Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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BaL 22.04.23 - Schubert: Symphony no. 5 in B flat D. 485
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostYes and indeed The plot is thickening . The Penguin Record review asserts that Brahms added extra bars in his edition. I’m just not patient enough to work out what those might be.
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Originally posted by Opinionated Knowall View PostHave just listened to the Jacobs recordings (which surely must use the NSA?) with the B&H (Brahms) score, and there are no extra bars that I noticed. For all the undoubted flair of the Jacobs recording, I just can't stand the way he messes about with the tempo. Makes me feel seasick!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostPPS Congrats to Jacobs and B’Rock band who play the opening pianissimo and the fiddles play a proper staccato downward run. Hats off ! Really beautifully done.
Slightly over narrow stereo mage though and very rhs skewed.
...Jacob's notes revelatory again too - do seek them out, even following the music while you read them...)
I'll try to to revisit COE/Harnoncourt soon....
But I don't detect any such balance anomalies with Jacobs and the Brocks off of CD or Q at 24/192; immediacy of sound but with fine soundstage depth and no hint of any right channel bias...
Screen-scrutiny an act of selfharm at this time of day, sorry....gotta go (back to the garden birds, in the sunshine...)... back later I hope....
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Funnily enough the right hand sidedness was only an issue in the first movement but a small blemish on an otherwise immaculate recording. So much better than the live Gaiggs which is to my ears over reverberant and with a distinct “hole in the middle”.
Jacobs and engineers managed to achieve a genuine pianissimo at the start which seems beyond all the other recordings I’ve heard so far.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostFunnily enough the right hand sidedness was only an issue in the first movement but a small blemish on an otherwise immaculate recording. So much better than the live Gaiggs which is to my ears over reverberant and with a distinct “hole in the middle”.
Jacobs and engineers managed to achieve a genuine pianissimo at the start which seems beyond all the other recordings I’ve heard so far.
As for the sound, having lived with the set on CD and Q for some time, I had this to say back then:
"The sound is a constant thrill: such spaciousness, resolution and dynamic impact, especially in the bass registers which are both full and deep, sounding out the acoustic character. The contrast between the thinner orchestral textures, the sheer rhythmic energy and the climactic, starkly unflinching dynamic power……quite exceptional even to this hardened audiophile."
Certainly no exaggerated channel separation audible on the usual set-up here (especially given the lower strings' position at centre-to-left (as photos show), exhilaratingly punchy in the 3rd Symphony minuet)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 23-02-23, 22:11.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI love the live Gaigg as you know, but feel it should be taken for the live event that it is, coming together over a few festival days. See my review of the whole cycle on MWI, linked to way back on this thread at #7.
As for the sound, having lived with the set on CD and Q for some time, I had this to say back then:
"The sound is a constant thrill: such spaciousness, resolution and dynamic impact, especially in the bass registers which are both full and deep, sounding out the acoustic character. The contrast between the thinner orchestral textures, the sheer rhythmic energy and the climactic, starkly unflinching dynamic power……quite exceptional even to this hardened audiophile."
Certainly no exaggerated channel separation audible on the usual set-up here.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThe Bohm remains fabulously played and conducted . I see a number of reviewers seem not to have enjoyed the scherzo in the Jacobs.
But wasn't the Vienna Bohm more highly favoured? Haven't looked into that recently....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI first fell in love with the 5th on the DG LP of the Berlin Phil, c/w No.8. One of my first LPs. Played them to pieces. At one time I really felt I would never want to hear them again. So thank goodness for The Revisionists! (Or Chamber Orchestras at least).
But wasn't the Vienna Bohm more highly favoured? Haven't looked into that recently....
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThanks for doing that as you saved me the trouble. My source for the extra bars is a throwaway remark in the no5 review in the Penguin CD guide 2005/6. Brahms did do that a bit to Schubert - in one of the piano sonatas for example . But I can’t find anything on the net about it in regard to 5 . Sorry the Jacobs made you seasick!
As for the performance, it was all going so well ... until we reached the minuet's da capo. From there on in, I'm afraid Mr Jacobs needed at least a couple of visits to the headmaster's study, for tiresome mucking about - both there, and in the finale's repeat. Bad boy! It's as if he's bored, assumes we must be too, and gets prompted by an inner devil to do mischief to Schubert's perfect Mozartian classicism. Letting us know he's in complete control of his band (and having them pander to his every whim) sounds horribly stagy ... but then, in his singing days he used to infuriate me, by getting up to similar tricks in Handel da capos.
