Originally posted by Petrushka
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BaL 5.10.24 - Brahms: Symphony 1
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Originally posted by duncan View PostThe live RFH 1989 version means even more to me (happy to learn there is a CD, my recording is an off-air cassette). Perhaps this is less related to intrinsic quality than its associations: I had just moved to London, was thrilled at the range of music available, had some disposable income at last, and was going to several concerts a week. This one was sold-out so I queued for hours for returns but sadly but didn't quite get in.
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThat concert was on October 6 1988 and is available on a Testament CD. I tried to book for the concert but it was sold out by the time my application was in.
I was there (decent stalls seats too), not sure how I managed to organise that. (Found and kept the programme too, in a recent clear-out)
Like duncan, the associations (not least that it was the only time I saw Karajan) meant I was delighted to find the performance on a commercial CD - but also it was and remains a special performance.
There was an unusual and tense atmosphere that night - orchestra equipment had been delayed in transit - for a while we weren’t sure the concert was going to happen at all. In the event, it went ahead after a very delayed start, with some players in ‘mufti’ as their concert attire was still missing. In contrast to that relaxed look, I recall the Brahms performance as almost angry, as if reflecting the mood of anxiety and tension 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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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
It's on both Amazon and Presto. If you put 'Karajan testament' in the searcboxes of either, it will come up. I've just tried it and it does.
a follow up-when I typed’ ‘Karajan’Testament’ in the regular Presto site the disc now appears. They don’t list a streaming option which might explain why the Presto streaming service doesn’t carry it. And regarding Amazon, today it appears whereas yesterday it did not! The wonders of Digital Search Engines.Last edited by richardfinegold; 12-10-24, 11:28.
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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
Obviously a work he was fond of, having recorded on 78s in 1947, Mono LP in 1951 (Both for Decca) and Stereo for Philips in 1958.
I also have a live Tennstedt on the way. Let’s see what he came up with.Last edited by oliver sudden; 11-10-24, 17:52.
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
Oh dear, I feel a bit guilty now
I was there (decent stalls seats too), not sure how I managed to organise that. (Found and kept the programme too, in a recent clear-out)
Like duncan, the associations (not least that it was the only time I saw Karajan) meant I was delighted to find the performance on a commercial CD - but also it was and remains a special performance.
There was an unusual and tense atmosphere that night - orchestra equipment had been delayed in transit - for a while we weren’t sure the concert was going to happen at all. In the event, it went ahead after a very delayed start, with some players in ‘mufti’ as their concert attire was still missing. In contrast to that relaxed look, I recall the Brahms performance as almost angry, as if reflecting the mood of anxiety and tension earlier….
The performance was broadcast on Capital Radio (!) on June 24 1979 and, despite searches and requests on Karajan websites and elsewhere, the only recording I've been able to find is one with a cut in the Adagio where someone obviously changed the cassette tape and which is also plagued by radio interference noises. Sad because the sound itself is actually very good.
Presumably, the original tape is gathering dust somewhere in the vaults but I still live in hope it will one day emerge and be issued on CD."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Many thanks to oliver for the lead to that Dennis Brain discography . I cannot better the remarks on pages 4 and 5 re the often complex question 'is it actually DB on this recording?' . One can usually pick him out by hs tone, though naturally other players tried to emulate him. For instance, I've often thought it is he on the Beecham complete Schumann Manfred music , a Philips recording now on SONY , but apparently not from this list.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYes, 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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Originally posted by smittims View PostMany thanks to oliver for the lead to that Dennis Brain discography . I cannot better the remarks on pages 4 and 5 re the often complex question 'is it actually DB on this recording?' . One can usually pick him out by hs tone, though naturally other players tried to emulate him. For instance, I've often thought it is he on the Beecham complete Schumann Manfred music , a Philips recording now on SONY , but apparently not from this list.
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostI shall most certainly be investigating Le Cercle de l'Harmonie on the basis of those few seconds.
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostI shall most certainly be investigating Le Cercle de l'Harmonie on the basis of those few seconds.
Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostDidn't really do it for me, in case anyone's wondering (unlikely, I know). /.../ Norrington is still my HIPP pick by quite some margin.
I too remain loyal to Norrington, both LCP and the Stuttgarters
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I didn't get on with Norrington's Brahms 1 - I think I still have the cassette somewhere. Unlike his Symphonie Fantastique which tops all other HIPP versions I have heard by a long way - and is up there with Colin Davis, Abbado, Barbirolli , Beecham and Stokowski as one of my very favourites.
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