A disappointing BAL - Barbirolli appeared to be ignored as was the 1947 complete Walter . Worthy winner though. These twofers seem particularly ill-suited to cases where there are masses of recordings .
BaL 18.06.16 - Mahler: Symphony no. 5
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Originally posted by zola View PostDoes the Death In Venice association with the adagietto still have any relevance / resonance ? It is almost a vintage movie by now. Same with calling that Mozart piano concerto Elvira Madigan. About as much relevance as Brief Encounter is to Rachmaninov.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostA disappointing BAL - Barbirolli appeared to be ignored as was the 1947 complete Walter . Worthy winner though. These twofers seem particularly ill-suited to cases where there are masses of recordings .
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAnd Bernstein (Vienna) it is.
(oh dear - I feel that I'm being the first person to shout 'bravo' before the last notes die away)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by zola View PostDoes the Death In Venice association with the adagietto still have any relevance / resonance ? It is almost a vintage movie by now. Same with calling that Mozart piano concerto Elvira Madigan. About as much relevance as Brief Encounter is to Rachmaninov.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostI found myself wholly out of sympathy with William Myval's blithe justification for the Bernsteinian approach ("times change, music changes along with them").[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostA disappointing BAL - Barbirolli appeared to be ignored as was the 1947 complete Walter . Worthy winner though. These twofers seem particularly ill-suited to cases where there are masses of recordings .
Despite those tiny faults, which I quite enjoy, it's not really a 'Library' choice.
Maybe more of a 'Connoisseurs' choice...
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How I wish that Bernstein's 1987 Prom performance given a day or two away from the commercial recording could be released. I was present and my own off air recording bit the dust long ago. If ever there was a BBC Legends this was it.
Never understood the praise for the Barbirolli, PG, sorry. Missing horn notes, finale far too slow, it's one of my least favourite and rarely gets played. Perhaps one for the great CD cull when it comes."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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For me the most astonishing thing to emerge from this (otherwise slightly annoying) BAL was to hear the Adagietto at Bruno Walther and Erich Leinsdorf speed. Transformed from grief-stricken anguished trauer-musik to a rather beautiful, tender love tribute. (Walther recording much 'cleaned up'.) I assume Norrington would have done the same sort of thing.
As given away half-an-hour earlier on the Record Review website!
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
Never understood the praise for the Barbirolli, PG, sorry. Missing horn notes, finale far too slow, it's one of my least favourite and rarely gets played. Perhaps one for the great CD cull when it comes.
I was very into Mahler 5 at that point and I played that JB cd over and over again.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostFor me the most astonishing thing to emerge from this (otherwise slightly annoying) BAL was to hear the Adagietto at Bruno Walther and Erich Leinsdorf speed. Transformed from grief-stricken anguished trauer-musik to a rather beautiful, tender love tribute. (Walther recording much 'cleaned up'.) I assume Norrington would have done the same sort of thing.
...also hinted at when the reviewer (for once) disagreed with the presenter and said he didn't mind the harp arpeggios being reduced to mere single-note plonks at Bernstein's speed!
The lachrymose replaced by the actively reflective.
Tiny aside by reviewer - Mahler would barely recognise what has happened to his symphony since that film, and compared the speeds of Mahler's own performances to many present day renderings...... For me, the damage the film has done .....hmm..........
And can someone please tell me how on earth Haitink got into ANY short list for this programme once, let alone twice and more, given what we heard. Crumbs.
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Originally posted by zola View PostDoes the Death In Venice association with the adagietto still have any relevance / resonance ? It is almost a vintage movie by now. Same with calling that Mozart piano concerto Elvira Madigan. About as much relevance as Brief Encounter is to Rachmaninov.
Is the Leinsdorf recording nla?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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