Indispensable recordings 10.08.2024. Proms Composer 4: Beethoven

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  • cloughie
    Full Member
    • Dec 2011
    • 22128

    #16
    1 Sym 3 PO Klemperer 1955
    2 Sym 6 BPO Cluytens 1956
    3 PC4 Gilels PO Ludwig
    4 Archduke Trio Oistrakh Oborin Knushevitsky
    5 Spring Sonata Fuchs Balsam

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    • LHC
      Full Member
      • Jan 2011
      • 1559

      #17
      These recordings aren't necessarily indispensable and won't be to everyone's taste, but I've chosen them because they are all special to me, and I wouldn't want to be without them.

      Fidelio - Klemperer, Ludwig, Vickers.
      Symphony No 3 - BPO, Karajan, 1963
      Piano Concerto No 5 - Arrau, Colin Davis, Dresden Staatskapelle
      Violin Concerto - Grumiaux, Colin Davis, RCO
      Piano Concerto No. 3 - Pires, Harding, Swedish Radio Symphony

      An honourable mention goes to the Piano Concertos with Robert Levin and JEG, which were revelatory for me at least when they were first released.
      "I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
      Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest

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      • richardfinegold
        Full Member
        • Sep 2012
        • 7668

        #18
        The recordings that imprinted me when I first discovered Beethoven will necessarily take pride of place. Why is this? Are there neural circuits created at a tender age and lots of dopamine release still associated with those particular recordings?

        1) VC-Oistrakh/Cluytens
        2) Fifth Symphony-Szell/Cleveland
        3) Razumovsky Quartets-the Hungarian Quartet
        4) Ninth Symphony-Toscanini/NBC
        5) Pathetique, Appassionata, Moonlight-Badura-Skoda

        The last two are in mono and I heard them both recently for the first time in decades PB-S probably 40 years). I was transported…
        I will add the Suk Trio Archduke as an honorable mention

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        • richardfinegold
          Full Member
          • Sep 2012
          • 7668

          #19
          Originally posted by LHC View Post
          These recordings aren't necessarily indispensable and won't be to everyone's taste, but I've chosen them because they are all special to me, and I wouldn't want to be without them.

          Fidelio - Klemperer, Ludwig, Vickers.
          Symphony No 3 - BPO, Karajan, 1963
          Piano Concerto No 5 - Arrau, Colin Davis, Dresden Staatskapelle
          Violin Concerto - Grumiaux, Colin Davis, RCO
          Piano Concerto No. 3 - Pires, Harding, Swedish Radio Symphony

          An honourable mention goes to the Piano Concertos with Robert Levin and JEG, which were revelatory for me at least when they were first released.
          I was thinking when I wrote the previous post that one reason the moldy oldies still to me reign supreme is because of the rise of the HIPP movement. Last night I was listening to a recording of the Ninth by a group from Potsdam. It has many virtues but the power and the mystery of the beginning of I is completely lacking. I did a mental inventory of my HIPP collection and I can’t think of any that convey that sense of scale. Same with the Levin PCs-every time I hear a fortepiano in these marvelous works I keep thinking “The player is marvelous. When he or she grows up hopefully their parents will buy them a real piano”

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          • makropulos
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 1674

            #20
            Five indispensable Beethoven recordings is an incredibly tough challenge. But just sticking to a few historical favourites...
            Rasumovsky Op. 59 No. 3, Busch Quartet (Warner)
            Eroica, Erich Kleiber, Vienna PO (Decca)
            Sonata Op. 109, Guida (Decca) or Annie Fischer (Warner)
            Piano Concerto No. 3, Solomon, Boult, BBCSO (HMV/Dutton)
            Leonore No. 3, Bruno Walter, Vienno PO (HMV/Naxos)




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            • Mandryka
              Full Member
              • Feb 2021
              • 1537

              #21
              Originally posted by oliver sudden View Post
              My ‘indispensable’ Beethoven violin concerto isn’t particularly well known or even outstandingly well played… it’s Thomas Zehetmair with Ensemble Modern conducted by Ernest Bour. When Ensemble Modern had done a couple of things with Bour they asked him what was one thing he had always wanted to do but never had the chance. His reply was the Beethoven violin concerto at the right tempi! I’ve forgotten whether his thoughts on the matter were influenced by Kolisch’s article in which he sets out his ideal speeds. What you get is a first movement in a gently flowing 2, a similarly flowing Larghetto, where the tempo is set by the orchestral material and the solo decoration is clearly decorative in preference to ‘time standing still’, and a blistering rondo in which for once I don’t get tired of the tune.

