Thanks for all the kind messages - Beef Oven is on ignore and has been for a very long time and I should not have fed the troll after someone unfortunately quoted his post .
Clemens Krauss
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostBeef Oven is on ignore and has been for a very long time and I should not have fed the troll after someone unfortunately quoted his post .
I'm pleased your hissy-fit is over, and I think it's best we both ignore one another. Keep to it though.
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It is an extraordinary thing about Krauss's conducting - is his terrific grasp of style . From the lilt of the Die Fledermaus to the amazing sense of balance in his Richard Strauss and a profound understanding of Brahms from just that 1930 recording of the Third Symphony and his immensely sympathetic accompaniment to Ferrier in the Alto Rhapsody .
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostThat's not true - you have responded with childish sarcastic, deliberately provocative comments when I've mentioned Goodall on this forum; comments that add nothing to the discussion. And we have exchanged perfectly civil posts on a few other threads.
I'm pleased your hissy-fit is over, and I think it's best we both ignore one another. Keep to it though.
"Keep Politics Out of Music!
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostSo we should all throw out those wonderful recordings by Karajan with the Philharmonia and Berlin orchestras and those exquisite records of his wife, Elizabeth Schwarzkopf(who was a great friend of Adolf Hitler)?
"Keep Politics Out of Music!
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostSo we should all throw out those wonderful recordings by Karajan with the Philharmonia and Berlin orchestras and those exquisite records of his wife, Elizabeth Schwarzkopf(who was a great friend of Adolf Hitler)?
"Keep Politics Out of Music!
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostSo we should all throw out those wonderful recordings by Karajan with the Philharmonia and Berlin orchestras and those exquisite records of his wife, Elizabeth Schwarzkopf(who was a great friend of Adolf Hitler)?
"Keep Politics Out of Music!
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostOf course not. Incidentally, Schwarzkopf was only 14 when Adolf came to power in 1933, and as he was pretty busy from 1939-45 it seems a bit unlikely that they had much time to develop the friendship.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI assume you mean Walter Legge, the Philharmonia's George Martin!Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostOf course not. Incidentally, Schwarzkopf was only 14 when Adolf came to power in 1933, and as he was pretty busy from 1939-45 it seems a bit unlikely that they had much time to develop the friendship.
As for the Krauss Strauss box - it's been in my wishlist (along with the Kempe) since it first appeared! I remember the bad effect the recordings had for years on my attitude to Strauss when I was a teenager: released in artificial stereo, and with particularly unpleasant and harsh sound, it put me off the Music for four or five years, until I managed to borrow cassettes of Karajan from the library. Never looked back.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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WOriginally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post- Schwarzkopf never met Hitler let alone being a "close friend" of his; she was, however, "patronised" by Goebbels (read "subject to that rancid goat's sexual attentions) like many other young women singers and actresses. This didn't help her career - she became stuck in a lower-rank opera house under Goebbels' jurisdiction who blocked her promotion to the Berlin Staatsoper (which was controlled by Goebbels' hated rival, Goering - whose sexual appetites lay elsewhere). She only escaped Goebbels' "attentions" by contracting TB; her doctor was a general in the SS, so Goebbels was unable to interfere. She might very well have devoutly wished that Politics would keep out of Music on many occasions.
At the time of Krauss' Eclipse recordings there were the equally cheap Reiner Victrola LPs - surprised you didn't go for them.
As for the Krauss Strauss box - it's been in my wishlist (along with the Kempe) since it first appeared! I remember the bad effect the recordings had for years on my attitude to Strauss when I was a teenager: released in artificial stereo, and with particularly unpleasant and harsh sound, it put me off the Music for four or five years, until I managed to borrow cassettes of Karajan from the library. Never looked back.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostOf course not. Incidentally, Schwarzkopf was only 14 when Adolf came to power in 1933, and as he was pretty busy from 1939-45 it seems a bit unlikely that they had much time to develop the friendship.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostMy reply to Ferret was why when the Krauss Eclipse issues were around, he did not go for the Reiner R Strauss issues on Victrola?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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