Originally posted by Pulcinella
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BaL 22.10.22 - Mozart: Symphony no. 31 in D "Paris" (K.297)
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post....
The composer's own description of the work's premiere is enlightening: a large orchestra, but with constant interruptions from the audience, even when the music was being played.
...where there were some forty string players and a wind section with clarinets, which Mozart here included for the first time in the scoring of a symphony.
In ANY symphony, or just a Mozart one?
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Originally posted by smittims View PostThey mean Mozart's first use of clarinets in one of his symphonies. He had previously used them in other music.
Claiming a 'first' in music is dangerous , as there may always be an earlier one. I don't know, but I'd guess Stamitz or JJ Molter wrote a symphony with clarinets first.
That makes sense: just a little ambiguously worded.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostAccording to the liner notes in the Naxos version I have,
...where there were some forty string players and a wind section with clarinets, which Mozart here included for the first time in the scoring of a symphony.
In ANY symphony, or just a Mozart one?
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostLinn recordings, including Mackerras Mozart, ARE available for streaming through Qobuz.
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Originally posted by Mal View PostIn 1777, the year before writing the symphony, Mozart visited Mannheim and listened to the famous orchestra. He said in a letter to his father, "You cannot imagine the glorious effect of a symphony with oboes, flutes, and clarinets..." So there must have been at least one symphony with clarinets before the "Paris". What did he hear in Mannheim?
Mozart became familiar with the clarinet as early as 1764, through copying C.F. Abel’s Symphony op.7 no.6, but didn’t use them until 1771 in his Divertimento K113, composed in Milan. The parts for this are quite simple, suiting the technical abilities of the orchestral players of the time, who would have most likely had five-key instruments.
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I suspect that Beecham’s 1938 recording of the work with the LPO was its premiere on 78 r.p.m. Beecham seemed to revel in its violin fireworks which was fortunate for the recording’s acoustics are dry as dust and the engineer, Walter Legge, gave the violins a prominence that turned the work into a Concerto for Orchestral Violins.
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I can't trace an earlier recording, so yes, I think Beecham 1938 was the first.
Where I must disagree with you, if only to encourage others to hear it, is on the recording quality. David Hall, in 'The Record Book' called it 'excellent... especially so.' I remember first hearing it in 1973, when Anthony Griffith's World Record Club LP transfer was released (I think the first issue in his 'Retrospect Series') and the sound leapt out of the speakers.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI can't trace an earlier recording, so yes, I think Beecham 1938 was the first.
Where I must disagree with you, if only to encourage others to hear it, is on the recording quality. David Hall, in 'The Record Book' called it 'excellent... especially so.' I remember first hearing it in 1973, when Anthony Griffith's World Record Club LP transfer was released (I think the first issue in his 'Retrospect Series') and the sound leapt out of the speakers.
I must admit that it isn’t as awful in recording terms as my memory led me to believe, smittims, but its dessicated acoustic does lack warmth and the violins are spot-lighted. No doubt, good in parts, and in terms of the standards of 1938, par for the course.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI’ve just listened to a 2011 remastered version on Youtube:
I must admit that it isn’t as awful in recording terms as my memory led me to believe...
https://open.spotify.com/track/0PqZyfK2UVkCNcJggPJQW2?si=RpI7Cr3jTgOb-gRklLSUcA&utm_source=copy-linkWolfgang Amadeus Mozart, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Thomas Beecham · The Classical Tradition: Haydn & Mozart · Song · 2011
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I wasn't being sarcastic, I like the EMI re-master, it's the Cris music re-master I don't like: https://open.spotify.com/album/0JShi...urce=copy-link
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