Originally posted by Caliban
View Post
BaL 5.10.19 - Strauss: Ein Heldenleben
Collapse
X
-
-
-
Originally posted by gradus View PostJansons/BRSO but you can disagree!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Caliban View Post
If only one of our number could arrange to have it out with the Controller face-to-face, and forcibly convey the general feeling to him direct...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by CallMePaul View PostI much preferred the Solti and was not keen on the Jansons. If you still have a decently-stocked HMV in your area you should be able to find the Solti (coupled with other tone poems) for £5.99, half of Presto's price!
On reflection, I'm now unsure of whether Jansons adds an extra trumpet Bb to the passage I identified in #114, since Bb & Eb clarinets in unison "hervortretend" could sound extremely piercing & trumpet-like on that high Bb....Hmm
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Maclintick View PostOn reflection, I'm now unsure of whether Jansons adds an extra trumpet Bb to the passage I identified in #114, since Bb & Eb clarinets in unison "hervortretend" could sound extremely piercing & trumpet-like on that high Bb....Hmm
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Nimrod View PostI have a very early, maybe even a first edition (can't find a date anywhere!), of the miniature score and it is as shown here.
It's good to note at the top of the title page that R.S. dedicated his tone poem to Wilhelm Mengelberg und dem Concertgebouw Orchester in Amsterdam.
That Tom Service used RS and WM recordings as historic yardsticks to measure more modern versions seems no more than 'going back to basics'.
My score was used at the fp of the work in GB
Its owner noted on the flyleaf, in pencil:
First performance in London took place on Sat. afternoon Dec.6th, 1902 at the Queen's Hall conducted by Strauss himself; at the same concert Mme. Teresa Careno played Tchaikovsky's Pf. concerto in Bb, conducted by Henry Wood - his first performance after an illness.
Looking at an advertisement for the Concert, I have discovered that Strauss brought a soloist with him ( Herr Zimmermann) for the Concertante solo part rather than trust the Queen's Orchestra leader: Arthur Payne.
Comment
-
-
I listened yesterday having been away last weekend and I share the common view of the twofer format and Tom Service's delivery. Afterwards, I listened again to the BaL on Sibelius 7. The format and Stephen Johnson's considered presentation were worlds apart from the Heldenleben review and the dramatic contrast emphasised what we have been missing recently.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by edashtav View PostI have an original edition: FEC Leuckart, copyright 1899 #5200 (quarter bound in leather) which is consistent with your score and Mac's. I do warm to the idea that the trumpet line heard on the Jansons is false and, in reality, emanated from the high, screaming clarinets plus flutes.
It's good to note at the top of the title page that R.S. dedicated his tone poem to Wilhelm Mengelberg und dem Concertgebouw Orchester in Amsterdam.
That Tom Service used RS and WM recordings as historic yardsticks to measure more modern versions seems no more than 'going back to basics'.
My score was used at the fp of the work in GB
Its owner noted on the flyleaf, in pencil:
First performance in London took place on Sat. afternoon Dec.6th, 1902 at the Queen's Hall conducted by Strauss himself; at the same concert Mme. Teresa Careno played Tchaikovsky's Pf. concerto in Bb, conducted by Henry Wood - his first performance after an illness.
Looking at an advertisement for the Concert, I have discovered that Strauss brought a soloist with him ( Herr Zimmermann) for the Concertante solo part rather than trust the Queen's Orchestra leader: Arthur Payne.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Maclintick View PostWow, Ed ! What a treasurable possession. Handling that score must generate a frisson of musical time-travelling -- an instant connection to late romanticism. Thanks for the historical sidelight on the first UK perf. One can appreciate Strauss's nervousness vis-à-vis the violin solo in the "Hero's Companion" section as this may well have overstretched the Queen's Hall Orchestra's leader, or, maybe equally likely in view of the paucity of rehearsal time in the days of Robert Newman & Henry Wood, to have been impossible to get under the belt within his busy schedule.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostOr he may have feared the "deputy " system.Last edited by Maclintick; 09-10-19, 12:16.
Comment
-
-
I think this thread is a good example of Heldenleben’s BAL law - the quality of the thread is in inverse proportion to that of the original review. As well as the 64 chord this is a great piece for
- lovers of the key of E flat ( ie pianists )
- flashy violin solos ( big fan me )
- bass heavy orchestration
- giving the big tune to the horns and celli
- organum
It appears that through inattention and my inability to read the notifications banner I missed out on the signal honour of posting EA ‘s recording list . Apologies for that but thanks as always to EA for his extraordinary diligence. I wonder if that honour will come around again...
Comment
-
Comment