Originally posted by smittims
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Beethoven Symphony Cycles
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Originally posted by ChandlersFord View PostA couple of years ago, I picked up (in a charity shop), Haitink’s final Beethoven cycle, with the LSO (LSO label).
I’d decided I had enough Beethoven integrales , but as this was so cheap (less than two quid), I thought it would be rude not to pick it up.
Well....I wish I’d left it there. The performances strike me as shockingly perfunctory and lackadaisical - as if both orchestra and conductor are thoroughly bored with the works. If you didn’t know it was the LSO, you’d probably think this was an above-average amateur band playing: and the conducting represents a sort of paradigm of anonymity.
Haitink was always talking about the ‘tyranny of the complete cycle’, while submitting himself to that very tyranny, time and time again. One wishes he’d refused the yoke on this occasion. This set really does him no favours at all.
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Originally posted by ChandlersFord View PostA couple of years ago, I picked up (in a charity shop), Haitink’s final Beethoven cycle, with the LSO (LSO label).
I’d decided I had enough Beethoven integrales , but as this was so cheap (less than two quid), I thought it would be rude not to pick it up.
Well....I wish I’d left it there. The performances strike me as shockingly perfunctory and lackadaisical - as if both orchestra and conductor are thoroughly bored with the works. If you didn’t know it was the LSO, you’d probably think this was an above-average amateur band playing: and the conducting represents a sort of paradigm of anonymity.
Haitink was always talking about the ‘tyranny of the complete cycle’, while submitting himself to that very tyranny, time and time again. One wishes he’d refused the yoke on this occasion. This set really does him no favours at all."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI 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.
Btw, Steinberg was originally on the Command label
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostThat set was offered for about $5 as an mp3 . I downloaded it and hated it
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
Btw, Steinberg was originally on the Command label
The remastered Konwitschny cycle (in a rather attractive Berlin Classics box) has its moments but I have to confess that I don't often find myself reaching for it. Indeed, "never" might be more truthful.
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Originally posted by Opinionated Knowall View PostPulled this set off the shelf to see/hear for myself. Got to ask which are these amateur orchestras that sound like the LSO here? And while Haitink certainly isn't in the 'it's all about ME' camp of conductors, on the basis of Symphonies 1-3 these are deeply felt and satisfying performances. Recordings are a bit bass-heavy, but you have to feel for any recording team working in the Barbican...
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI 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.
But like his marvellous (if typically idiosyncratic ) Haydn, all his Beethoven readings have far more to commend them - the subtlety of rubato within those speeds, and the wonderfully nuanced playing, strings especially. This is even truer of the earlier 1950s Beethoven 1, 3, 6, 7 and 9 with the VSOO/VSO, with often measured tempi and an instinctively expressive rapport with the sound of Old Vienna. (the 1953 9th's 1st movement takes over 17'...)
Philosopher-King Scherchen had something special to say about both these great symphonists. His recordings have been special to me for some years....
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI too have and like the LSO/Haitink.
Maybe it’s because I have heard the LSO at the Barbican a lot and am used to the acoustic, but I find the LSO Live recordings to be a pretty faithful rendering of the live performances, especially in surround sound on the SACDs, which are generally much better than the stereo CDs."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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Originally posted by LHC View PostAnother me too. I also attended all of these concerts at the Barbican and they were anything but dull or routine.
Maybe it’s because I have heard the LSO at the Barbican a lot and am used to the acoustic, but I find the LSO Live recordings to be a pretty faithful rendering of the live performances, especially in surround sound on the SACDs, which are generally much better than the stereo CDs.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostDamn it. I am going to have to get that set out of storage. There were just too many recent HIPP surveys around at the time of its release and it sort of got put to one side."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThey're not HIPP but Haitink did use a slimmed down LSO with the timpani (hard sticks) interestingly placed at the extreme front right of the stage behind the second violins. The double basses were at the extreme left. At least this was the case on the evening I attended (Symphonies 1 & 9). Agree with LHC that the sound on the CDs is a pretty faithful representation of what I heard in the hall.
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