Originally posted by HighlandDougie
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Favourite Bernard Haitink recordings
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Originally posted by Alison View PostWhat about that Mahler DVD box from the Concertgebouw on the back of the programme ?
Shame Bernard only doing 9 but I could still be up for this one.
Is this an excuse to invest in Blu-Ray ?
I do have a little collection of BD discs but no player as yet as I do need a further excuse to get one.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostI enjoy Bernstein too and have his DG set. It's just that Gramophone has had an unvarying slant on Mahler for as many years as I can recall. Maybe the new editor will shake things up a bit to provide greater balance.
On the other hand, in those early days I couldn't get on with Haitink as he seemed so understated and tedious - I wanted instant gratification and Bernstein provided that. Revisiting all those Haitink recordings from the 60s and 70s (Brahms, Mahler, Bruckner and the rest) has been an ear-opener and a pleasure.
PS All those live recordings from the Concertgebouw available in so many boxes from RN on CD and DVD are well worth tracking down. Probably come under the heading "bargain", too, as they're not full-price, but, if you love them as much as I do.........
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Originally posted by PJPJ View Post
PS All those live recordings from the Concertgebouw available in so many boxes from RN on CD and DVD are well worth tracking down. Probably come under the heading "bargain", too, as they're not full-price, but, if you love them as much as I do.........
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No doubt deleted and reboxed now but I have been enjoying Haitink's disc of other VW works this morning . A wonderfully crisp yet not matter of fact Tallis Fantasia and excellent performances of the Norfolk Rhapsody No1 and In the Fen Country . Now listening to his account of the On Wenlock Edge songs with the young Ian Bostridge .
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostNo doubt deleted and reboxed now but I have been enjoying Haitink's disc of other VW works this morning . A wonderfully crisp yet not matter of fact Tallis Fantasia and excellent performances of the Norfolk Rhapsody No1 and In the Fen Country . Now listening to his account of the On Wenlock Edge songs with the young Ian Bostridge .
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On a search , I can't find any mention in this thread of his 1973 Rite of Spring with the LPO, which seems to get good reviews, and which I have just bought, and on first listen sounds excellent.
Any thoughts?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostNo doubt deleted and reboxed now but I have been enjoying Haitink's disc of other VW works this morning . A wonderfully crisp yet not matter of fact Tallis Fantasia and excellent performances of the Norfolk Rhapsody No1 and In the Fen Country . Now listening to his account of the On Wenlock Edge songs with the young Ian Bostridge .
BH recordings of Antartica and London were my introductions to RVW
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostIt's a pity that some of his early recordings for Philips seem to have disappeared. I particularly love his performance of the complete Incidental Music to Rosamund, which to my mind has never been bettered
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Schubert-Rosamunde-Symphony-No-8/dp/B000024XII
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No idea if this came up in another thread, but if not, one major gap in Uncle Bernie's discography now is filled, LvB's Missa solemnis with the BRSO and friends. Some reviews:
The Bavarian Radio's page on the issue: http://www.br.de/radio/br-klassik/or...itink-100.html
Too bad CSO Resound didn't see fit to issue an edited version of the performances that BH did with the CSO a few years back. They would have been first past the post.
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Haitink: Favorite Recordings
I don’t quite know where to start so this will be a jumble. If I had to do the Desert Island thing, it would be his seventies Debussy and Ravel with the Concertgebouw, which was the first time I had heard this French music with just a touch of Mittel Europa suavity, with the Orchestra beautifully recorded in the peak of analog by Phillips. I also love his Schubert Nine (Eight?) from the same time with the burnished sound of that superlative Orchestra, and superb pacing that doesn’t make the piece seem overlong.
His Shostakovich and RVW Symphonies were formative experiences for me. Many of them were my initial acquaintances with the works. I will single out his DSCH 4 (I have both his LPO and CSO recordings, which are remarkably consistent, I purchased the latter after attemding the Concerts from which it is culled), which blew me away with it’s ferocity, and the RVW Antarctica, which opened my eyes to RVW as a Symphonist.
His Beethoven PC cycles with Perahia are long term favorites.
And yours?
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Per RF's comment in the 'Bernard Haitink at 85 - and beyond' thread, here's an earlier thread on fave BH recordings, bumped up. Don't know if this set was mentioned elsewhere, but BH features on Symphonies 5 & 6 in this Bruckner set with the BRSO:
BR Klassik präsentiert in einer 9 CD-Box Aufnahmen von Anton Bruckners 9 Symphonien mit dem Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks unter der Leitung von vier internationalen Bruckner-Experten: Herbert Blomstedt, Bernard Haitink, Mariss Jansons und Lorin Maazel. Die Aufnahmen entstanden zwischen 1999 und 2017. Die CD-Edition wurde mit dem supersonic pizzicato 2019 ausgezeichnet.
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