Just for the sake of all the coughing & spluttering that'll ensue, I'll opt for the Pletnev set
Your desert island disc Beethoven symphony recordings.
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amateur51
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post5 - Harnoncourt/COE(wish more conductors would include trio repeat)
(A confession: in 40 years of concert-going I've heard Beethoven 5 just once. Halle/Loughran 1976)."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostSo do I - so much more satisfying. Abbado does so in his second set with the BPO recorded in Rome.
(A confession: in 40 years of concert-going I've heard Beethoven 5 just once. Halle/Loughran 1976).
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostOh dear. This is quite impossible, but I'll have a stab at it.
1. VPO, Schmitt-Isserstedt
2. VPO, Schmitt-Isserstedt
3. VPO, Kleiber
4. Philharmonia, Klemperer
5. Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Walter
6. VPO, Abbado
7. BPO, Karajan (the last version)
8. yet to decide
9. SRO Ansermet
I haven't even got round to deciding for number 9 yet - let alone the rest. For 9 my short list would be Karajan (any, but I think one of the analogue ones is the best), Schmidt-Isserstedt and Ansermet. If pushed I'd probably eliminate Ansermet, and if pushed really hard I'd go for Karajan (and incidentally I'm not a great Karajan fan - but his 9th his superb) - though I might flip on alternate days ...... but ..... a oh ..... What about Furtwängler?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAre the Schmidt-Isserstedt versions of 1 and 2 available?
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I can hardly wait for the Chailly set to appear and am determined not to ready any reviews prior to
listening myself.
Many of us Im sure found that we didnt have a readily identifiable favourite for one or two of the
symphonies and I really hope Chailly can fit the bill.
In particular I stilll await that elusive superlative version of the Seventh. I will revisit RLPO/Mackerras though
as I seem to share a couple of Makropulos' other choices.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostI can hardly wait for the Chailly set to appear.
For a superlative 7th I take it that you don't share the general acclaim for the Carlos Kleiber/VPO so I'd suggest the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra under Franz Konwitschny. It's only available as part of the complete set but it's cheap enough and most of the performances are pretty good. A set well worth comparing with the Chailly with the same orchestra."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Bonsoir, Eine Alpen...
That Schmidt-Isserstedt Decca set is amazing - not only the symphonies, but the concertos as well! I'm sure Decca had no idea what a winner they were on to, with that release!
As for deciding on a DID perfect 8 - well I won't even try to satisfy such an impossible notion. Suffice to say, I am actually quite disappointed with the Furtwangler 9, which I acquired when it came out on EMI's GROCs series. It leaves me rather flat, to be honest. I would go for Mackerras in the 9th. Solti's CSO 7th is pretty damned explosive, and Cluytens BPO - well, all of these are sure-fire winners.
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Roehre
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostFor a superlative 7th I take it that you don't share the general acclaim for the Carlos Kleiber/VPO so I'd suggest the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra under Franz Konwitschny. It's only available as part of the complete set but it's cheap enough and most of the performances are pretty good. A set well worth comparing with the Chailly with the same orchestra.
- it was one of the first stereophonic complete Beethoven-sets ever;
- it was recorded by the Eastern German Eterna /VEB Deutsche Schallplatten team in colloboration with the Philips team, and the stereo recording was intended to show the technical superiority of the "Socialist" system in the German peasant's and labourer's state over the Capitalist Federal Republic (as the Philips team's leaders were westgermans);
- because of the pressure of all this Konwitschny was (to put it mildly) not always sober during the sessions, some of them made with armed Soviet soldiers present.
I have much respect for these recordings, and especially the striking seventh especially
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostAlthough less well recorded we have to keep a couple of things in mind re this B7 especially (and the Konwitschny cycle in general):
- it was one of the first stereophonic complete Beethoven-sets ever;
- it was recorded by the Eastern German Eterna /VEB Deutsche Schallplatten team in colloboration with the Philips team, and the stereo recording was intended to show the technical superiority of the "Socialist" system in the German peasant's and labourer's state over the Capitalist Federal Republic (as the Philips team's leaders were westgermans);
- because of the pressure of all this Konwitschny was (to put it mildly) not always sober during the sessions, some of them made with armed Soviet soldiers present.
I have much respect for these recordings, and especially the striking seventh especially
I have a number of old Eterna LPs of his Beethoven cycle which I haven't listened to for ages. I might be tempted to investigate the CDs.
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