Cantelli set? any comments?
Schumann Symphonies Complete Set
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostCantelli set? any comments?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostDid he record all Four, DracoM? I only know of (and can find) the Fourth - and I didn't know about that before the BaL the other week. The excerpts played there sounded astonishingly good.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI thought that you'd said that you'd discovered that you already had the JEGgers set, Bbm?
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Want a real outlier, a risk-taking full-orchestral original...? Try this...
I haven't had time to listen extensively this time round (the 1851 4th is great, although I still feel the Rhenish 1st Movement (pretty fast for paddle steamers - 7'39!) is just a bit too fast...), but it might prove a more substantial pleasure than returning yet again to 4th-only Cantelli, Furtwangler et al...
Yes, one for the adventurous, but the transfers are very good and it's never dulled by familiarity... lovely presentation set, with Boult's own extensive and fascinating notes (about playing the Schumann Symphonies with Fanny Davies as a duet, for example.."a wonderful lesson in interpretation" Boult says)...
(even includes some very dodgy, heavily sexist (to say the very least), what-were-they-thinking-of cover-art from the original LPs... look away now, etc)***.
But musical and historical interest - sky-high.
(*** actually "September Morn" by Paul Chabas. Sort of thing you might consider temporarily removing from a gallery wall...but repeated across 4 LP covers...? ).Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 13-06-18, 19:14.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWant a real outlier, a risk-taking full-orchestral original...? Try this...
I haven't had time to listen extensively this time round (the 1851 4th is great, although I still feel the Rhenish 1st Movement (pretty fast for paddle steamers - 7'39!) is just a bit too fast...), but it might prove a more substantial pleasure than returning yet again to 4th-only Cantelli, Furtwangler et al...
Yes, one for the adventurous, but the transfers are very good and it's never dulled by familiarity... lovely presentation set, with Boult's own extensive and fascinating notes (about playing the Schumann Symphonies with Fanny Davies as a duet, for example.."a wonderful lesson in interpretation" Boult says)...
(even includes some very dodgy, heavily sexist (to say the very least), what-were-they-thinking-of cover-art from the original LPs... look away now, etc)***.
But musical and historical interest - sky-high.
(*** actually "September Morn" by Paul Chabas. Sort of thing you might consider temporarily removing from a gallery wall...but repeated across 4 LP covers...? ).
In the second movement he has a great way of bringing out rhythmic interest by using emphasis across the sections. Endless surprises in the Scherzo, and loved the woodwind in the finale.
And he rolls out a fabulous sound just when it is most needed , in that finale in the big rising harmonic minor scale.
Blimey , that artwork....not the sort of thing a middle aged fellow should be googling...
Thanks Jayne. Loved it. ( the music not the LP cover !!)
( Quibble.....Could live without the massive Rall in the first movement though....).I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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This is a set I have been meaning to get hold of for ages. Meanwhile a plug for Bruno Walter's Rhenish - a symphony that I have found difficult in the past - HVK 's recording was my first and it did not make me fall for the piece. Walter's 1941 account is an old recording but one hell of a performance.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWant a real outlier, a risk-taking full-orchestral original...? Try this...
I haven't had time to listen extensively this time round (the 1851 4th is great, although I still feel the Rhenish 1st Movement (pretty fast for paddle steamers - 7'39!) is just a bit too fast...), but it might prove a more substantial pleasure than returning yet again to 4th-only Cantelli, Furtwangler et al...
Yes, one for the adventurous, but the transfers are very good and it's never dulled by familiarity... lovely presentation set, with Boult's own extensive and fascinating notes (about playing the Schumann Symphonies with Fanny Davies as a duet, for example.."a wonderful lesson in interpretation" Boult says)...
(even includes some very dodgy, heavily sexist (to say the very least), what-were-they-thinking-of cover-art from the original LPs... look away now, etc)***.
But musical and historical interest - sky-high.
(*** actually "September Morn" by Paul Chabas. Sort of thing you might consider temporarily removing from a gallery wall...but repeated across 4 LP covers...? ).
The Berlioz overtures are very good too .
I join the chorus of recommendations.
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