The reviewer said that the Gardiner is the only one to use period instruments, but in fact the Hanover Band and Roy Goodman also did an HIP set of the symphonies on RCA.
BaL 29.11.14 - Schumann: Symphony no. 2
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostThe reviewer said that the Gardiner is the only one to use period instruments, but in fact the Hanover Band and Roy Goodman also did an HIP set of the symphonies on RCA.
I never partook; did I miss something good? (man )
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Well this was a really impressive survey, covering a lot of ground in what will never be enough time...
Sympathies with slarty, but surely it makes sense to give more time to newer cycles on each revisit to a familiar work?
I'm afraid the excerpts from Karajan, Bernstein et al only confirmed my own prejudices against older, slower, heavier performances. I even find Szell almost unlistenable now, and as I said in January find Sawallisch almost Brucknerian in its weight and grandeur!
I was surprised how many of the excerpts sounded disappointing, and was amused to find my ears pricking up at.... Nezet-Seguin - which was the performance I least enjoyed from his cycle! Heavens, do I have to have yet another go at it now? All is truly relative...
But the much-praised winner JEG still sounded flat and inexpressive to me, even in this comparative context. I keep returning to the lovely green & white Archiv box, but never really get on with it... I feel that Dausgaard does everything JEG does but does it better, in better sound - AND it's a real competitor as a comprehensive symphonic survey.
I was thrilled with Abbado's OM performance earlier this year, but today the finale did indeed sound... plodding? Well, very steady... Again, it's simply because of my recent fortnight in the company of Ticciati and Nezet-S. All that dash, agility, volatility and rhythmical freedom! The Abbado will never sound the same again...
Glad to hear the oft-overlooked Harnoncourt getting some acclaim, the whole COE cycle is very, very good - AND you have the Berlin Phil supplement with the 1851 4th.
Classical performances are like sharks; if they're not constantly moving forward, they die... You can still enjoy them in the museum though...
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I was a bit uncomfortable with RW's pronunciation of Nezet-Seguin, ("Say-Gwan") so I looked around and found this
All news about the conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin are listed on this page. Consult them to learn more about his achievements.
So it's "Say-GUN". Good to get that cleared up... (I'd started with a nasal say-gan, then moved to say-geen...)...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 29-11-14, 22:11.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI was a bit uncomfortable with RW's pronunciation of Nezet-Seguin, ("Say-Gwan") so I looked around and found this
All news about the conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin are listed on this page. Consult them to learn more about his achievements.
So it's "Say-GUN". Good to get that cleared up... (I'd started with a nasal say-gan, then moved to say-geen...)...
Sorry, I've strayed into Pedants' Paradise, and don't at all want to detract from your very interesting (as always) comments on the music.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostKarajan and Haitink were the first sets I got, later I got the Gardiner.
Four's my favourite anyway, and It's Furtwangler and Karajan, for me.
Interesting Bal, but increasingly it shows that you can almost divide it into two self-contained programmes, one on well-upholstered 'traditional' performances and the other on HIPP/later renditions.
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Google on "Yannick-Nezet Saywhat? - youtube" for the truth from the maestro's mouth...
(Link to video was "unavailable" as usual...) What a youthful charmer Yannick seems!
So JFLL you were right! As was my initial guess... (i.e, as per Gauguin).
But I realise now that the journalist, David Patrick Stearns, would be saying "gun" with an American accent - so for him it would be, well, close enough...
.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 30-11-14, 01:24.
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostSurely it can't be "Say-GUN", as we pronounce say and gun? This looks to me like Berlitzese, or a version by a linguistically unsophisticated English-speaker making a shot at the French sound he heard. Phonetically, isn't the ending as in Gauguin, a nasalized open e? (Unfortunately I can't do the correct phonetic symbol with the fonts I have -- a Greek epsilon with a tilde)?
Sorry, I've strayed into Pedants' Paradise, and don't at all want to detract from your very interesting (as always) comments on the music.
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostThat's true. I remember that it was quite well-lauded in the 1990s, and quite popular - always popping up in HMV sales!
I never partook; did I miss something good? (man )
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostCertainly agree with you on Furtwangler - which Karajan - I like the EMI 1955 recording. Klemperer's 4th is good- was done earlier than 1 2 & 3 with the Philharmonia on good form!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostClassical performances are like sharks; if they're not constantly moving forward, they die...[/I] You can still enjoy them in the museum though...
Barenboim
Bernstein x3
Celibidache
Dohnanyi
Haitink
Inbal
Janowski
Karajan
Klemperer
Konwitschny
Kubelik x2
Levine
Marriner
Masur x2
Mehta
Muti
Paray
Saccani
Sawallisch x2
Schuricht
Sinopoli x2
Solti
Szell
Thielemann
Vonk
Wit
and just to get the right sound I'll play them through my 80s amp and 70s speakers!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostGoogle on "Yannick-Nezet Saywhat? - youtube" for the truth from the maestro's mouth...
(Link to video was "unavailable" as usual...) What a youthful charmer Yannick seems!.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostMy money's already on Gardiner
Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostWasn't the opening Klemperer excerpt truly dreadful? No wonder critics used to slag off this symphony!Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI'm afraid the excerpts from Karajan, Bernstein et al only confirmed my own prejudices against older, slower, heavier performances.
I was surprised how many of the excerpts sounded disappointing
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostWell this was a really impressive survey, covering a lot of ground in what will never be enough time...
Originally posted by Caliban View Post"Sawallisch’s searching, far-seeing 1972 recording, gloriously executed by the Dresden Staatskapelle, still leads the field, despite memorable recent offerings from the likes of Gardiner, Sinopoli and Thielemann. Richard Wigmore"
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Postwas amused to find my ears pricking up at.... Nezet-Seguin - which was the performance I least enjoyed from his cycle!
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI was a bit uncomfortable with RW's pronunciation of Nezet-Seguin, ("Say-Gwan")"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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amateur51
I agree, an enjoyable BaL.
However I find RW's voice problematic - it is almost as boring as Clement Freud's, such that by the time the clip was played, I'd forgotten who it was by.
But that's me.
Innit.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI agree, an enjoyable BaL.
However I find RW's voice problematic - it is almost as boring as Clement Freud's, such that by the time the clip was played, I'd forgotten who it was by.
But that's me.
Innit.
Got yer Schumann Minced Morsels muddled up Ammy?
I find that with certain other reviewers, but find RW's gravelly introductions fine, or at least I did earlier.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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