Originally posted by richardfinegold
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BaL 5.10.24 - Brahms: Symphony 1
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Originally posted by duncan View Post
Oh dear! I meant 1989... must take the tablets before posting."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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To me it was a fashion conscious decision from Katy H. Didn’t you just know it wasn’t to be the HvK which both she and Andrew had rather laughed at earlier on? Not many insights from a supposed Brahms specialist. I found the references to beards and the different sorts of Brahms a shade facile and unhelpful.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostTo me it was a fashion conscious decision from Katy H. Didn’t you just know it wasn’t to be the HvK which both she and Andrew had rather laughed at earlier on? Not many insights from a supposed Brahms specialist. I found the references to beards and the different sorts of Brahms a shade facile and unhelpful.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostTo me it was a fashion conscious decision from Katy H. Didn’t you just know it wasn’t to be the HvK which both she and Andrew had rather laughed at earlier on? Not many insights from a supposed Brahms specialist. I found the references to beards and the different sorts of Brahms a shade facile and unhelpful.
(I was glad the live LPO/Jurowski was included - acquired years ago as the companion work to No 2 which mopped the floor with all-comers in the opinion of the French critics of La Tribune…)"...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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I've just listened to Karajan's 1952 recording with the Philharmonia Orchestra and found it to be very fine indeed, sounding terrific in the Warner Official Remastered Edition issue, done an amazing 10 years ago. Is that Dennis Brain on solo horn does anyone know? Was he in the Philharmonia in 1952?
It goes to show that you can't just leave these older recordings out of consideration"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI've just listened to Karajan's 1952 recording with the Philharmonia Orchestra and found it to be very fine indeed, sounding terrific in the Warner Official Remastered Edition issue, done an amazing 10 years ago. Is that Dennis Brain on solo horn does anyone know? Was he in the Philharmonia in 1952?
It goes to show that you can't just leave these older recordings out of consideration
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Originally posted by cloughie View Post
Two on Testament worth a listen - Toscanini with the Philharmonia from 1952 and BPO Kempe from 1959."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
Doesn’t appear to be available on the Presto streaming service (I’m doing a 30 day trial) nor the CD on Amazon"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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While we're mentining other versions, and since Furtwangler has featured, I'll mention two or three other recordings of his apart from the famous 1952 Vienna :
Vienna Philharmonic, November 1947. This was an HMV studio recording produced by Walter Legge. Ward Marston did a fine Naxos remastering of it.
North German radio Orchestra, Hamburg, October 1951. John Ardoin called it 'granitelike and dramatic, ominous and tragic.' I know it from a 1996 Maggi Payne remastering published by Musicand ArtsAmerica.
Berlin Philharmonic, Titania-Palast, February 1952. This was issued on a DG LP inthe 1970s and is in the 2019 DG 'Wilhelm Furtwangler' box.
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Originally posted by smittims View Post
Berlin Philharmonic, Titania-Palast, February 1952. This was issued on a DG LP inthe 1970s and is in the 2019 DG 'Wilhelm Furtwangler' box.
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Yes, they're easily confused because the dates were very close ; the Vienna was 27 January 1952.
Some of Furtwangler's recordings are difficult to date and identify. There's a 1952 Eroica with the Vienna Phil which Vox published as 'Berlin Philharmonic'. And I have a supposedly 1942 Brahms 4 which is suspiciously similar to the 1943 Berlin recording issued by Music and Arts. I'm told a lot of paper records were destroyed by fire during the allied bombing.
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