Hi Thomas, Haitink has said that he has no feeling for the Scandinavians and avoids conducting their music. A great pity , I feel, as I am sure that he would have much to say on Sibelius in particular bearing in mind the Finn's Bruckner-like sonority.
Favourite Bernard Haitink recordings
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A wonderful conductor whose recorded performances never quite capture the special qualities of those given live, but here goes:
Debussy Nocturnes with the Concertgebouw
Mastersingers with the ROH (live recording - which I attended, so a very special performance)
Mahler 9 with the Concertgebouw
Pelleas et Melisande with the Orchestra National de France
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Haitink live
Belgrove's point about the difference between the excitement of the live recordings and the caution of the studio ones is often seen: the booklet notes to the Mahler Christmas Matinées box go into some details on this. These Mahler recordings are certainly some of my favourite Haitinks.
As is a recent 2-cd set from Hänssler Profil of 2 live performances from Dresden in 1992. Mozart's Prague Symphony was recorded in September at a special fundraising concert for the Danube floods in the previous month; Bruckner 8 was recorded in December at the first concert back in the orchestra's flood-damaged home, the Semperoper. The Staatskapelle strings and brass produce their customary wonderful sound in the Bruckner; the Mozart is surprisingly fleet-footed, given the size of the band.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostA quiet magician is a lovely description.Our chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... Our two weapons are fear and surprise...and ruthless efficiency....
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rubbernecker
I was weaned on his 70s Mahler recordings, but if I had to pick just one, it would be the VW Sea Symphony on EMI
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Exonian
I think haitink is one of the greats. His Shostakovich 13, 14 and 15 on decca were wonderful. His early Philips Debussy (rare on original CD now) absolutely sublime and for me the watermark performances. His Mahler 3, 4 and 9 superb (rare too on original CD for some reason). His Vaughan Williams consistently excellent and as someone who often finds impatience with Bruckner (my fault not the composer's!) his 4 and 9 magical. The Schumann symphonies and Richard Strauss I find very fine as well.
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Paul N
I have only a handful of Haitink recordings. Really enjoy the Debussy orchestral works (keep coming back to them - yes) and love the Rachmaninov Rhapsody with Ashkenazy. The Beethoven concertos with Perahia seem more OK rather than special.
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Thomas Roth
There is a new Blu-ray and DVD with Haitink and Cgo playing Bruckner 9 and Schumann PC with Perahia. Alas, it is only available in Japan and costs fortune. Argh, I want it.
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Originally posted by Thomas Roth View PostThere is a new Blu-ray and DVD with Haitink and Cgo playing Bruckner 9 and Schumann PC with Perahia. Alas, it is only available in Japan and costs fortune. Argh, I want it."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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No, I keep hoping the disc will appear over here. Patience wearing a bit thin now.
That Bruckner 9 would be a very special performance to have based on our Barbican Sunday afternoon experience
in March 2009.
Thanks for all the replies.
I feel like digging out the Elgar symphonies again while Nigel Simeone's review in IRR is sending me back to the Brahms Serenades
with the Concertgebouw.
A reminder of the wonderful Bizet Symphony (Eloquence) if anyone fancies adding a record of that work to their collection.
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