Much as I enjoyed the discussion between Andrew McGregor and Hannah French yesterday about all those new Telemann box sets, I do think that they were somewhat condescending and dismissive about those Harnoncourt recordings of the Darmstadt Overtures. To my mind, they remain amongst the very best recordings of Telemann ever made.
Telemann Box Sets
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My guess is that it is very much a generation thing. Unlike you and a lot of us who were actually there when it was all happening, to Hannah French*, Harnoncourt’s recording must be historical in more than one sense. To her generation, HIPP has its own history now. Makes you think, doesn’t it?
*https://about.me/hannahcfrench
Andrew McGregor probably thought it wasn’t a good time to argue.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostMy guess is that it is very much a generation thing. Unlike you and a lot of us who were actually there when it was all happening, to Hannah French*, Harnoncourt’s recording must be historical in more than one sense. To her generation, HIPP has its own history now. Makes you think, doesn’t it?
*https://about.me/hannahcfrench
Andrew McGregor probably thought it wasn’t a good time to argue.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI came to HIPP recordings in the 90s as it was 20 years or so on. I don't like most of those N.H. recordings-scrappy strings, squawking oboes, blatty horns, etc. I applaud their pioneering spirit but Period performance has progressed enormously in the 2 succeeding generation.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostMuch as I enjoyed the discussion between Andrew McGregor and Hannah French yesterday about all those new Telemann box sets, I do think that they were somewhat condescending and dismissive about those Harnoncourt recordings of the Darmstadt Overtures. To my mind, they remain amongst the very best recordings of Telemann ever made.
Scrappy or squawking aren't words the that come to my mind listening to the Das Alte Werk original-issue sets of the Darmstadt Overtures(**) or indeed the Table Music and the single CD of concertos. I do worry about the sound quality of large reissue sets on ensembles like these, having been disappointed in such things too often - sending them back. I often find earlier CDs sound better in direct comparison (and spend ages hunting them down..!). That Harnoncourt Alte Werk Concertos CD is a peach.
Ear-of-the-beholder as ever, (and system-of too) but as a soundquality obsessive, I've never been put off those precious late 70s/80s NH Telemann sets. Quite the reverse, even under close comparative scrutiny.
(I think so highly of those CWM Darmstadt Overtures I've often used them as HiFi test discs.)
(**) Worth recalling that the last 2 of those are 1966 recordings (with Bruggen on recorder), and sound rather sweetly Romantic! Did the review go into much detail?Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 20-08-17, 16:44.
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Not as much detail about the 30 CD box as I would have liked, Jayne. Glad you are with me over the Harnoncourt recordings - I agree, they are impeccably played and yet manage to sound so earthy at the same time.
Happily I have already amassed a considerable Telemann collection of my own over the years and won't need to acquire these sets. But of course there is always room for more single releases! I'm tempted by the extensive CPO collection of the Kapitansmusik.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI have the Rheinhart Goebel's Musica Antqiqua Telemann box set, which so full of good recordings. Looks like I will have to investigate Harnoncourt's ast array of recordings that he made with his Concentus Musicus.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostIndeed you must...the Darmstadt Overtures and the complete Tafelmusik are essential to have alongside the equally impressive Goebel recordings.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI applaud their pioneering spirit but Period performance has progressed enormously in the 2 succeeding generation.
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Originally posted by OddballIf I may blunder into this conversation, knowing hardly anything about the subject, it does not take a genius to work out that if a current ensemble want to generate an authentic HIPP performance, rather than fast forwarding 200 years to present day sounds, they might fast rewind to a century or two before Telemann to the sounds that the musicians of Telemann's era might have been aware of.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIn some ways though this "progress" has been in the direction of making sounds more palatable to listeners who expect the same kind of polish you'd get from a modern symphony orchestra, so that HIPP in the early 21st century has, for better or worse, quite possibly less to do with how the music originally sounded than for example Harnoncourt's recordings of the 1960s and 1970s. I like the inhomogeneity of the string sound. It seems to me more indicative of the kind of sound 17th or 18th century players would make than the smoothed-out contemporary HIPP version. The musicologist Richard Taruskin has written interestingly on this subject (although personally I don't always agree with his tastes or conclusions), for example in his book Text and Act from 1995. It often seems to me that many of the most successful HIPP performers these days are purveying HIPP for people who don't really like HIPP.
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