Originally posted by pastoralguy
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BaL 4.01.20 - Elgar: Enigma Variations
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Originally posted by Alison View PostI remember buying this disc in Oxford St and couldn’t stop playing it for months. Thrilling Falstaff as well.
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I have the RPO/Del Mar disc (coupled with some exhilerating P & C Marches) which I think is extremely good despite being recorded in a Cathdral acoustic. I do hope KC doesn't spend too much time on the Bernstein - his Nimrod totally rules it out for me. Fascinating how one's first hearing stays with you for ever: Barbirolli, Oxford Town Hall in the 1950s or 60s.
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The first one I put my hand on was Rattle/CBSO about which Gramophone said:
Rattle's Enigma [....] aided by a highly responsive CBSO, the results are always enjoyable and refreshing, with myriad details in Elgar's lovingly-woven orchestral canvas adroitly pinpointed (Downes's BBC PO version, too, is especially strong in this regard). The sluggishness that so often blights the opening bars is mercifully absent and Rattle follows it up with a wonderfully transparent and affectionate ''C. A. E.''. Rattle brings an almost chamber-like intimacy and point to ''R. B. T.'', ''Ysobel'' and ''W. N.'', whilst his ''Dorabella'' is a veritable miracle of tripping delicacy. Equally, I revelled in the exhilarating punch and clean-limbed virtuosity of the more extrovert numbers: both ''Troyte'' and ''G. R. S.'' winningly combine athleticism and bluster. ''Nimrod'', too, is a success, its progress dignified and its noble climax unerringly well graduated (and, yes, we really do get a genuine ppp at the start). Overall, then, a fine, deeply-felt Enigma.....
Suits me very well, and it's always good to reflect on Elgar's association with Birmingham. Will this get a mention? I doubt it.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostThere is a Japanese SACD version listed on Amazon, a bargain at £38.54!
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Originally posted by Lordgeous View PostI have the RPO/Del Mar disc (coupled with some exhilerating P & C Marches) which I think is extremely good despite being recorded in a Cathdral acoustic. I do hope KC doesn't spend too much time on the Bernstein - his Nimrod totally rules it out for me. Fascinating how one's first hearing stays with you for ever: Barbirolli, Oxford Town Hall in the 1950s or 60s.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostThat cathedral acoustic for the Del Mar adds to the atmosphere and the organ at the end goes on forever!
That aside, I have special affection for Barbirolli/Philharmonia and Halle, and Jochum/LSO among the many on my shelves."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostYup! - and a superbargain on Fontana when it first appeared at a similar time to the excellent RPO Dorati Beethoven 5.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
It’s sometimes forgotten how good the old and the current RPO was and is, whether in its heyday under its founder Beecham, or with Kempe and Dorati in the 1970s or at this year’s Wagner Night Prom, recently repeated on R3 and sounding glorious. Its inability to have secured a long-term London base (the Cadogan Hall is inadequate) and tales of it appearing in two different countries simultaneously have clouded its reputation, placing it behind the Philharmonia, LSO, LPO, and even the BBCSO in listeners’ minds; but IMV its players are and have been first-rate.
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