Originally posted by amateur51
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Brahms Symphony No1
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Beef Oven
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostBoult you mentioned, but I'd want the live (ICA) and studio (EMI and Pye) versions.
As is the Levine/Chicago Symphony, recorded in one 3 hour session.
Then there's the Sanderling with the Dresdeners.
And Kempe with the Muenchners...
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI reckon that in this symphony Furtwängler always has something to offer.
The RFH BPO/Karajan is also very special - and, as always, Loughran with the Hallé on CfP is first class (and shows that the Expo repeat in the First Movement is both structurally essential and emotionally desirable).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostKempe is of interest to me - his accompaniment to Menuhin with the BPO in the violin concerto is magnificent.
I have a number of the Furtwanglers - the one in the EMI set is probably my favourite .
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
The RFH BPO/Karajan is also very special - .
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostThe 1968 Boult with the LPO is very good
I played this symphony under Jascha Horenstein. What an experience! I don't know whether he ever recorded it or with whom.
HS
I would include van Beinum and Walter (NYPO) on the list of very worthwhile versions of this symphony.
What are the turkeys?
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Originally posted by PJPJ View PostI'm waiting for a reissue of that set. Do the masters belong to Sony? BMG? Eurodisc?
K."Let me have my own way in exactly everything, and a sunnier and more pleasant creature does not exist." Thomas Carlyle
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I can see this thread is going to cost me money.
I have many already mentioned, the wonderful LPO/Boult being a Christmas acquisition, but I seem to have missed out on Kempe's Brahms.
In addition to those mentioned I have VPO/Bernstein, the 1977 Karajan, VPO/Böhm, Concertgebouw/Haitink, Chicago SO/Solti and Philharmonia/Giulini on BBC Legends."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Roehre
Originally posted by mathias broucek View Post...Van Beinum (Decca) - I believe he died rehearsing the 1st BTW
The orchestra has always been lucky with its Brahms conductors: Mengelberg, van Beinum, Jochum, Haitink, Chailly.
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I used to own the monumental tome " The Compleat Conductor" by that American polymath, Gunther Schuller, horn player, composer, conductor and writer. (I say 'used to' because several months ago I loaned it to a pupil ( as we teachers do...), can't remember exactly who, and will now probably never get it back.)
However, I do remember a brilliant chapter in which Schuller goes into great detail about nearly every one of the 70-odd Brahms # 1 recordings available when the book was written ( about 1998).
He pretty well trashes many of the 'great', iconic recordings and in his final judgement finds a lot to praise ( not unreservedly) in performances by ( among others) Stokowski, Furtwängler, Szell and even Norrington.
Surprisingly his overall 'winner' ( not that he uses such a crude expression) is Scrowaczewski/ Hallé. His reasons are partly to do with 'faithfulness to the score' but also "Stan's" mastery of tempo relationships and transitions.
I urge anybody who has any conducting aspirations at all, whether amateur or professional, to buy the remarkable Schuller book. Non-conductors as well will find much to enjoy in the book.
Other recordings which are analysed, dissected and finally judged include Brahms' # 4, Beethoven's #5 & #7, Strauss' 'Til Eulenspiegel' , Ravel's 'Daphnis et Chloë', and several other works which I now can't quite remember.
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Originally posted by Karafan View PostWell the original [Sanderling] RCA set was under the BMG aegis, unless the rights have been sold. I was never struck with the set. In #1 I prefer Abbado in Berlin (in fact his whole cycle is pretty much hors concours for me!).
K.
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