The Brahms discussion elsewhere on this forum has recalled this set to mind.
Critical word on the street has been largely negative about it - it was seen, at the time, as a horrible economic indulgence on the part of DG, who had been 'forced' offer their chart-topping maestro yet another Beethoven cycle in order to keep him under contract (I'd have been inclined to dismiss this as a Lebrechtian myth but I think Richard Osborne mentions it in his HvK biog, too). The digital sound was felt to be cold and unimpressive, even at the time, and I'm not sure the set sold all that well (it became well-known as a specially priced introductory offer for Record Clubs - remember them?).
I picked the set up courtesy of Oxfam for the princely sum of £3.49 a few years back and was VERY surprised at how impressive I found it. It includes Karajan's best ever reading of the Pastoral, the symphony that always seem to elude him, at least in the studio, and the other symphonies are just as good. The whole thing is a very easy, but not superficial, listen and it's a toss-up as to which of the three later HvK cycles I prefer (I own them all, apart from the Philharmonia set).
Any opinions on late Karajan Beethoven?
Critical word on the street has been largely negative about it - it was seen, at the time, as a horrible economic indulgence on the part of DG, who had been 'forced' offer their chart-topping maestro yet another Beethoven cycle in order to keep him under contract (I'd have been inclined to dismiss this as a Lebrechtian myth but I think Richard Osborne mentions it in his HvK biog, too). The digital sound was felt to be cold and unimpressive, even at the time, and I'm not sure the set sold all that well (it became well-known as a specially priced introductory offer for Record Clubs - remember them?).
I picked the set up courtesy of Oxfam for the princely sum of £3.49 a few years back and was VERY surprised at how impressive I found it. It includes Karajan's best ever reading of the Pastoral, the symphony that always seem to elude him, at least in the studio, and the other symphonies are just as good. The whole thing is a very easy, but not superficial, listen and it's a toss-up as to which of the three later HvK cycles I prefer (I own them all, apart from the Philharmonia set).
Any opinions on late Karajan Beethoven?
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