I listened to the Stokie/National Philharmonia recording of #1 today. It is to bad they didn't do the whole cycle
Favourite Sibelius cycle
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Black Swan
i am revisiting Rattle/CBSO on EMI and loving them again. But am thinking that we might see a release of a new set of recordings by Sir Simon with the Berliners....
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Originally posted by Black Swan View Posti am revisiting Rattle/CBSO on EMI and loving them again. But am thinking that we might see a release of a new set of recordings by Sir Simon with the Berliners....
Thanks Cali. Sounds that the accoustics again at The Barbican are letting them down. Seems quite strange....Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Black Swan View Posti am revisiting Rattle/CBSO on EMI and loving them again. But am thinking that we might see a release of a new set of recordings by Sir Simon with the Berliners....
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There are two Sibelius works that I enjoy very much, but rarely hear performed. One is The Oceanides, a piece which Thomas Beecham thought very strange, but luckily he recorded it at the end of his career. It's certainly a strange and haunting poem beautifully realised by Sir Thomas. Interestingly Boult recorded it back in 1936 with the BBC SO, along with another neglected work, Night Ride and Sunrise.
The other fine work is the Lemminkainen Suite, generally only known for The Swan of Tuonela. I have a splendid 2 disk set of the tone poems on Chandos with Alexander Gibson conducting the Scottish National Orchestra and a separate CD of the Suite. Gibson seems to have been rather forgotten for some reason. His set of the symphonies is one to be reckoned with.
I notice that Ashkenazy is conducting the suite with the Philharmonia on 14th March at the RFH. Vadim Repin plays the Violin Concerto.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI listened to the Stokie/National Philharmonia recording of #1 today. It is to bad they didn't do the whole cycle
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostThere are two Sibelius works that I enjoy very much, but rarely hear performed. One is The Oceanides, a piece which Thomas Beecham thought very strange, but luckily he recorded it at the end of his career. It's certainly a strange and haunting poem beautifully realised by Sir Thomas. Interestingly Boult recorded it back in 1936 with the BBC SO, along with another neglected work, Night Ride and Sunrise.
The other fine work is the Lemminkainen Suite, generally only known for The Swan of Tuonela. I have a splendid 2 disk set of the tone poems on Chandos with Alexander Gibson conducting the Scottish National Orchestra and a separate CD of the Suite. Gibson seems to have been rather forgotten for some reason. His set of the symphonies is one to be reckoned with.
I notice that Ashkenazy is conducting the suite with the Philharmonia on 14th March at the RFH. Vadim Repin plays the Violin Concerto.
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If you love The Oceanides, if you haven't already got the Lahti/Vanska recording then rush out and buy. Rattle and others do well with it, but his seems unsurpassable and the final climax beggars description! It just happens to be on a great BIS tone-poem compilation too.
Franck, Segerstam and other Scandinavians have made fine Lemminkainen Suite records, but for me the all-time classic is the stereo Philadelphia/Ormandy one. Quicker and sharper than most and very atmospheric, get the Toshiba if you can.
Night Ride and Sunrise - Rattle good, Sanderling exceptional, one of the highlights of a fine cycle.
I've been roaming around various Sibelius cycles, and among the highlights were Vanska's second, Minnesota Orchestra taping of No.1, which has an almost supernatural precision and bite, astonishingly virtuoso playing at high-speed, and stunning hi-res 24/96 recording too.
Like Makropulos, I'm very fond of Berglund's Bournemouth SO set, and the 3rd sounded wonderful yesterday, especially subtle and expressive in the finale before a terrific ending.
I know The Great Layton was never terribly impressed with Bournemouth/Berglund... one of the very few occasions I've found myself a little at odds with him.
**BTW, did anyone here buy the 2013 EMI remaster of the Berglund set? If so, I'd love to know the details of the remastering (including engineer's name) if any were given in the booklet...thanks!Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 15-02-15, 21:01.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
**BTW, did anyone here buy the 2013 EMI remaster of the Berglund set? If so, I'd love to know the details of the remastering (including engineer's name) if any were given in the booklet...thanks!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostKing Christian II.
Best wishes if you ever look in here, KCII."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostBy coincidence, I'm going to the Barbican next Wednesday when 'The Oceanides' is part of Sakari Oramo's BBC SO programme and I have earlier this afternoon bought a ticket for the Ashkenazy concert in the RFH in March. I have a great fondness for the Lemminkainen Legends which possibly stems from hearing the-then Alexander Gibson conducting the-then SNO in the Swan of Tuonela when I was, err, 10 years old. A very long time ago, anyway. The Okko Kamu recording of Lemminkainen is very exciting, ditto Mikko Franck, with the most recent Osmo Vanska release (albeit cobbled together from various recording sessions) as a rather more measured if no less impressive alternative.
Two wonderful tone poems. I would vouch for the (for me) newly acquired Anthony Collins, LSO Decca Eloquence for Nightride & Sunrise and Vanska, Lahti Orchestra in The Oceanides.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostThere are two Sibelius works that I enjoy very much, but rarely hear performed. One is The Oceanides, a piece which Thomas Beecham thought very strange, but luckily he recorded it at the end of his career. It's certainly a strange and haunting poem beautifully realised by Sir Thomas. Interestingly Boult recorded it back in 1936 with the BBC SO, along with another neglected work, Night Ride and Sunrise.
The other fine work is the Lemminkainen Suite, generally only known for The Swan of Tuonela. I have a splendid 2 disk set of the tone poems on Chandos with Alexander Gibson conducting the Scottish National Orchestra and a separate CD of the Suite. Gibson seems to have been rather forgotten for some reason. His set of the symphonies is one to be reckoned with.
I notice that Ashkenazy is conducting the suite with the Philharmonia on 14th March at the RFH. Vadim Repin plays the Violin Concerto.
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