Originally posted by smittims
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BaL 13.04.24 - Brahms: Symphony 3
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Originally posted by makropulos View Post
There's a comprehensive online discography of Dennis Brain's recordings by Robert L. Marshall who says: 'Brain could hardly have taken part in Otto Klemperer's recording of the Brahms Symphony No. 3, recorded on 26 and 27 March 1957, since he was on a solo tour in Scotland from about the 23rd to the 28th of that month.' According to Marshall, he is the first horn on the live RFH Toscanini performance and Cantelli's recording from August 1955. For anyone interested, the link is here: https://www.hornsociety.org/home/dow...scography/file
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Thanks. makropoulos; it's always good to have accuracy! I was going by an old obituary which promised record collectors that they would hear him in the Columbia recordings of all four Brahms symphonies. It's some tribute to his influence that other horn players sometimes sounded like him, for instance Alan Civil in the recording of Strauss' Capriccio, where an American magazine mistook him for Dennis Brain.
I had forgotten the Philharmonia / Toscanini recordings, and I confess I did not know Cantelli had recorded the Third. Thanks once again for 'putting the record straight'. .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThanks. makropoulos; it's always good to have accuracy! I was going by an old obituary which promised record collectors that they would hear him in the Columbia recordings of all four Brahms symphonies. It's some tribute to his influence that other horn players sometimes sounded like him, for instance Alan Civil in the recording of Strauss' Capriccio, where an American magazine mistook him for Dennis Brain.
I had forgotten the Philharmonia / Toscanini recordings, and I confess I did not know Cantelli had recorded the Third. Thanks once again for 'putting the record straight'. .
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Yes, unless he goes for a HIPP version I expect the VPO will be front runners, though I'd think Abbado would be a head by a short neck, unless he's a Bernstein fan , in which case heaven help us.
I find I do have a Cantelli Brahms 3, though it's the NBC S.O. in 1951. And just to complete the possibility of Dennis Brain recordings, Giulini's version with the Philharmonia was in 1962 when sadly Dennis was no more, and while Karajan might have recorded it with this orchestra, in fact (unles sa broadcast tape turns up) his first version was with the VPO in 1961 during his Decca years.
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Originally posted by makropulos View Post
Yes, there will. That much I can say :) For me, the issue is not so much a harmonic argument as one about structure and formal balance.
Last edited by Eine Alpensinfonie; 25-03-24, 08:52.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYes, unless he goes for a HIPP version I expect the VPO will be front runners, though I'd think Abbado would be a head by a short neck, unless he's a Bernstein fan , in which case heaven help us.
Other VPO recordings of the work I have are Abbado, Barbirolli and Kertesz, though I’m less keen on the Kertesz.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... which is often an excellent idea
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I remember in my mid twenties hearing Solti perform this with the CSO at Ravinia. It was a miserably hot and humid midwestern summer night and the mosquitoes were having a feast, and damned if he didn’t take every repeat;, and he just didn’t seem to have a feel for Brahms rhetoric with much arbitrariness in rubato. The experience put me off listening to this for years.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostExcept that Brahms himself said his exposition repeats were unnecessary if the audience had already heard the work. However, this doesn’t solve the problem, as an audience will almost always be a mixture of those who have/haven’t heard it before. But for me, an exposition repeat is always a structurally dodgy concept, as the composer has already presented the material and has made the important key change in preparation for the development. Jumping back to the beginning is like being told to reread the first chapter of a book.
I think there are certain works where I would expect the exposition repeat - most of the Beethoven symphonies example. The exposition of Brahms 3 isn’t that long really - about 3’ 30 “in Abbado .Brahms’ modulatory passage (A minor back to F ) couldn’t be more perfunctory- a mere two bars.
A lot of conductors don’t do the exposition repeat in Brahms 2 - a pity as Brahms actually writes a few more bars for that. I like to hear the repeat in the 3rd mainly because JB spends time in the development working through his material in that way he has so that it’s quite nice to have it fixed in your mind. I’m not even sure that he hasn’t started manipulating the material in the exposition - which is thematically so dense .I can think or worse ways of spending 3 mins 30 on this planet.
That Abbado recording is excellent.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYes, unless he goes for a HIPP version I expect the VPO will be front runners, though I'd think Abbado would be a head by a short neck, unless he's a Bernstein fan , in which case heaven help us.
I find I do have a Cantelli Brahms 3, though it's the NBC S.O. in 1951. And just to complete the possibility of Dennis Brain recordings, Giulini's version with the Philharmonia was in 1962 when sadly Dennis was no more, and while Karajan might have recorded it with this orchestra, in fact (unles sa broadcast tape turns up) his first version was with the VPO in 1961 during his Decca years.
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Originally posted by MickyD View Post
Apart from Norrington and Gardiner, are there are any other HIPP contenders?
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