Karafan's thread prompts me to pose a question . I have only his account of the Seventh in Cairo - a rather boxy recording indeed. Is there a better version out there of Furtwangler conducting this ?
Bruckner 7 and Furtwängler
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There's a Rome recording from the same tour (which I haven't heard, but which others have said has the same problems with recorded sound)
and a 1949 version from EMI, available in two pressings:
... the latter a strange compilation of very early recordings of movements from the Brukner symphonies. There is, apparently, a disc of the 1949 performance from URANIA that has better sound, but whither on the aether ...[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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This is the Electrola/EMI version 1949, re-mastered by Andrew Rose:
Superb award-winning historic classical, jazz and blues recordings restored and remastered to the highest standards. CDs, HD downloads and streaming services.
I can confirm that the sound of the 1 May 1951 recording (Music & Arts) strains one's tolerance. As it says on the back of the CD, "Like many other Italian Radio recordings of the period, this performance was preserved on acetate discs, rather than on tape. The discs had limited fidelity, surface noise, distortion and dynamic compression. Some of these defects could not be eliminated from the present release. The CD is, therefore, not recommended to listeners primarily interested in high fidelity sound". Fine performance but ....
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Barbirollians - I think Andrew Rose's XR remastering of the 1949 7th is definitely the way to go - he does tremendous work and has struck gold again with his sensitive and careful restoration of this masterpiece, revealing a WF reading in all its febrile brilliance."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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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostKarafan's thread prompts me to pose a question . I have only his account of the Seventh in Cairo - a rather boxy recording indeed. Is there a better version out there of Furtwangler conducting this ?
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostIn the play and movie about the post war Furtwangler "deNazification" investigation, the adagio from 7 as conducted by WF is played at the end. In the story, the Nazi government announced Hitler's death as this recording played in the background. If that is a historically correct item (a big if), then that would imply that there must have been a wF Bruckner/7 made before 1945.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostKarafan - is that the ambient stereo version . I am not sure I like the sound of that . If one orders the CD which version is that ?
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBb - if you click on "order CD" you'll then see "options" in a dropdown. Then you can choose XR or not. I don't know this recording, but on past experience Rose's "ambient" treatments are sensitively handled, just adding a subtle space and depth to the sound. Somewhere on that vast and informative site you can compare samples to hear its effect.
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slarty
This recording/ performance sounds much better than either Cairo or Rome, although it is from two years earlier.
The pristine XR treatment is fine, non intrusive, it just seems to open it up a little. I have had this recording, man and boy, including the horrible Electrola LPs in electronic stereo issued in the 70s and I would say that Andrew Rose's Pristine issue is the best yet.
As for WFs interpretation, the 1949 performance is better than either of the tour performances. The orchestra sounded a little tired in places and WFs problems with deafness were not yet hindering his performances. This is his best work in this symphony.
The 1942 Telefunken slow movement was a test recording of that movement only - made on tape and not shellac discs.
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