Given the current interest in the ‘Wondering why some cycles remain unfished?’ thread, I thought a complementary thread might be based around second (or even third,….) recordings of the same work by the same performers/conductors. This was triggered by listening to the Boulez Sony version of Bartok’s Music for strings, percussion and celesta (I’m working through the box in a random way, rather than adopting JosephK’s admirable approach!) and wondering how his interpretation might have changed for the DG remake: there is lots of music in that set that Boulez recorded again later, sometimes with the same orchestra.
There are immediate and obvious instances: the first that springs to mind is Karajan’s Beethoven symphony cycles, where for example perhaps a nice contrast could be drawn between those and Mackerras’s different cycles, first with the RLPO and later primarily with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra; then there’s Gould’s (1955 and 1981) and Hewitt’s (released 2000 and 2016) takes on the Goldberg Variations; the list certainly goes on.
There is a section in the Rewind article each month in BBC MM where an artist says ‘I’d like another go at….’, which can make interesting reading, as there are often very cogent and understandable reasons given.
Are second thoughts usually for better, or for worse?
Over to you! I might come back on the Boulez Bartok later.
(PS: It was hard to come up with a snappy title for this thread; any better ideas, and might it even develop into a subforum? I'm sure our hosts can do the necessary.)
There are immediate and obvious instances: the first that springs to mind is Karajan’s Beethoven symphony cycles, where for example perhaps a nice contrast could be drawn between those and Mackerras’s different cycles, first with the RLPO and later primarily with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra; then there’s Gould’s (1955 and 1981) and Hewitt’s (released 2000 and 2016) takes on the Goldberg Variations; the list certainly goes on.
There is a section in the Rewind article each month in BBC MM where an artist says ‘I’d like another go at….’, which can make interesting reading, as there are often very cogent and understandable reasons given.
Are second thoughts usually for better, or for worse?
Over to you! I might come back on the Boulez Bartok later.
(PS: It was hard to come up with a snappy title for this thread; any better ideas, and might it even develop into a subforum? I'm sure our hosts can do the necessary.)
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