              You will probably already know whether you want to hear this! If you already love the piece you probably won’t. But if you’ve never been able to crack it, this might be for you.
              When I was into this sort of music I remember thinking that Zehetmair/Bruggen was the only Beethoven violin concerto I needed. I've never heard of the Bour - I'll remember it if I ever feel like hearing the concerto again

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              • Mandryka
                Full Member
                • Feb 2021
                • 1537

                #22
                Op 110 - Pletnev
                Op 110 - Ernst Levy
                Op 110 - Zhukov
                Op 110 - Edwin Fischer
                Op 110 - Hamelin
                Last edited by Mandryka; 21-07-24, 16:20.

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                • CallMePaul
                  Full Member
                  • Jan 2014
                  • 791

                  #23
                  Originally posted by Mandryka View Post
                  Op 110 - Pletnev
                  Op 110 - Ernst Levy
                  Op 110 - Zhukov
                  Op 110 - Edwin Fischer
                  Op 110 - Hamelin
                  August's Gramophone has a disappointing consideration of this sonata - only the Fischer of Mandryka's choices was even listed. My own favourite in this sonata (and a lot of the others) is Paul Badura-Skoda on a selection of fortepianos, which did not even get a look-in! Only one fortepiano performance - Lubimov, which I agree is very good - was mentioned and there was no discussion of period performance in general.

                  Back on topic, my five essential performances would be: -
                  Symphonies - Mackerras/ SCO (1-8), Philharmonia/ Edinburgh Festival Chorus (9). I suspect that the Philharmonia was chosen for the ninth to balance the full Edinburgh chorus with a larger orchestra
                  Cello sonatas (esp op 102) - Adrian and Alfred Brendel
                  Appasionata Sonata - Paul Badura-Skoda, or Rudolf Buchbinder on a modern piano (Salzburg Festival recording 2014)
                  An die ferne Geliebte - Goerne/ Trifanov
                  Violin Concerto - Faust/ Abbado

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                  • Mandryka
                    Full Member
                    • Feb 2021
                    • 1537

                    #24
                    Originally posted by CallMePaul View Post

                    August's Gramophone has a disappointing consideration of this sonata - only the Fischer of Mandryka's choices was even listed. My own favourite in this sonata (and a lot of the others) is Paul Badura-Skoda on a selection of fortepianos, which did not even get a look-in! Only one fortepiano performance - Lubimov, which I agree is very good - was mentioned and there was no discussion of period performance in general.

                    On fortepiano I think I'd plump for Trudelies Leonhardt.

                    Comment

                    • oliver sudden
                      Full Member
                      • Feb 2024
                      • 617

                      #25
                      Originally posted by makropulos View Post
                      Five indispensable Beethoven recordings is an incredibly tough challenge. But just sticking to a few historical favourites...
                      Rasumovsky Op. 59 No. 3, Busch Quartet (Warner)
                      Eroica, Erich Kleiber, Vienna PO (Decca)
                      Sonata Op. 109, Guida (Decca) or Annie Fischer (Warner)
                      Piano Concerto No. 3, Solomon, Boult, BBCSO (HMV/Dutton)
                      Leonore No. 3, Bruno Walter, Vienno PO (HMV/Naxos)
                      A lot of No. 3s here, makropulos! And the only one that isn’t is Sonata No. 30…

                      Comment

                      • oliver sudden
                        Full Member
                        • Feb 2024
                        • 617

                        #26
                        Originally posted by CallMePaul View Post

                        My own favourite in this sonata (and a lot of the others) is Paul Badura-Skoda on a selection of fortepianos, which did not even get a look-in!
                        I am unable to stop my inner pedant pointing out that he does as far as I know only use one piano per sonata!

                        As far as I’m concerned that sonata set is absolutely tremendous. (I’m referring to the Astrée set, as you presumably are too, but I suspect richardfinegold upthread is not!) For me he has just the right amount of looking for what the music needs and the instruments can only just do, whether it’s fragile cantabile or the kind of heaven-storming moments in op. 57 or op. 106 where you fear for the instrument’s well-being.

