Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow
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Beethoven Symphony Cycles
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Dorati's RPO set was recorded by Contour, I think a DG British subsidiary and first issued on their bargain label, (as were other Contour RPO and Bournemouth Sinfonietta recordings under George Hurst and Norman del Mar), then soon after on DG's mid-price Privilege label. I haven't heard them but the Penguin Guide was dismissive: 'four-square, plainspun, not really competitive even at mid-price' and so on.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostDorati's RPO set was recorded by Contour, I think a DG British subsidiary and first issued on their bargain label, (as were other Contour RPO and Bournemouth Sinfonietta recordings under George Hurst and Norman del Mar), then soon after on DG's mid-price Privilege label. I haven't heard them but the Penguin Guide was dismissive: 'four-square, plainspun, not really competitive even at mid-price' and so on."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Maybe there's a Dorati fan in an influential place in Universal. Who knows what goes on in the corridors of power?
I often think Dorati had patchy career on disc, shifting from label to label over many years. I've heard he was difficult to work with . He was offered a complete 'Firebird ' as a launch title for the enterprising 'Enigma' label, a brave British venture which ran out of money. The producer told me 'Mr . Dorati doesn't seem to speak any language known to man'.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostDorati's RPO set was recorded by Contour, I think a DG British subsidiary and first issued on their bargain label, (as were other Contour RPO and Bournemouth Sinfonietta recordings under George Hurst and Norman del Mar), then soon after on DG's mid-price Privilege label. I haven't heard them but the Penguin Guide was dismissive: 'four-square, plainspun, not really competitive even at mid-price' and so on.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostMaybe there's a Dorati fan in an influential place in Universal. Who knows what goes on in the corridors of power?
I often think Dorati had patchy career on disc, shifting from label to label over many years. I've heard he was difficult to work with . He was offered a complete 'Firebird ' as a launch title for the enterprising 'Enigma' label, a brave British venture which ran out of money. The producer told me 'Mr . Dorati doesn't seem to speak any language known to man'.
The blurb on DG's website states that the release is intended to "commemorate 35 years of Antal DorĂ¡ti’s passing in 2023", and goes on to say that "the 5-CD set includes liner notes (EN/DE) by well-acclaimed British music broadcaster and writer Rob Cowan and comes with a stunning cover art adapted from the original LP release"."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Further thoughts on the origin of these recordings drew me to the charismatic figure of Brian Culverhouse, who used to make recordings as a private venture,then sell them to the big companies or persuade themto distribute them, Polydor and Contour were, I think, the popular arm of DG (Polygram); weren't they James Last's label? Some of Culverhouse's recordings were published by them, such as Antony Rolfe Johnson's discs of English song and Norman del Mar's Elgar, with the RPO. So this may have been one of his projects.
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Smittims is on the ball here. According to Discogs (searched using 'Brian Culverhouse'), the Beethoven symphonies with Dorati and the RPO were indeed produced by Brian Culverhouse, although whether he was commissioned to do so by DG or did so then sold them to it is not noted. I suspect the latter, as earlier Contour releases of Beethoven symphonies featured the likes of 1950s Franz Konwitschny and Willem van Otterloo, so buying a ready-made, brand-new, well-recorded cycle with a respectable orchestra and its principal conductor off the shelf might have seemed like an attractive proposition at the time. This was, after all, the period when Decca were releasing the boxes of Dorati's Haydn symphonies.
Brian Culverhouse's many recordings as producer include various other gems such as the Alexander Gibson 'Music of the Four Countries' release. I had also forgotten that he was responsible for the EMI/HMV 'Great Cathedral Organ Series'.
While re-releasing the Dorati cycle might seem a bit like barrel-scraping on the part of Universal (as per the slightly sniffy comments above), it seems no worse than re-releasing the comparable cycles of Hermann Scherchen and William Steinberg.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostSmittims is on the ball here. According to Discogs (searched using 'Brian Culverhouse'), the Beethoven symphonies with Dorati and the RPO were indeed produced by Brian Culverhouse, although whether he was commissioned to do so by DG or did so then sold them to it is not noted. I suspect the latter, as earlier Contour releases of Beethoven symphonies featured the likes of 1950s Franz Konwitschny and Willem van Otterloo, so buying a ready-made, brand-new, well-recorded cycle with a respectable orchestra and its principal conductor off the shelf might have seemed like an attractive proposition at the time. This was, after all, the period when Decca were releasing the boxes of Dorati's Haydn symphonies.
Brian Culverhouse's many recordings as producer include various other gems such as the Alexander Gibson 'Music of the Four Countries' release. I had also forgotten that he was responsible for the EMI/HMV 'Great Cathedral Organ Series'.
While re-releasing the Dorati cycle might seem a bit like barrel-scraping on the part of Universal (as per the slightly sniffy comments above), it seems no worse than re-releasing the comparable cycles of Hermann Scherchen and William Steinberg.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThat reminds me that I bought the Konwitschny on Fontana a few years ago and have not listened to it . I got the feeling at the time that the consensus appeared to be that the Seventh was great and the rest pretty much wasn't .
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I think Scherchen and Steinberg were always more respected as Beethoven interpreters than Dorati, Scherchen for his close-to-original-Metronome tempi, and Steinberg because, at 12s6d. on Music for Pleasure his discs were bargains, as the original Capitol recordings weren't then very old. Dorati of course was enjoying fame for his Haydn ; his Kodaly series was also well-received.
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I'm not sure the world really needs another Beethoven cycle of this type. Watch - it will get stunning reviews now. I still enjoy his Haydn symphonies though even if the minuets, in particular, sound a bit sluggish now. But the Dorati recording that I most admire is the, now almost forgotten, Flying Dutchman with London, Rysanek and the orchestra of the ROH on Decca.
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