It's just a lovely thing. I owe my enjoyment of it to the LSO under Krips, a performance that is as charming as it is sprightly.
BaL 18.01.20 - Beethoven: Symphony no. 1 in C, Op.21
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Originally posted by seabright View PostAs a matter of interest, does anyone have the complete Beethoven cycle with Rene Leibowitz and the RPO? ... It was recorded for Readers Digest and produced by Charles Gerhardt with a top-class Decca engineering team.
The RPO was the orchestra on the first Beethoven recording I ever bought: the 10 inch LP that came with the "Great Musicians" magazine series at the start of the '70s. Charles Groves was the conductor (as he was in the Pastoral which was released a few issues later) and both were specially recorded for the series (many of the other LPs were from the Turnabout label - Brendel in the Piano Sonatas for example) and were very fine indeed - I'd be very happy if both received a CD release.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by gradus View PostIt's just a lovely thing. I owe my enjoyment of it to the LSO under Krips, a performance that is as charming as it is sprightly.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostYup! (I have the Chesky reissues of the set - recording and performance quality are both superb.)
The RPO was the orchestra on the first Beethoven recording I ever bought: the 10 inch LP that came with the "Great Musicians" magazine series at the start of the '70s. Charles Groves was the conductor (as he was in the Pastoral which was released a few issues later) and both were specially recorded for the series (many of the other LPs were from the Turnabout label - Brendel in the Piano Sonatas for example) and were very fine indeed - I'd be very happy if both received a CD release.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostNot the first I bought but I also had that Great Musicians issue (along with many others).
Many thanks to Michael Nyman for passing on to me a few issues of a companion series of New Music issues from Italy. These included Cage's String Quartet in Four Parts .Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 09-01-20, 15:20.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Eine Alpensinfonie does an amazing job with his weekly BAL listings but I wonder how many of all those Beethoven Firsts will actually have been listened to by Richard Wigmore. Incidentally, I presume it's OK to add a 'Pristine' release to the list ... Paul Paray and the Detroit SO, recorded by 'Mercury' in 1959 but in the 'public domain' as of 50 years later, in accordance with the EU Directive on Sound Recordings dated 1 November 2013 ...
overviewfb55cd020f0643f08418183279e63a5fBEETHOVEN Symphony No. 1BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 2MOZART Symphony No. 35Recorded 1959 and 1956Total duration: 72:49 Detroit Symphony Orchestraconducted by Paul Paray578a9379d1e540bd96d26f03a79628d9review_titlefb55cd020f0643f08418183279e63a5f578a9379d1e540bd96d26f03a79628d9review_qu
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Originally posted by seabright View PostEine Alpensinfonie does an amazing job with his weekly BAL listings but I wonder how many of all those Beethoven Firsts will actually have been listened to by Richard Wigmore. [/url]
I suspect that these days the BaL producer does the 'whittling down' and the results are passed onto the reviewer.
I've just counted Alpie's list and it's approximately 200 recordings! Let's say an 'average' of 30 minutes per symphony so that's 100 hours of listening to each performance ONLY ONCE!
I don't know how much a BaL reviewer is remunerated but I suspect it's not enough to justify AT LEAST 100 hours of listening time quite apart from the fact that I suspect you would never want to hear Beethoven's First ever again!
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI still have them! Nowt to play them though - and, with the condition of the discs (I was 12, and played them regularly for the next ten or more years) I'm not forking out on a new system just to play them! I didn't get them when they first came out - the local Boots sold them off at around 30p each a couple of years later. I'd pop into town on a Saturday, buy a copy, and go and see the early James Bond films being shown in sequence on Saturday afternoons at one of the local cinemas.
Now, I don't think that that series was ever issued in Britain!
BTW: there are some interesting names, of less than world status, on that BaL list for Beethoven 1. Being much less than world status myself I have played and recorded for/with several of these. Most deserve to be known a little better; just one so incompetent that he should be barred for life from conducting orchestras (no - not telling!)
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Groves and Loughran were the conductors who appeared most frequently to conduct concerts at the Town Hall nearest where I grew up - I have the very deepest gratitude to (and fondest memories of) them.
