Originally posted by Lordgeous
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Great Elgar recordings
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View Post[Sinopoli] recorded them both. No. 2 is a dreadful (so slow) as No. 1 is wonderful.
His No.2 is not good, far too comatose - though I really like Tate's powerful LSO recording on EMI which is also well over 60 mins but doesn't sound slow (though Tate does rather savour the closing pages). Phenomenal playing from the LSO in this one.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostHeinrich Shiff's recording of the Cello Concerto!?!??
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Originally posted by Pianoman View PostLike the man said, a welcome antidote to du Pre and much nearer Elgar's owm tempi. I really rate the Schiff/ Elder disc, but then I like most of the other recent Elgar stuff from Elder and the Halle..Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostI taped the live broadcast but hardly ever played it, recalling the pained look on the face of that put-upon principal viola in the TV doc. Years later I recklessly spent a couple of quid of hard-earned cash on the DG issue, but I'm still waiting to be in the 'right' mood to play it.
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
Some of the comments underneath the video are priceless ...
"I saw this performance and loved it, especially Nimrod. It has made me cry then and now. I believe Leonard Bernstein loved Elgar as I do and the English do"
"Oh well, I suppose Elgar conducting West Side Story would have been as much of a train-crash."
The You Tube upload of the Bernstein "Enigma" is in three parts, the above being the first one. But then, rather curiously, Lenny and the NYPO in the "Cockaigne" Overture aren't remotely as controversial and deliver quite a lively and straight-forward performance of it, as will also be heard on You Tube ...
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Originally posted by seabright View PostYou can see the viola player in the Bernstein "Enigma," though not so much his pained look, due to the TV camera angle, on You Tube, where so far well over 54,000 people have viewed it ...
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
Some of the comments underneath the video are priceless ...
"I saw this performance and loved it, especially Nimrod. It has made me cry then and now. I believe Leonard Bernstein loved Elgar as I do and the English do"
"Oh well, I suppose Elgar conducting West Side Story would have been as much of a train-crash."
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Bamig
I seem to remember BAL going for a Dresden / Davis 1st Symphony. Anyone know that recording? A couple of votes for the 1976 Boult version - intrigued by that.
I'd only ever read about Bernstein's tempo for Nimrod. To be honest, I didn't find it as shocking as I thought I might, although it definitely felt as though the strings were trying to move Bernstein along - they often seem to arrive at the next bar before him.
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