I suspect I'll be standing by my favourite of three recordings I have - Colin Davis on LSO live. A fine reminder of this conductor who I enjoyed so much in my first live concert experiences at the Proms in the late 60s and also of sitting in the front row at the Gewandhaus in the the early 70s and being blown off my chair during my first live concert of this work.
BaL 20.02.21 - Bruckner: Symphony no. 6
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI suspect I'll be standing by my favourite of three recordings I have - Colin Davis on LSO live. A fine reminder of this conductor who I enjoyed so much in my first live concert experiences at the Proms in the late 60s and also of sitting in the front row at the Gewandhaus in the the early 70s and being blown off my chair during my first live concert of this work.
Try Rattle for an LSO Live Refresh!
Veils of Patina dissolved away, statues thrown into rivers, etc....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 06-02-21, 15:29.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostFine reading, yes. I can just about take the majestoso-very-moderato of Davis' Klempereresque 1st movement, but the scherzo lumbers a bit, and despite beautiful playing, the 19'49 adagio is a bridge too far, or long, for me. Not far off Celibidache pace.
Try Rattle for an LSO Live Refresh!
Veils of Patina dissolved away, statues thrown into rivers, etc....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostRO of that vintage would, IIRC, have favoured Klemperer and the Chicago SO/Barenboim .... later he was very taken with the SWR (then Stuttgart)/Norrington (Gramophone 11/2008, with some interesting comments re. Klemperer...)...
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWhen compiling the list, I noticed the larger than normal number of SACDs for this work. The format is far from dead.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWhen compiling the list, I noticed the larger than normal number of SACDs for this work. The format is far from dead.
And in Multichannel, when done properly, one gets a feeling of a Cathedral like spaces. The Simone Young Bruckner series on Oehms is a great illustration of this. The rear speakers are used to provide ambience . One can really get a sense of the conductor waiting for the reverberation to decay before giving a downbeat.
Speaking of SACD, I note that the Blomstedt/Leipzig Sixth isn’t on the list. The 3rd from that set won one of these shoot outs a bit back, and the 6th is very fine. That was a limited edition, expensive set so perhaps nla.
The Sixth is my favorite Bruckner Symphony. I like the Haitink/Bavaria that Petrushka endorsed but my favorites are Wand with a German Radio Orchestra, Karajan, and Stan S.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostClassical Music lovers have kept it going, and more in the Orient. Bruckner is increasingly popular there and thus the preponderance of SACD. Bruckner and Mahler are frequently linked, and of course there are dissimilarity between them than common elements. However, both benefited from the Hi Fidelity revolution, first in stereo and then in Higher Resolution Formats.
And in Multichannel, when done properly, one gets a feeling of a Cathedral like spaces. The Simone Young Bruckner series on Oehms is a great illustration of this. The rear speakers are used to provide ambience . One can really get a sense of the conductor waiting for the reverberation to decay before giving a downbeat.
Speaking of SACD, I note that the Blomstedt/Leipzig Sixth isn’t on the list. The 3rd from that set won one of these shoot outs a bit back, and the 6th is very fine. That was a limited edition, expensive set so perhaps nla.
The Sixth is my favorite Bruckner Symphony. I like the Haitink/Bavaria that Petrushka endorsed but my favorites are Wand with a German Radio Orchestra, Karajan, and Stan S.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostClassical Music lovers have kept it going, and more in the Orient. Bruckner is increasingly popular there and thus the preponderance of SACD. Bruckner and Mahler are frequently linked, and of course there are dissimilarity between them than common elements. However, both benefited from the Hi Fidelity revolution, first in stereo and then in Higher Resolution Formats.
And in Multichannel, when done properly, one gets a feeling of a Cathedral like spaces. The Simone Young Bruckner series on Oehms is a great illustration of this. The rear speakers are used to provide ambience . One can really get a sense of the conductor waiting for the reverberation to decay before giving a downbeat.
Speaking of SACD, I note that the Blomstedt/Leipzig Sixth isn’t on the list. The 3rd from that set won one of these shoot outs a bit back, and the 6th is very fine. That was a limited edition, expensive set so perhaps nla.
The Sixth is my favorite Bruckner Symphony. I like the Haitink/Bavaria that Petrushka endorsed but my favorites are Wand with a German Radio Orchestra, Karajan, and Stan S.
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Not expressing a view on SACD, but it’s hard to believe that anything recorded in the Barbican can be ‘sonically exceptional’ - adequate for sure, but not much more. Having said that, I’d better actually listen to the Rattle to make sure I’m not talking nonsense! Last one I heard was BRSO/Haitink, excellent from all points of view.
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I went off the LSO Live CDs for months or even years at one time (though the Faulkner 176.4 derivations were much better).
Latterly, the experience of the JEG Mendelssohn in 24/96/192, then the SACD box of that and the Schumann cycle, and this Rattle 6th, forced me to reconsider.....much better, at least in the Barbican context; and genuinely enjoyable.
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This will be an interesting one as, to this day, only one recording of this work seems to receive all-round acclaim (that’s Klemperer way back in ‘64). Karajan’s sight-reading (that’s what it sounds like) is the black spot on his integrale.
I like Blomstedt’s San Francisco recording, but I’m almost certainly wrong to do so.
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