Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Karajan's 1980s Digital Beethoven Cycle on DG
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostDepends whether you want an HST view or a dawdle through the Duchy! I think that many more conductors take a quicker approach, though going back Kleiber Sr did not hang about.
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIt is the original CD issue - which may explain it . Fleet of foot I can handle but silvestrione's description of it as tense in the first movement I get .[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
I like "tense" - it's a symphony, after all - but I disagree with silvie's "a little too tense".
Timings wise the box suggests only the scene by the brook is much different timings wise . There is only 17 seconds in it for the first movement.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThe Philharmonia set of HVK's first Beethoven cycle has arrived . That is next for audition.
Timings wise the box suggests only the scene by the brook is much different timings wise . There is only 17 seconds in it for the first movement.
The first movement is just as fleet of foot as in Berlin but a carefree lightness of spirit that is missing in the 1980s . The scene by the brook is far from too leisurely and benefits from extraordinarily beautiful and characterful playing by the Philharmonia woodwind principals . The third movement has a real sense of merrymaking and the horns if a bit recessed are a real joy . The storm is terrifying just as it should be - how the players rip into the first big thundercrack and the shepherd's hymn if slightly slower than Berlin is really joyful , an ecstatic real prayer of thanks and the oboe ( I assume Sidney Sutcliffe) is wonderful . The string playing has an extraordinary spirituality - and it is long time since this work brought me close to tears . The sotto voce at the end makes you hold your breath.
Only the Erich Kleiber, Bohm and Boult compare for me - and I am sure that for all the 1953 mono sound that the performance of the finale is the best I have ever heard.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThis performance from 1953 is a in a different league . On first hearing I reckon this is one of the greatest Pastorals on record .
The first movement is just as fleet of foot as in Berlin but a carefree lightness of spirit that is missing in the 1980s . The scene by the brook is far from too leisurely and benefits from extraordinarily beautiful and characterful playing by the Philharmonia woodwind principals . The third movement has a real sense of merrymaking and the horns if a bit recessed are a real joy . The storm is terrifying just as it should be - how the players rip into the first big thundercrack and the shepherd's hymn if slightly slower than Berlin is really joyful , an ecstatic real prayer of thanks and the oboe ( I assume Sidney Sutcliffe) is wonderful . The string playing has an extraordinary spirituality - and it is long time since this work brought me close to tears . The sotto voce at the end makes you hold your breath.
Only the Erich Kleiber, Bohm and Boult compare for me - and I am sure that for all the 1953 mono sound that the performance of the finale is the best I have ever heard.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThis performance from 1953 is a in a different league . On first hearing I reckon this is one of the greatest Pastorals on record .
The first movement is just as fleet of foot as in Berlin but a carefree lightness of spirit that is missing in the 1980s . The scene by the brook is far from too leisurely and benefits from extraordinarily beautiful and characterful playing by the Philharmonia woodwind principals . The third movement has a real sense of merrymaking and the horns if a bit recessed are a real joy . The storm is terrifying just as it should be - how the players rip into the first big thundercrack and the shepherd's hymn if slightly slower than Berlin is really joyful , an ecstatic real prayer of thanks and the oboe ( I assume Sidney Sutcliffe) is wonderful . The string playing has an extraordinary spirituality - and it is long time since this work brought me close to tears . The sotto voce at the end makes you hold your breath.
Only the Erich Kleiber, Bohm and Boult compare for me - and I am sure that for all the 1953 mono sound that the performance of the finale is the best I have ever heard.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI am still waiting for ferney's take on the Boult recording - which he told me he was about to post three weeks ago ![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI like "tense" - it's a symphony, after all - but I disagree with silvie's "a little too tense".
