Originally posted by visualnickmos
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François-Xavier Roth's Heroic Eroica
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostWithout checking earlier posts, I would suggest that the subjects of Nick's opprobrium are the recent Teodor Currentzis/Anima Aeterna LvB 5th and 7th, rather than anything from F-X R. The latter's recording of the 7th has not yet appeared on CD to my knowledge. But Nick may wish to confirm/deny my surmise.
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Highly detailed Reviews in Musicweb and Gramophone of the Roth 5 and 7 concurred with my own enthusiasm to some extent (#1 and #86 above); they were largely positive, the Gramophone with a few carefully assessed reservations......
MusicWeb, with links to the 5th....
(You may find some G., googled with free access. Will post G. refs later if I can).
I swear by close and repeated listening. One has to immerse oneself in the present performance, as it were forsaking all other, not leaping to comparison and at least attempting to free oneself of one's internal models (Past attachments, favourites, experiences of the music)....and yes - read as many reviews as you can for the obvious reasons: they may have noticed things that you have missed. My own experience, time and time over....
(Reading, or hearing, a single review and rushing to leap onto its own subjective bandwagon is the worst thing you could do).
The only problem I have with the Currentzis Beethoven is - the oddly extreme reactions of various listeners (not Gramophone, who were very precise as usual, but very positive too). The 7th is: for the most part surprisingly respectful - crisp, lean and lively, with great rhythmic precision (no dactylic ambiguities in (i)) and textural transparency; trio thrillingly uptospeed. The dynamics are taken to hushed extremes in the allegretto, yes, which is I think why some listeners took against it. It is essentially a poised and classical reading with fine recorded sound, whether in hi-res or off of CD.
(If you really want interpretive extremity, try the late CMW/Harnoncourt 5th finale....)
So much to say so little time. Very poorly today so reluctant to enter into lengthy debate; waiting for the GP phone-consult ; off to sit under a tree....
(Incidentally - the Roth LvB is a part of the HM 20/27 series; they have indeed covered the 7th, but with Golz and the Freiburg Baroque; and extremely fine it is. Part of a composite cycle of highest interest and fine sound)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 27-08-21, 17:47.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostHighly detailed Reviews in Musicweb and Gramophone of the Roth 5 and 7 concurred with my own enthusiasm to some extent (#1 and #86 above); they were largely positive, the Gramophone with a few carefully assessed reservations......
MusicWeb, with [broken?] links to the 5th....
The page cannot be found
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThe link in the opening paragraph leads to a dead end:
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostEt voilà.....
http://www.musicweb-international.co...-HMM902423.htm
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostInteresting to see that Christophe Rousset and his Les Talents Lyriques have recently been giving some Beethoven concerts in Europe....I wonder if they will be recording any of them.
If anyone wants an appetizer of what to expect - here is an excerpt of the group in rehearsal.
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I listened to the Roth again this morning. Once you get past the introduction it gains some momentum and coherence. My problem with it is one that I have with all Chamber sized groups in this music, HIPP or modern instruments, and that is that the tradeoff for an increase in speed and agility is offset but a feeling of excessive lightness. Since my first and only recording of this piece for my formative listening years was Furtwangler, who builds sound from the ground up, I just expect a certain sort of mass, and the tradeoff for that tends to be a loss of speed. It is a tricky balance, and for me the Eroica is the most difficult Beethoven Symphony to get right. However that caveat certainly isn't unique to this Conductor or Orchestra
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Not all that small really?
42 strings, 10 winds, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 tb....
Larger again for the 5th....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 26-08-21, 19:05.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI listened to the Roth again this morning. Once you get past the introduction it gains some momentum and coherence. My problem with it is one that I have with all Chamber sized groups in this music, HIPP or modern instruments, and that is that the tradeoff for an increase in speed and agility is offset but a feeling of excessive lightness. Since my first and only recording of this piece for my formative listening years was Furtwangler, who builds sound from the ground up, I just expect a certain sort of mass, and the tradeoff for that tends to be a loss of speed. It is a tricky balance, and for me the Eroica is the most difficult Beethoven Symphony to get right. However that caveat certainly isn't unique to this Conductor or Orchestra
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Originally posted by Pianoman View PostIf you don't like 'excessive lightness', then for heaven's sake don't get the Cristofori version with....single strings (one of the more whacky recent 'experiments, I would say generously). Roth is 'heavyweight by comparison...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostForgotten about that one - thanks..... will seek out soon....
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