Originally posted by gradus
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BaL 11.06.22 - Debussy: La Mer
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Many people will have the Haitink Philips Duo Debussy Orchestral Music which appeared in 2006. It is still very much around as a Decca twofer. La Mer from this set was William Mival's BaL choice in 2008.
It is one of my four CD versions: Two Toscaninis on the complete RCA box and von Karajan 60s DG - all already mentioned above.
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostWe had a thread on La Mer a few years' back, prior to a Rob Cowan survey in the Gramophone. He chose Halle/Elder. On the forum, I seem to remember mentions for Karajan (by the way, there are three BPO/Karajan, two on DG, one on EMI), particularly his 60s DG, and the Lucerne/Abbado, which now remains my favourite.
Rob Cowan chooses his top recordings of Debussy’s seascape, which helped establish the composer’s reputation as the founding father of musical modernism
I hadn't known this:
iii features brass ‘fanfares’ ... that would – had Debussy left them in – be on page 157 of my Eulenberg score, above forte woodwind and tremolando strings. The story goes that the ‘fanfare’ tune so resembled the five-note title-phrase of the then relatively recent song ‘Ciribiribin’ (Alberto Pestalozza, 1898) that every time the passage appeared in concert there would be titters among the audience. Hence its excision, which in my view is a great shame, as it suggests a desperate alarm amid the storm.
Last edited by Pulcinella; 01-06-22, 09:33.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostRob Cowan's article is available here:
Rob Cowan chooses his top recordings of Debussy’s seascape, which helped establish the composer’s reputation as the founding father of musical modernism
I hadn't known this:
which might explain why I've enjoyed some versions (those that restore it) more than others, though I should have realised what was going on.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostMany people will have the Haitink Philips Duo Debussy Orchestral Music which appeared in 2006. It is still very much around as a Decca twofer. La Mer from this set was William Mival's BaL choice in 2008.
It is one of my four CD versions: Two Toscaninis on the complete RCA box and von Karajan 60s DG - all already mentioned above.
I also have a copy on LP with Maazel conducting the Cleveland Orchestra coupled with Scriabin's Poeme de l'extase, which I don't think has ever made it to CD."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostMany people will have the Haitink Philips Duo Debussy Orchestral Music which appeared in 2006. It is still very much around as a Decca twofer. La Mer from this set was William Mival's BaL choice in 2008.
It is one of my four CD versions: Two Toscaninis on the complete RCA box and von Karajan 60s DG - all already mentioned above.
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I have the two Barbirolli recordings, which are very fine, but I put Previn/LSO ahead of any I've heard. Apparently EMI's early digital recording method was a particular good one (though I don't know the details), but it was considered too expensive, so was abandoned (or perhaps modified) after this technically superb recording.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostMany people will have the Haitink Philips Duo Debussy Orchestral Music which appeared in 2006. It is still very much around as a Decca twofer. La Mer from this set was William Mival's BaL choice in 2008.
It is one of my four CD versions: Two Toscaninis on the complete RCA box and von Karajan 60s DG - all already mentioned above.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostRob Cowan's article is available here:
Rob Cowan chooses his top recordings of Debussy’s seascape, which helped establish the composer’s reputation as the founding father of musical modernism
I hadn't known this:
which might explain why I've enjoyed some versions (those that restore it) more than others, though I should have realised what was going on.
and https://groups.google.com/g/rec.musi.../c/SCHzUnmnAlE
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Originally posted by Bryn View Post
Now all I've got to do is wait for my study score (Eulenberg edition) to arrive!
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As RC says, Abbado has rethought all the details of balance in the work in a way that (sometimes surprisingly) gets closer to the notated dynamics than other performances I've heard, as for example in the climax of the first movement (which I'm sure I mentioned when La Mer was discussed here before, although the search function isn't being very helpful to me today) where not even Boulez gets the right balance as notated in the score
I may also have mentioned that the first time I heard La Mer was at a concert of MTT conducting the Concertgebouw, which indeed knocked me overboard. I've just put on his recording with the Philharmonia.
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