One I had great expectations of, but found them dashed, was the Norrington SACD. Had he soloists better suited to the work, it might have helped, but he didn't. Sibylla Rubens in particular I found disappointing. I must dig out the Harper, Watts, LSO, Solti, and not just for nostalgic reasons.
BaL 22.04.17 - Mahler: Symphony no. 2
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It's a great pity that Rattle's 'farewell' 1998 CBSO live performance has never been issued in any format as it remains one of the great concert hall experiences I've had, a real privilege to have been there. The Mahler was filmed by Humphrey Burton and shown on Channel 4(!). It was also broadcast on Radio 3. Fortunately, I have the performance safely secured on to a recordable DVD. Quite why it have never been released as an official DVD is something of a mystery."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostIt's a great pity that Rattle's 'farewell' 1998 CBSO live performance has never been issued in any format as it remains one of the great concert hall experiences I've had, a real privilege to have been there. The Mahler was filmed by Humphrey Burton and shown on Channel 4(!). It was also broadcast on Radio 3. Fortunately, I have the performance safely secured on to a recordable DVD. Quite why it have never been released as an official DVD is something of a mystery.
Magnífica presentación del Maestro Británico Sir Simon Rattle, la Orquesta Sinfónica y Coro Juvenil de la Ciudad de Birmingham, Hillevi Martinpelto (Soprano)...
While I was at it, I checked some other televised Mahler 2nds on You Tube. They include Abbado / Lucerne Festival Orchestra; Dudamel / Simon Bolivar Symphony; Jansons / Concertgebouw; Boulez / Staatskapelle Berlin; Gergiev / Munich Philharmonic; and lots of audio recordings, ie: radio broadcasts or commercial releases, accompanied by still photos, including Bernstein, Klemperer, Stokowski, Schuricht, Mehta, Tennstedt and Rattle with the Berlin PO. Take your pick!
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Originally posted by seabright View Post... I've just typed "Rattle Mahler Symphony 2" in the You Tube 'search' field and straight away there appeared the very 1998 Rattle / CBSO performance Petrushka refers to, in first-class quality, both visual and audio. ...
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI have distinct feeling that there are some (many?) here who might question your use of the description "first-class" in relation to audio available on YouTube. I have not checked this specific example but in general you are very lucky to get anything higher than 128kbps aac. Radio 3's iPlayer rate is 320kbps aac, i.e. two and a half times as many bits to represent the music. Try https://www.h3xed.com/blogmedia/youtube-info.php for a tool which supposedly shows the data rates for most YouTube URLs. See https://www.h3xed.com/web-and-intern...80p-720p-1080p for further info.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAnyone seen on YouTube, a rehearsal snippet of a BBC orchestra trumpeter disagreeing with Lenny about something?!?!?
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostYes! The notorious Enigma Variations occasion where Lenny and the BBC Symphony made it pretty clear it was not a match made in heaven! Actually, the trumpets were not in tune and Lenny merely rehearsed them. They were sufficiently graceless in refusing to acknowledge that they had improved.
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The relationship between Lenny and the players deteriorated rapidly and although this was supposed to be the start of an Elgar series in which he was going to record both symphonies, it ended up with him announcing that he never wanted to conduct the BBC SO again. Unsurprisingly the feeling was mutual. Curious too that the BBCSO didn't get on with another American conductor, Leonard Slatkin. He was only too glad when his contract as their Chief Conductor had run its course and he has seldom conducted in the UK since then.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostActually, the trumpets were not in tune and Lenny merely rehearsed them. They were sufficiently graceless in refusing to acknowledge that they had improved.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostYes! The notorious Enigma Variations occasion where Lenny and the BBC Symphony made it pretty clear it was not a match made in heaven! Actually, the trumpets were not in tune and Lenny merely rehearsed them. They were sufficiently graceless in refusing to acknowledge that they had improved.
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For me, listening to the Fried recording from 1924 is like eavesdropping on a performance by Mahler himself. Of course, the sound is fairly primitive - the last year of non-electric recording, the orchestra huddled around one or maybe two horns.
Most astonishing is the Andante second movement, positively dripping with portamento - shortly to become forbidden, deemed vulgar.
I wonder if any of the recent conductors of this symphony have listened to the Fried? I compared it with BPO/Fischer, whose Andante is super-clean by comparison - and so much less moving.
It would have taken a Mackerras to try Fried's saturated portamento with a modern orchestra.
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