Originally posted by mikealdren
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BaL 7.02.15 - Saint-Saëns: Symphony no. 3
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I was surprised GN didn't mention the very different noises we heard out of the various Cavaille-Cols that he played side by side as it were. One of them at least was not at all what I wanted to hear: saturated treble 'fizz' and very little weight in the bass The style of presentation at this point meant I didn't really catch which was which, so as to avoid this fizzy one at all costs!
Assuming it wasn't the guilty one I'm almost tempted by the Siecles/ Roth, having really enjoyed hearing their Stravinsky ballets disc this week. Not sure I really need another S-S 3 though. Still, as none of my current three versions (Paray, Fremaux, Mehta) got a mention, and with only the latter on CD, I'm sure I can make a caseI keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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I have this version too (Barenboim) and I like it very much.
However, I probably shouldn't say it, but I actually quite liked the "effortful ritardandos" [sic] of Bernstein's recording. As is so often the case with LB, you have to hear the whole thing to put it into its correct concept - and as is so often the case, it never sounds 'wrong' - case in point; his Enigma Variations (BBCSO/DG)
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tigajen
Eschenbach in 2007 but I dont know who the reviewer was.I have the Munch which I dont believe got a mention.I am very happy to stick with it.
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I was pleased that Barenboim won for its clarity, depth of perception and structural coherence. Les Siècles with François-Xavier Roth astonished me, at times, in much the manner that Norrington's Beethoven symphonies with the LCP once did. The Roth is like a historical research document - there are a 101 ideas for you to consider before you form you ideal interpretation.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostWell, already having the first choice, I have just ordered the Roth père et fils via ebay. Strange though that no mention seems to have been made of the fact that the organ part was conceived not for a Cavaillé-Coll, but, as Andrew Mellor reminds us, "an English-style concert hall organ in London", and that Saint-Saens offered the use of a harmonium as an alternative. So the big sound we are all use to seems to be far from the composer's aim.
According to Rollin Smith's book on Saint-Saëns and the Organ, the instrument from St. James's Hall used for the premiere was moved to High Wycombe Town Hall when St. James's Hall closed in 1905 (Smith also includes a complete spec. for this organ).
Does anybody know if this instrument still in High Wycombe? (I can't find any mention of organ recitals there online).
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Originally posted by tigajen View PostEschenbach in 2007 but I dont know who the reviewer was.I have the Munch which I dont believe got a mention.I am very happy to stick with it.
I'm a little surprised he didn't mention the Eschenbach as it was Chris de Souza's BaL top choice in December 2007. The recording also captures the deep (32 ft ?) organ registers where you feel the sound rather than hear it. Not all recordings do and I always feel slightly cheated by recordings that don't.
I like the Munch but either he or the recording engineer seems to have been allergic to the orchestra playing "p" or "pp".
I'm intrigued by the Roth and will be interested to hear the BAL choice on Monday.
Yan Pascal Tortelier recorded the piece with the Ulster Orchestra. I seem to remember the performance had a distinctly Gallic twang to it and would love to hear it again.
(What ever happened to YP Tortelier? He seems to completely disappeared from the UK after his successful partnership with the BBC Philharmonic.)
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My immediate reaction was to bemoan the fact that an 'artificial' version (i.e. organ and orchestra apart) had been chosen. OTOH, listening to a CD in one's sitting room is 'artificial' and relies on the mixer's art, even for so-called 'recorded live' CDs. Scrabbling through my shelves, I find it's a version I have anyway, and I'd forgotten all about the remoteness of Gaston Litaize!
I enjoyed the review, the only quibble I had with GN being his obsession with the clarity of the four-hands piano bit in Jansen's version, where he claimed (Hoffnung style) 'each note is like a polished diamond'! It's surely written as coloration to the texture, being merely arpeggiated figures, as in a similar bit in The Carnival of the Animals. I'm sure SS didn't mean it to be an 8-bar piano concerto,
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Originally posted by Roehre View Posttheir loss
PS: Probably should have replied to EdgeleyRob rather than Roehre; I thought all of Rohre's post would appear as my 'quote'!
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Originally posted by makropulos View Post
According to Rollin Smith's book on Saint-Saëns and the Organ, the instrument from St. James's Hall used for the premiere was moved to High Wycombe Town Hall when St. James's Hall closed in 1905 (Smith also includes a complete spec. for this organ).
Does anybody know if this instrument still in High Wycombe? (I can't find any mention of organ recitals there online).
The 1921 rebuild is here: http://www.npor.org.uk/NPORView.html?RI=N09664
A specification of what is currently available at the Town Hall does not mention the organ: https://wycombeswan.co.uk/Online/Art...0Review%29.pdfLast edited by subcontrabass; 07-02-15, 12:37.
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Originally posted by subcontrabass View PostThe original specification is available here: http://www.npor.org.uk/NPORView.html?RI=N09663
The 1921 reduild is here: http://www.npor.org.uk/NPORView.html?RI=N09664
A specification of what is currently available at the Town Hall does not mention the organ: https://wycombeswan.co.uk/Online/Art...0Review%29.pdf
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Ofcourse, I think the last movement, I find especially a wow factor, for me. If you ever hear atop brass band play this with organ, like Black Dyke Band, then your onto a certain winner! :) Imagine this with Black Dyke and a Cavaille-Coll organ combined!!!Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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It did seem a little odd that the Barenboim performance was only mentioned once during the programme, but ended up as first choice.
I was struck by the harsh and ugly sounds that most of the organs made, all of them were far removed from the experience we would have in the hall.As is so often the case, early examples of the quiet opening of the piece sounded impossibly remote, although this was rectified later in the programme. The presenter seemed to attach great importance to a few bars of rippling piano, a nice moment certainly, but he did make rather a thing of it,
One version that seems to have disappeared is the CBSO performance conducted by Louis Fremaux, a beautiful performance IMHO. It was one of EMI's more successful quadraphonic discs, and still sounds well in 2 channel stereo. Of the half dozen versions I have, my firm favourite is the Boston / Munch, a sensation in its day but presumably Norris felt it was too far back to qualify.
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tigajen
my firm favourite is the Boston / Munch, a sensation in its day but presumably Norris felt it was too far back to qualify.[/QUOTE]
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