Have been spending many an idle moment on the Gramophone Digital Archive despite its appalling search engine . One thing that has struck me as how lukewarm sometimes the reception to what gave now become classics was .
Trevor Harvey and rather more surprisingly Edward Greenfirld can be read putting the boot into or damning with faint praise recordings by the likes of Fricsay and Horenstein.
I wonder why that is - was it just that they were more critical or that they had lived through such s golden age of conductors that they were spoiled . TH for example is lukewarm about fricsay's Beethoven 9 . I imagine nowadays one would be thrilled to bits to have a vocal quartet of the quality of Seefried,Forrester,Haefliger and the young DFD .
Or maybe that poor pressings meant that the quality of a performance was concealed from the reviewers something hinted at in TH's review of the finale of the Fricsay 9 .
Trevor Harvey and rather more surprisingly Edward Greenfirld can be read putting the boot into or damning with faint praise recordings by the likes of Fricsay and Horenstein.
I wonder why that is - was it just that they were more critical or that they had lived through such s golden age of conductors that they were spoiled . TH for example is lukewarm about fricsay's Beethoven 9 . I imagine nowadays one would be thrilled to bits to have a vocal quartet of the quality of Seefried,Forrester,Haefliger and the young DFD .
Or maybe that poor pressings meant that the quality of a performance was concealed from the reviewers something hinted at in TH's review of the finale of the Fricsay 9 .
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