It's a wonderfully cheeky and playful realization of the score - the articulation brilliantly pointed - and whilst the arrival in the countryside is as brisk as the composer requires, it's by no means relentless: there are subtle touches of rall which colour the phrasing without disrupting the symphonic impetus of the Music. It had me utterly captivated - and Karajan's insights and attention to detail follow through in the other Movements; particularly the way the cross-rhythm relationship between triple and duple patterns recur throughout the whole Symphony (although the fives against fours in the 'celli and basses in the storm get smudged terribly in this muddy recording - inevitable when 20th Century instruments are used in these numbers in this register) - and does any modern instrument performance on record bring out the similarities iof the Scherzo with that of the Eroica as clearly? (Emperors and Peasants - cunning chap, our Ludwig: observant cove, our Herbie! ) And Beethoven's scoring!!! This symphony could be used as a set text for students of instrumentation and orchestration - there's just so much invention and colour!
The sheer pleasure and joy I got from hearing this reading (as distinct from the recorded sound) is greater than from any other modern instrument performance I know - which (as I intend to demonstrate with Boult later - I haven't forgotten, Barbie ) is not intended to "slight" other recordings, many of which are very fine indeed. But I think the point needs to be repeated - a point that is becoming clear even to some reviewers and critics previously hostile to Karajan - that the conductor did not just record the same performances of the same repertory in the same way each time but with newer technology. Whatever Karajan's personal flaws, with the Music he most admired, he continuously sought ever more faithful ways of presenting that repertoire. This superb reading of the Pastoral is one of his greatest successes in this respect - it has become my favourite of modern instrument performances.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostA wonderful, detailed account of your response to that performance, Fernie, thank you so much! It's certainly sending me back to have another listen.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Some (other) Versions of Pastoral
(With apologetic thanks to William Empson )
Boult's recording with the LPO from 1977 is lovely - I can easily see why this might be many people's favourite recording of the work (I don't know any of his previous versions - there are at least two: one from the late fifties with the LPO under a pseudnym with n added "Promenade" to its name; the other a BBC recording with the BBCSO.)
Its tempi are more leisured than Beethoven's metronome markings suggest, but they are by no means sluggardly - its a gentler reading than Karajan's enthusiastic exuberance; Constable, rather than Turner (especially in the Storm movement), but entirely satisfactory in its own terms. The recording, in the Warner box remix, is much better than DG's original digital from six years later - and Boult's clear ear for the detail is readily communicated from the speakers, although the cross-rhythm effects Karajan brings out are much less noticed by Boult, who treats them "traditionally" as foreground and background. There is more obvious observation of "traditional" tempo modification not noted in the score, but these are spontaneous-sounding, and do not distort the flow of the Music anything like as much as some other recordings.
Orchestral playing is so felicitous so frequently - flutes in the First Movement; Horns in the Second; solo oboe against unison Bassoons in the Scherzo a touch I'd never noticed before (and a particularly lovely touch of Beethoven's affectionate humour, bringing back memories for me of my own experience as a player in amateur ensembles with "unbalanced" numbers of instruments - a Jupiter with no Double Basses and more Violas than Violins ); Double Basses in the Storm. There are a couple (literally) of moments when - armed with the score - the ensemble makes a noticeable fluff in timing, but I can quite see why these were not retaken: correcting them to fit in with the really lovely Music-making surrounding them would have disrupted the "magic"
Boult's ear for the details in Beethoven's score is consistently fine - the sfzs that pepper the score are given due weighting, AND (the biggest point in its favour for me) all Beethoven's repeats are faithfully and Musically observed, to the benefit of the timing and proportion that the composer envisaged - and which is so beautifully "placed" when played like this.
One of Boult's finest achievements in the recording studio, and a recording I shall certainly be returning to with great pleasure and affection.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostPerhaps my problem with the late Karajan is the fact i have a cheap second hand copy of the original release of the HVK recording . The 1953 knocks it into numerous cocked hats IMO on the evidence I have heard .
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI have a, presumably, remastered version in my Karajan '1980's' set which is pretty good. I suspect that once Karajan had gone to conduct the great orchestra in the sky, the engineers and producers re-mastered all the maestro's twiddlings."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI have a, presumably, remastered version in my Karajan '1980's' set which is pretty good. I suspect that once Karajan had gone to conduct the great orchestra in the sky, the engineers and producers re-mastered all the maestro's twiddlings.
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