I always found this piece a bit heavy handed and dated ( sorry Vernon H whose recording I had ) until I came across the composer's recording which is very clever and beautifully played - any other favourites. I am about to play the Barbirolli .
Elgar Falstaff
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI always found this piece a bit heavy handed and dated ( sorry Vernon H whose recording I had ) until I came across the composer's recording which is very clever and beautifully played - any other favourites. I am about to play the Barbirolli .[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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This is not a favourite work for me, but I do like Boult's 1956 recording with the LPO, recorded in Watford as part of Nixa's first stereo project with Westminster. It's available on First Hand Remasters FHR06 . There are two volumes in this series with 2 CDs apiece, engrossing performances of Walton 1, Elgar 2, the Britten / Rossini Matinees and Soirees Musicales, and many more. The very early stereo is remarkably good.
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The Mackerras with the LPO on EMI coupled with the Enigma Variations was the very first cd I ever bought. What I loved was that the disc was banded in such a way that the liner notes explained so clearly exactly what was going on. As well as the sound quality it proved to me that this carrier was the future.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostThe Mackerras with the LPO on EMI coupled with the Enigma Variations was the very first cd I ever bought. What I loved was that the disc was banded in such a way that the liner notes explained so clearly exactly what was going on. As well as the sound quality it proved to me that this carrier was the future.
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It does not seem to be programmed very often . The Halle/Barbirolli is gloriously characterful on first hearing . I have the Boult somewhere but it is coupled with the Tortelier/Boult version of the Cello Concerto which is as dry as dust so it is not a CD I get out often . I must play the Falstaff again .
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And it's 100 years old this coming October!
Yes, both the Barbirolli and Mackerras are wonderful. I bought them both on the same day in 1989. Elgar's own is, naturally, a must listen. There is a good deal of the same droll sense of humour that Strauss has in Don Quixote and like that work it is vital to know what is 'going on'. Falstaff's snoring is one of the real laugh out loud moments in music."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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