Monteux ( 1929 and 1951)and Markevitch for me - what's your favourite ?
Your favourite Rite of Spring
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"Rie of Spring"? Ah the dance in Carmina Burana
Seriously, though. I agree with the choice of Igor Markevich. I marginally prefer the older mono recording. Both his versions come with the Philharmonia on one disc on Testament. I really ought to listen to Monteux who would have known the work better than anyone.
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I have a version that is titled the Right of spring
will dig it out
its a version that Simon would love !
as opposed to the liberal left of springLast edited by MrGongGong; 24-05-11, 21:02.
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barber olly
Originally posted by Chris Newman View Post"Rie of Spring"? Ah the dance in Carmina Burana
Seriously, though. I agree with the choice of Igor Markevich. I marginally prefer the older mono recording. Both his versions come with the Philharmonia on one disc on Testament. I really ought to listen to Monteux who would have known the work better than anyone.
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Having effectively grown up with the Monteux/Paris Conservatoire recording of around 1958 I still go back to this version as my favourite, tinny though it sounds on today's superior equipment, ahem. Nevertheless, the finest live performance I have yet experienced was the one given by Boulez - with which orchestra I now forget - in the RFH, back somewhere around 1966. The sheer drama was overwhelming, particularly the build-up just before the halfway "break" when the entire orchestra resembled a tempest at sea; Boulez stopped at that point to mop his brow! More recent recordings I have heard conducted by Boulez have come nowhere as close, for me, that is.
S-A
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A controversial view, I suppose, but imo we still await the ideal Rite. I saw Markevich conduct it at the RFH in a leaden performance in (I think) 1979 with the LSO and never felt inclined to investigate the Testament CD. OK he was near the end of his life so I may seek out this one after all as many speak well of it.
I have literally dozens of versions on my heaving shelves but none of them truly hit the spot. Many have under-recorded percussion or just lack bite. What I want is one that really does send the wild echoes flying. One I do like (I was there) is a 1993 Europa Konzert outing with the BPO inder Haitink on DVD."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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prokkyshosty
Not to most people's taste, I'd imagine, but I have a soft spot for this hard nut:
EMI's Muti/Philadelphia from somewhere around 1979. The ADD recording is so over the top, so brutal, so manipulated... if it were anything other than the Rite of Spring, it would be sacrilege. Instead, because it's the Rite of Spring it's... sacrilicious. (ok, I stole that word from Homer Simpson)
It's one of my handful of "demonstration discs".
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Originally posted by prokkyshosty View PostEMI's Muti/Philadelphia from somewhere around 1979.
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Thomas Roth
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Mandryka
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The Muti recording is very good, no doubt about it- but I'm really looking forward to the forthcoming CD from Ivan Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra- sounds like the perfect combination for The Rite.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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