We've never had a thread about Mahler 7 and its various interpretations, I think (there have been a couple about specific broadcast performances, and one about TV adverts...)
Last week I caught up with the CD Review from 3rd August when AMcG considered and played extracts from these two new discs:
Gustav Mahler
Symphony No. 7
Performer: Berlin Philharmonic. Performer: Michael Gielen.
TESTAMENT SBT 1480 TK 3
Gustav Mahler
Symphony No. 7
Performer: Gürzenich-Orchester Köln. Performer: Markus Stenz.
OEHMS CLASSICS OC 652 TK 5
I've long had a fondness for the 7th and its colour, glamour and - I think - irony (it sometimes seems like Mahler writing a parody of his own work, to me).
Both those two new discs grabbed me and I've acquired both, and used a peaceful weekend to listen to them.
Not sure I shall hang on to the Stenz. Maybe it's the SA-CD format, but on my CD system the sound is rather recessed and nasal. What got me on the radio was the final movement, played in headlong and exhilarating manner... but as AMcG said, the earlier movements are less remarkable.
On the other hand, the Gielen 'live' performance is fabulous. He stepped in to replace an ailing Tennstedt, and it's something special - and a wonderful rich but precise recording.
I heard Klaus Tennstedt conduct Mahler 7 once, and it was the only concert by him I was very disapponted with - he let it sprawl it seemed to me, all tugging and no structure.
Gielen doen't take it briskly but he maintains a focus and a pulse. Some terrific playing, and nice precise timps I think you can hear the 'modern music' specialist in the way he makes the music sound, right from the outset - the accompaniment figure under the tenor horn solo usually sounds as a sort of low, husky shimmer - Gielen makes it throb and shudder, much more distinctly.
This reading is a keeper!
I learnt this piece from Abbado's classic Chicago reading which I still love - it seems to balance the exotic with the formal, as so often with that conductor, in ideal manner. I also have both Bernsteins, Rattle, Svetlanov and the Kubelik DG recording.
I remember pricking up my ears a few years back at extracts on CD Review of a new version by Zdenek Macal and the Czech Philharmonic, which sounded stunning. But the price (it stretches to two discs) always put me off and I never got round to hearing it. Does anyone have this?
(Actually the pricing of that disc is very odd... Having seen the above on sale for £19.42, I noticed yesterday that it was apparently due for re-release on 13 August at a more sensible price - £12 I think... but on looking again, the given price has changed upwards... markedly
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Symphony-No-...mahler+7+macal )
Anyway - views on the piece, preferred recordings and performances attended, most welcome.
Last week I caught up with the CD Review from 3rd August when AMcG considered and played extracts from these two new discs:
Gustav Mahler
Symphony No. 7
Performer: Berlin Philharmonic. Performer: Michael Gielen.
TESTAMENT SBT 1480 TK 3
Gustav Mahler
Symphony No. 7
Performer: Gürzenich-Orchester Köln. Performer: Markus Stenz.
OEHMS CLASSICS OC 652 TK 5
I've long had a fondness for the 7th and its colour, glamour and - I think - irony (it sometimes seems like Mahler writing a parody of his own work, to me).
Both those two new discs grabbed me and I've acquired both, and used a peaceful weekend to listen to them.
Not sure I shall hang on to the Stenz. Maybe it's the SA-CD format, but on my CD system the sound is rather recessed and nasal. What got me on the radio was the final movement, played in headlong and exhilarating manner... but as AMcG said, the earlier movements are less remarkable.
On the other hand, the Gielen 'live' performance is fabulous. He stepped in to replace an ailing Tennstedt, and it's something special - and a wonderful rich but precise recording.
I heard Klaus Tennstedt conduct Mahler 7 once, and it was the only concert by him I was very disapponted with - he let it sprawl it seemed to me, all tugging and no structure.
Gielen doen't take it briskly but he maintains a focus and a pulse. Some terrific playing, and nice precise timps I think you can hear the 'modern music' specialist in the way he makes the music sound, right from the outset - the accompaniment figure under the tenor horn solo usually sounds as a sort of low, husky shimmer - Gielen makes it throb and shudder, much more distinctly.
This reading is a keeper!
I learnt this piece from Abbado's classic Chicago reading which I still love - it seems to balance the exotic with the formal, as so often with that conductor, in ideal manner. I also have both Bernsteins, Rattle, Svetlanov and the Kubelik DG recording.
I remember pricking up my ears a few years back at extracts on CD Review of a new version by Zdenek Macal and the Czech Philharmonic, which sounded stunning. But the price (it stretches to two discs) always put me off and I never got round to hearing it. Does anyone have this?
(Actually the pricing of that disc is very odd... Having seen the above on sale for £19.42, I noticed yesterday that it was apparently due for re-release on 13 August at a more sensible price - £12 I think... but on looking again, the given price has changed upwards... markedly
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Symphony-No-...mahler+7+macal )
Anyway - views on the piece, preferred recordings and performances attended, most welcome.
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