Originally posted by Bryn
View Post
BaL 11.11.17 - Shostakovich: Symphony no. 11 (The Year 1905)
Collapse
X
-
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
-
-
It's not the first time that this sort of fraud has been perpetrated. Some years ago (mid-'80s-ish) I bought a bootleg Italian CD purporting to be a BBC recording of a Live concert from 1961 in which Klemperer conducted the New Philharmonia Orchestra in a performance of Bruckner's Sixth Symphony. It was in Mono, and had audience noise, and was a splendid performance - one that I was convinced was even finer than the Studio recording of a few years later (which I had on vinyl). It was, in fact, a Mono reissue of that Studio recording with audience noise added, just as in the case of the Praga Mravinsky DSCH #11.
I learnt a lot from this experience.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIt's not the first time that this sort of fraud has been perpetrated. Some years ago (mid-'80s-ish) I bought a bootleg Italian CD purporting to be a BBC recording of a Live concert from 1961 in which Klemperer conducted the New Philharmonia Orchestra in a performance of Bruckner's Sixth Symphony. It was in Mono, and had audience noise, and was a splendid performance - one that I was convinced was even finer than the Studio recording of a few years later (which I had on vinyl). It was, in fact, a Mono reissue of that Studio recording with audience noise added, just as in the case of the Praga Mravinsky DSCH #11.
I learnt a lot from this experience.
I take my hatto ff to them for putting it right in the next issue.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI've just been listening again to the Leningrad PO and Mravinsky in a live 1967 Prague performance of the DSCH 11 and while it won't be winning any prizes for sound quality it is still perfectly acceptable. The performance though is absolutely blistering and I'd still take this as my library choice over all others. It was the Leningrad PO and Mravinsky who gave the first performance and what you have here is total Authenticity, the sound of each and every instrument exactly as the composer would have known.
McBurney will certainly know this performance and it will be interesting to see whether he chooses Western refinement and digital sound over the real deal.
As to Mravinsky, there are two You Tube uploads, the first of which has the performance date 2 November 1959. However, this has a 'comment' underneath which says there was a "double premiere" on the same evening in 1957, from Rakhlin in Moscow and Mravinsky in Leningrad. Perhaps Rakhlin's performance started before Mravinsky's, making him the first with the actual premiere! ...
"Symphony No 11 in G minor", "Year 1905" Op 103by Dmitri ShostakovichLeningrad Philharmonic OrchestraYevgeny Mravinsky, conductor02.II.1959
The other upload is also stated to be the November 1959 performance, though the audio quality doesn't sound much different to the other one ...
Support us on Patreon and get more content: https://www.patreon.com/classicalvault --- Dmitri ShostakovichSymphony No 11 in G minor, Op 103 'The Year 1905'Le...
Mravinsky's 1967 Prague performance doesn't seem to be on You Tube, so we can't do a quick check there as to how that one sounds.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
I suppose that ends my advocacy of that recording.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by seabright View PostThe Wiki entry on this work states that the first performance was given by Natan Rakhlin and the USSR Symphony on 30 October 1957 ...
As to Mravinsky, there are two You Tube uploads, the first of which has the performance date 2 November 1959. However, this has a 'comment' underneath which says there was a "double premiere" on the same evening in 1957, from Rakhlin in Moscow and Mravinsky in Leningrad. Perhaps Rakhlin's performance started before Mravinsky's, making him the first with the actual premiere! ...
"Symphony No 11 in G minor", "Year 1905" Op 103by Dmitri ShostakovichLeningrad Philharmonic OrchestraYevgeny Mravinsky, conductor02.II.1959
The other upload is also stated to be the November 1959 performance, though the audio quality doesn't sound much different to the other one ...
Support us on Patreon and get more content: https://www.patreon.com/classicalvault --- Dmitri ShostakovichSymphony No 11 in G minor, Op 103 'The Year 1905'Le...
Mravinsky's 1967 Prague performance doesn't seem to be on You Tube, so we can't do a quick check there as to how that one sounds.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostAnother twofer BAL - I really dislike them.Last edited by mikealdren; 11-11-17, 09:47.
Comment
-
-
I really enjoyed that BaL. Such fascinating conversation, really expanded my perspective on this symphony. Scholarly, experienced and so interesting. I shan't be adding the Bychkov, though. I'm enthralled with my Barshai (and have been for some time) and my recently acquired Haitink is not so far behind. I also have the Naxos Petrenko, but it doesn't move me as much as the other two - perhaps I can revisit it and listen with new ears, following this BaL.
We seem to have been lucky over the last couple of years with these BaLs, they are to me of consistently high quality. I still feel this is R3's best programme!
Comment
-
-
My heart also sank when I realised that it was a twofer but I found Gerard McBurney's, if I can be permitted to use the word, "exegesis", on the symphony to be, as Beefy puts it, "scholarly, experienced and so interesting". Exactly. I'm sorry that it wasn't longer as I would have liked more music but I came away from the programme with a new respect for a symphony which I've been inclined to dismiss as a bit second-rate. I have Bychkov anyway but will get hold of the Wigglesworth, if only for the wonderful recording.
Comment
-
Comment