Originally posted by Alison
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Beethoven Pastoral Symphony - Gramophone Collection
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That Kubelik set was interesting, wasn't it? As I recall, each symphony was played by a different orchestra: LSO, Concertgebouw, VPO, Israel PO, Berlin PO, Orch de Paris, Cleveland and Bavarian Radio. I can't remember who played the Seventh. I never found out why they did that, and I have to admit I didn't find the performances as a whole had the staying power of, say, the Schmidt-Isserstedt set on Decca.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI agree, cloughie, Kleiber is superb, even better than his previous set with the LPO which was a 'launch title' on Ace of Clubs (ACL 2). His Concertgebouw has I think the most leisurely stay by the brook ; lovely.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
It’s been a while since I read about Pfitzner, but the the jist of it that I recall was that he considered Judaism as a type of negative forcethat infected the German Volk and their Kultur, but that he made an exception for individuals of Jewish descent (as long as they renounced their Jewish background, such as Bruno Schlesinger). By the standards of the Third Reich, this almost makes him seem like a Humanist, but that is not the yardstick that I wish to use. And I listened to V of his Pastoral yesterday and I still opt for Toscanini
I was unaware that Bruno Schlesinger renounced his Jewish background, and although he changed his name, there doesn't appear to be any opinion that he renounced his cultural identity.
I have very little information and/or next to no opinion about Hans Pfizner. Is any of his music any good?
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Originally posted by CallMePaul View Post
Very different from the (live) performance from his son, who belts through the work, ignoring every repeat mark and making Norrington sound like a slowcoach! Very different from his 5th and 7th which observew most repeats! Yet I remember it being the top recommendation on BAL some years ago. I don't know who the reviewer was but maybe Darloboy can provide the info?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI was intrigued by this, so I checked with Perplexity.
I was unaware that Bruno Schlesinger renounced his Jewish background, and although he changed his name, there doesn't appear to be any opinion that he renounced his cultural identity.
I have very little information and/or next to no opinion about Hans Pfizner. Is any of his music any good?
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
The Swindon Woolworths Philharmonic...?
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThat Kubelik set was interesting, wasn't it? As I recall, each symphony was played by a different orchestra: LSO, Concertgebouw, VPO, Israel PO, Berlin PO, Orch de Paris, Cleveland and Bavarian Radio. I can't remember who played the Seventh. I never found out why they did that, and I have to admit I didn't find the performances as a whole had the staying power of, say, the Schmidt-Isserstedt set on Decca.
They were all recorded in quadrophonic (which probably reduced their sales) except the Eroica, and those can be obtained on a series of Pentatone SACDs, as well as the full cycle on 3 DG double CD sets.
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Thanks, akiralx! I gave away my copy in 1984 so my memory has slipped.
Sir Thomas Beecham did more Beethoven than many may think today. He recorded 3,6 & 8 for Columbia in the early '50s and reherased the fifth at Abbey Road but didn't complete a recording. I have the third and the 'pastoral' (33CX 1086 and 1062 respecively) and as you say, Philips later reissued them as they did most of the Columbia recordings they inherited. Later he recorded the second and seventh in stereo for HMV.Last edited by smittims; 03-11-23, 07:31.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
When he conducted the Columbia Symphony in the early 1950s, Walter was recording one of the Bach Passions. Many of the Jewish players walked out over what they felt to be excessively anti semitic comments. Apparently as a convert, Walter was a true believer
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