                        For a long time that box was hard to find and I still remember the whoop of joy I let out when I saw it on a shelf at the late lamented classicmania in Luxembourg!

                        Here’s a historical piano approach I haven’t managed to investigate yet…

                        Inside the Hearing Machine. Beethoven on his Broadwood. Project by Tom Beghin.

                        Comment

                        • CallMePaul
                          Full Member
                          • Jan 2014
                          • 791

                          #27
                          Originally posted by oliver sudden View Post
                          I am unable to stop my inner pedant pointing out that he does as far as I know only use one piano per sonata!

                          As far as I’m concerned that sonata set is absolutely tremendous. (I’m referring to the Astrée set, as you presumably are too, but I suspect richardfinegold upthread is not!) For me he has just the right amount of looking for what the music needs and the instruments can only just do, whether it’s fragile cantabile or the kind of heaven-storming moments in op. 57 or op. 106 where you fear for the instrument’s well-being.

                          For a long time that box was hard to find and I still remember the whoop of joy I let out when I saw it on a shelf at the late lamented classicmania in Luxembourg!

                          Here’s a historical piano approach I haven’t managed to investigate yet…

                          Inside the Hearing Machine. Beethoven on his Broadwood. Project by Tom Beghin.
                          Sorry for any confusion - I was referring to the complete set when I referred to "a selection of fortepianos". The last three somstas are played on a Graf; I think it's from 1824 but posibly from 1826 - I' ve not checked but he uses both in his Beethoven and Schubert cycles.
                          Last edited by CallMePaul; 23-07-24, 17:27. Reason: correction of typo

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                          • oliver sudden
                            Full Member
                            • Feb 2024
                            • 617

                            #28
                            Please be assured that there was no actual confusion! Merely that I was amused at the thought of him flitting from piano to piano mid-piece.

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                            • Opinionated Knowall
                              Full Member
                              • Jan 2014
                              • 61

                              #29
                              Originally posted by CallMePaul View Post

                              August's Gramophone has a disappointing consideration of this sonata - only the Fischer of Mandryka's choices was even listed. My own favourite in this sonata (and a lot of the others) is Paul Badura-Skoda on a selection of fortepianos, which did not even get a look-in! Only one fortepiano performance - Lubimov, which I agree is very good - was mentioned and there was no discussion of period performance in general.
                              It was a strange one, wasn't it? The comments on each recording read like an Associate Board examiner’s report: ‘Good observation of dynamics, phrasing a little wooden, last movement rather too steady tempo’. And much as I like and admire the chosen pianists, odd that they were all ‘historical’, Lubimov apart.

                              Comment

                              • Retune
                                Full Member
                                • Feb 2022
                                • 316

                                #30
                                An impossible task, of course. My list will probably be very different tomorrow (except Op.111). Limiting myself to different genres, which absurdly prevents me picking any Hammerklavier, or choosing which Richter Appassionata, or selecting the VPO/Böhm Pastoral, or deciding on an Eroica, or agonising over a 'best' 4th or 5th Piano Concerto. And no room for the Missa Solemnis or the Diabelli Variations, or that iconoclastic Kopatchinskaja/Say Kreutzer Sonata, or...

                                Symphony No. 9, Op.125 - ORR/Gardiner (1994). I will resist the urge to call this a typically punchy performance from JEG. Choice inspired by hearing them in an electric concert at the Proms in the 90s.

                                Piano Concerto No. 3, Op. 37 - Kempff/BPO/Leitner. My introduction to the Beethoven concertos, and an excellent one.

                                Violin Concerto, Op.61 - Schneiderhan/BPO/Jochum. Very beautifully done, with the cadenzas adapted from Op.61a, which I always miss in other versions.

                                String Quartet No. 13, Op. 130, with Grosse Fugue, Op.133 - Alban Berg Quartett (1983). I think this speaks for itself, but would not argue with anyone who prefers another great performance of this extraordinary work.

                                PIano Sonata No. 32, Op.111 - Artur Schnabel (1932). A desert island disc for me. I have yet to hear a reading of the Arietta that moves me like this one. Or indeed any other piece of recorded music that does.
                                Last edited by Retune; 23-07-24, 23:36.

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