bit downloads too...
(Heard directly off the iPlayer again at 320 kbps AAC.)
I'm sure No. 2 benefited from being the only symphony in that night's concert: a distinction it rarely has, and you can imagine the orchestra saving something for what's to come, usually, e.g. the 3rd, 5th, or 7th. You realise what a masterpiece it is, played like that (the obvious influence of Mozart's 'Prague' a positive thing, with the new symphony standing up well in the face of that great predecessor).
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