A pity, when the first two movements are pretty much perfect in mood and balance, genial, serene and yet alert to nuance. And I was pleased to hear him use Schubert's minims to the full in the opening theme, rather than crotchets or Gaiggian quavers, much to the music's benefit. Alas, I would not want to listen to what he does in the minuet da capo more than once. In fact, I'm sorry I had to listen to it even once.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostThe Decca 50s recording? - Yes - lovely!
Dresden Staatskapelle (1942)
VPO (1954)
BPO (1966)
VPO (1979)
I was very lucky to hear Bohm conduct the Schubert 5 with the LSO in 1978."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThere are actually four versions of the Schubert 5 from Karl Bohm:
Dresden Staatskapelle (1942)
VPO (1954)
BPO (1966)
VPO (1979)
I was very lucky to hear Bohm conduct the Schubert 5 with the LSO in 1978.
Do you have an especial favourite among them?
Did you ever get hold of that 4CD Andante Set of Bohm with the LSO? From the 1970s Salzburg Festival in the Brahms 2, Beethoven 7, Schumann 4, Mozart 28 & 35 etc....?
I enjoyed that, it was a very good sonic document of what seems to have been a warm relationship....
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostListening also to the Jacobs this evening, like Opinionated Knowall I didn't notice anything peculiar about the Brahms edition.
As for the performance, it was all going so well ... until we reached the minuet's da capo. From there on in, I'm afraid Mr Jacobs needed at least a couple of visits to the headmaster's study, for tiresome mucking about - both there, and in the finale's repeat. Bad boy! It's as if he's bored, assumes we must be too, and gets prompted by an inner devil to do mischief to Schubert's perfect Mozartian classicism. Letting us know he's in complete control of his band (and having them pander to his every whim) sounds horribly stagy ... but then, in his singing days he used to infuriate me, by getting up to similar tricks in Handel da capos.
A pity, when the first two movements are pretty much perfect in mood and balance, genial, serene and yet alert to nuance. And I was pleased to hear him use Schubert's minims to the full in the opening theme, rather than crotchets or Gaiggian quavers, much to the music's benefit. Alas, I would not want to listen to what he does in the minuet da capo more than once. In fact, I'm sorry I had to listen to it even once.
Into the con moto - watch out! "The Catastrophe" as he describes it in his remarkable notes, is one to shock the complacency out of even this music's most jaded familiars.....
As for the finale - no spoilers now!
The brilliant Brocks produce brassy, punchy, sharp and shiny sonorities as they respond to his goadings... (but sudden soft tendernesses between...). I think Jacobs works with this group for similar reasons to Harnoncourt in his earlier recordings with the COE - that youthfulness and freshness, the excitement of discovery.
And it is those extensive notes, to all of the movements in all of the symphonies in his wonderful cycle, that give the lie to anyone doubting his profound understanding of Schubert, the structures, moods and meanings of the music, and and of Jacobs' Artistic Integrity in all that he does. Anyone who makes the time and effort to read them (and listen perhaps, along-with) will learn much, and never listen to Schubert quite the same way again.
(Incidentally - why would Schubert even want to reproduce Mozartian Classical perfection? Surely too great a prodigious creator himself to follow, where he might lead....)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 24-02-23, 03:31.
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Some strong differences of opinion here on Jacobs... for my part I would say it's beautifully played but too micromanaged for my liking. This isn't to do with the question of varied repeats - and varying repeats may be just as appropriate in Mozart - but I prefer a less interventionist approach to conducting Schubert (I often have a problem with Harnoncourt's interpretations by the same token, although most of the time the distinctive sound of his ensemble is what particularly attracts me).
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostSome strong differences of opinion here on Jacobs... for my part I would say it's beautifully played but too micromanaged for my liking. This isn't to do with the question of varied repeats - and varying repeats may be just as appropriate in Mozart - but I prefer a less interventionist approach to conducting Schubert (I often have a problem with Harnoncourt's interpretations by the same token, although most of the time the distinctive sound of his ensemble is what particularly attracts me).
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