Originally posted by Petrushka
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BaL 14.12.24 - Wagner: Siegfried Idyll
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Originally posted by Dance Band Spiv View Posthttps://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/af6d4fce...6c9b1644976801
Does anyone else recall this wonderful dramatisation from 1969 of the work's genesis and first performance? I wonder if it still exists in the archive, as I've searched in vain on YouTube
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Originally posted by Dance Band Spiv View Posthttps://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/af6d4fce...6c9b1644976801
Does anyone else recall this wonderful dramatisation from 1969 of the work's genesis and first performance? I wonder if it still exists in the archive, as I've searched in vain on YouTube
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostFor the original 13 player version the Solti with members of the Vienna Philharmonic wins hands down, in my opinion. It's a gorgeous performance, intimate and beautiful, as if we were eavesdropping on the original players sitting on the stairs on that Christmas morning in 1870.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostI remember seeing this as a teenage Wagner neophyte, and the image of Alan Badel as the composer has stuck with me ever since, but I wasn't aware at the time that he was reprising the rôle he played in1955 here:
I gather Korngold 'arranged' the music - and according to wiki, plays the part of Hans Richter
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostMy first recording of Siegfried Idyll was Colin Davis conducting the Sinfonia of London on a WRC from 1960 - in recent years it was in a Colin Davis ICON box of his early recordings - most of which still soundcremarkably good. I too like Solti’s VPO slimmed down version.
I mentioned this in my post on 22-11-24, 15:07
Interesting stuff in that box, including the Tippett PC, of course!
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI got the Solti recording in October 1970 (I was 16) and recall playing it on Christmas morning for the centenary. I repeated this on Christmas morning 2020 for the 150th anniversary.
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Originally posted by Wolfram View Post
Somewhere in the back of my mind I vaguely remember reading that there was some doubt as to whether Solti actually conducted the recording, and in reality it was led by Willi Boskovsky from the leader’s chair. I’m sure someone here might be able to throw some light on this. Nevertheless it is my favourite chamber version, Klemperer being my favourite of the orchestral versions.
The leader was Walter Weller, not Boskovsky, and this was the cause of trouble that beset the Walkure recording (see 'Ring Resounding' page 243 and following by John Culshaw).
None of it matters now."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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