Last week, I picked up his NBC Brahms Symphonies/assorted bits and pieces: the performances impress with their clarity and dynamism and the early remastering obviously did wonders with the very dry original sound of these recordings.
But Toscanini is no longer a name to drop, it would seem. Thirty or so years ago, he was still acknowledged by many as THE conductor of the 20th century....even twenty years ago, I can recall him being mentioned in the same breath as Furtwangler (his long-standing rival)....but nowadays, he seems to be dismissed by many as an old-fashioned hard driver whose renditions of the classic repertoire lack replace poetry with tension.
All nonsense, I'd say. I know he did once have a reputation for 'objectivity' which, on closer inspection, was undeserved (he pretty much tore up the score of the Leningrad Symphony when he recorded it, I hear) but that's no reason to rubbish his entire legacy. Maybe people have strong memories of those drily-recorded NBC sessions, which tended to make listening to his recordings a bit of an ordeal?
Anyway, I'd argue that his recording of Otello is the only one that makes that opera sound like the masterpiece many maintain it is.
But Toscanini is no longer a name to drop, it would seem. Thirty or so years ago, he was still acknowledged by many as THE conductor of the 20th century....even twenty years ago, I can recall him being mentioned in the same breath as Furtwangler (his long-standing rival)....but nowadays, he seems to be dismissed by many as an old-fashioned hard driver whose renditions of the classic repertoire lack replace poetry with tension.
All nonsense, I'd say. I know he did once have a reputation for 'objectivity' which, on closer inspection, was undeserved (he pretty much tore up the score of the Leningrad Symphony when he recorded it, I hear) but that's no reason to rubbish his entire legacy. Maybe people have strong memories of those drily-recorded NBC sessions, which tended to make listening to his recordings a bit of an ordeal?
Anyway, I'd argue that his recording of Otello is the only one that makes that opera sound like the masterpiece many maintain it is.
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