(I've got Loughran's Beethoven #1 on LP, too!)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI don't know how much a BaL reviewer is remunerated but I suspect it's not enough to justify AT LEAST 100 hours of listening time quite apart from the fact that I suspect you would never want to hear Beethoven's First ever again![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostGroves and Loughran were the conductors who appeared most frequently to conduct concerts at the Town Hall nearest where I grew up - I have the very deepest gratitude to (and fondest memories of) them.
(I've got Loughran's Beethoven #1 on LP, too!)"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by seabright View PostAs a matter of interest, does anyone have the complete Beethoven cycle with Rene Leibowitz and the RPO? ... It was recorded for Readers Digest and produced by Charles Gerhardt with a top-class Decca engineering team. I remember that Gerhardt gave an interview in which he revealed that he sat Leibowitz down and together they listened to all the great Beethoven recordings of the past - Weingartner, Furtwangler, Kleiber, Toscanini, Klemperer, et al. - and as a result Leibowitz produced a fabulous set. Of course, in those days Readers Digest LPs weren't reviewed, as they were only available to subscribers of the RD magazine itself. Even so, Gerhardt engaged some other great conductors - Barbirolli, Horenstein, Munch, Reiner, Boult, et al. - who all gave him some great recordings for that label.
As to the Leibowitz No. 1 and the rest of the set, it's on Naxos, as per this link ...
Conveniently buy, stream or download at Naxos anytime. Add 9.80964 from Naxos Classical Archives to your classical music collection today.
And for a taster of how it sounds, it is - like so much else these days - readily available on YouTube! ... And a first-rate recording it is too ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4EFEfG819U
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Originally posted by Lordgeous View PostSounds terrific - very spirited playing and excellent recording. Thanks for the link.
Listen to unlimited or download Beethoven: 9 Symphonies by Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in Hi-Res quality on Qobuz. Subscription from £10.83/month.
Each symphony is presented as a single file in this option. If you pay more, you can get them with a separate file for each movement.
Scribendum issued a CD set of the Symphonies a few years ago. That set has been withdrawn but they have been incorporated into a 13 CD Leibowitz set (£39 direct from Scribendum, or £59 from Amazon.
This from the amazon.com listing of the earlier set of just the Beethoven:
Ludwig van Beethoven ~ The Symphonies & Orchestral Works. Disc One: Symphony No.l in C Major, Op.21. Total (Includes time between tracks) 66'21". Disc Two: Symphony No.3 in E flat Major, Op.55 "Eroica". Total (Includes time between tracks) 71'40". Disc Three: Symphony No.5 in C Minor, Op.67. Total (Includes time between tracks) 71'08". Disc Four: Symphony No.7 in A Major, Op.92. Total (Includes time between tracks) 68'29". Disc Five: Symphony No.9 in D Minor, Op.125 "Corale". Total (Includes time between tracks) 61'49". Royal Philharmonic Orchestra — Rene Leibowitz, conductor with the participation of The Beecham Choral Society and Inge Borkh, soprano - Ruth Siewert, contralto - Richard Lewis, tenor - Ludwig Weber, bass. The New Symphony Orchestra of London. Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8: Recorded in April 1961, Walthamstow Town Hall, London. Symphony No. 4: Recorded in May 1961, Walthamstow Town Hall, London. Symphony No. 9: Recorded in June 1961, on the 3rd, 5th, and 7th, Walthamstow Town Hall, London. Turkish March from "The Ruins of Athens": Recorded in February 1961, London. Egmont Overture: Recorded in January 1962, Walthamstow Town Hall, London. Leonora Overture: Recorded in February 1962, Walthamstow Town Hall, London.
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Originally posted by seabright View PostEine Alpensinfonie does an amazing job with his weekly BAL listings but I wonder how many of all those Beethoven Firsts will actually have been listened to by Richard Wigmore. Incidentally, I presume it's OK to add a 'Pristine' release to the list ... Paul Paray and the Detroit SO, recorded by 'Mercury' in 1959 but in the 'public domain' as of 50 years later, in accordance with the EU Directive on Sound Recordings dated 1 November 2013 ...
https://www.pristineclassical.com/co...oducts/pasc209
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