Originally posted by Bryn
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Missing period instrument Haydn symphonies.
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Originally posted by rkyburz View PostDon't miss out on the Chiaroscuro's op.95!
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rkyburz
Originally posted by Bryn View PostI had somehow missed this one, a situation now rectified. Thanks, they pull no punches, so they?! A very disc indeed, even if the booklet notes are merely Serviceable.
I like their Mozart just as much, if not more. As this is (one of) their first CD(s), I think it is legitimate that the booklet concentrates on the artists, even if some of the pics don't add much information!
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I am particularly fond of the Schubert 'Rosamunde' Quartet as a piece of music. This Chiaroscuro performance rather bowled me over when I first heard it in 2011:
String Quartets K465 & D8 [Import]: Mozart, Schubert: Amazon.fr | Formats: CD, Vinyl, MP3 |Livraison gratuite dès 25 € d'achat
Apart from the Ebène's performance which I heard in the Wigmore Hall and which I have preserved from the R3 relay, it remains the one I turn to most often. The Chiaroscuros performed the Schubert - and the Mozart K428 - at last year's Edinburgh Festival. A wonderful concert.
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rkyburz
Thanks for that pointer (ran into this before, but didn't want to order before having looked at their Mozart/Beethoven CD) — will look at that in due time; from their Facebook page I take that they are working with Christophe Coin on the Schubert Quintet — I hope this will result in a recording!!
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rkyburz
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Have just been searching through past Radio 3 broadcasts of the Chiaroscuro Quartet, and have found:
and most recently,
all of which I will listen to over the next few days.
I really don't know how I have failed to give them an ear (or two) before.
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Originally posted by ostuni View PostSince none of those 3 programmes are available on the iplayer at the moment, how will you listen to them? Is there a clever way to fool the system?!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThere has been a number of attempts at recording complete surveys of the Haydn symphonies using period instrument and instrumental techniques. Not only has none as yet been completed, there remain no period recordings at all of Nos. 79 and 81 as far as I can see. There is also but one of No. 80.
What is it about these symphonies that is holding the HIPPsters back? Must they remain available only in the distorted sound of versions with modern beefed up instruments?
No. 79:
The Symphony No. 83 in F major, Hoboken 1/79, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn. It was composed in 1784 as part of a trio of symphonies that also included symph...
No. 81:
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IL Giardino Armonico with Giovanni Antonini have recently released Symphonies Nos. 39 & 49 on the Alpha label, album entitled "La Passione". Shame perhaps that they've put Gluck's Don Juan between the two, but having not found the time for a review on New Releases, all I can say is that it's very good indeed - small orchestra with great rhythmic bite and plenty of.... passion. The 24/96 file is very well recorded with fearsome dynamics and attack. Would have preferred 3 Sturm und Drangs but...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 19-12-14, 19:18.
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostI was digging about for HIPP versions of 79 & 81 recently and came across both of them on YouTube with Hogwood and the AAM. There's no information on the venue, but it may well be in Germany, as the titles are in German. Maybe someone recognizes it. I wonder whether these performances were in preparation for the continuation of the Oiseau-Lyre cycle which was complete up to no. 75 (with some of the London symphonies)? The date is apparently c.2000.
No. 79:
The Symphony No. 83 in F major, Hoboken 1/79, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn. It was composed in 1784 as part of a trio of symphonies that also included symph...
No. 81:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUqwuLDQRmw
and who knows, maybe they were even laid down by Decca, never to be released. Nos. 76 and 77 were certainly recorded and though they never got issued by Decca, they did make a brief appearance on a BBC music magazine disc, which I guard with my life - definitely a collector's item.
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Yes, five boxes were still to be released in the complete edition of the AAM set and we fans were left high and dry, having bought all the previous issues.
Getting back to the TV peformances of 79 and 81...if Tony played in the band, could he tell us if they were indeed recorded by Decca, even though they were never released? I would so love to have them...no.79 is just superb.
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostI was digging about for HIPP versions of 79 & 81 recently and came across both of them on YouTube with Hogwood and the AAM. There's no information on the venue, but it may well be in Germany, as the titles are in German. Maybe someone recognizes it. I wonder whether these performances were in preparation for the continuation of the Oiseau-Lyre cycle which was complete up to no. 75 (with some of the London symphonies)? The date is apparently c.2000.
No. 79:
The Symphony No. 83 in F major, Hoboken 1/79, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn. It was composed in 1784 as part of a trio of symphonies that also included symph...
No. 81:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUqwuLDQRmw
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