Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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BaL 4.01.14 - Schumann's Symphony no. 1 in B flat "Spring"
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWow! That was my first encounter with this work, but on an old, early DECCA LP (with a yellow/orange label) containing just the one work: Side One for the first two movements with the last two on Side Two. It was in the school Music library and I borrowed it one Half-Term holiday in about 1975.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe Decca Eclipse LP from 1974 has a photograph of a Jacobean bed in the Crimson Room at Montacute House in Somerset. Not sure what it has got to do with Schumann but it's a striking picture anyway.
I also had another Decca Eclipse LP of the Schumann 'Spring' with Furtwängler and the VPO in a live 1951 Munich concert at around the same time. The Bruckner 4 was in part two and was on another Decca Eclipse.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostMy Krips was on Ace Of Diamonds - Does my memory serve me falsely or was the opening sound different to what is now the norm?
Just checked online:
In the opening, the ‘g’ and ‘a’ in the last measure cannot be played on natural trumpets at all, and can only be played on horns by ‘cupping’—i.e., sticking the hand into the bell of the horn, a kind of jerry-rigged valve. However, the sound is considerably muffled, not the best sonority for a fortissimo opening. Fortunately for all of us the conductor of the premiere was no less than Felix Mendelssohn, who was a much more experienced orchestrator than our boy Bob. He suggested the the passage be transposed up a third—all of the notes are of the overtone series and can therefore be played on valveless brass instruments. Mendelssohn conducted the first performance and altered it.
Mike
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Roehre
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostIIRC Schumann wrote the opening chords outside the range of the horn so they are altered nowadays, perhaps Krips used a different version?
Just checked online:
In the opening, the ‘g’ and ‘a’ in the last measure cannot be played on natural trumpets at all, and can only be played on horns by ‘cupping’—i.e., sticking the hand into the bell of the horn, a kind of jerry-rigged valve. However, the sound is considerably muffled, not the best sonority for a fortissimo opening. Fortunately for all of us the conductor of the premiere was no less than Felix Mendelssohn, who was a much more experienced orchestrator than our boy Bob. He suggested the the passage be transposed up a third—all of the notes are of the overtone series and can therefore be played on valveless brass instruments. Mendelssohn conducted the first performance and altered it.
Mike
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostI don't know the Krips, but I seem to recall comments re Solti's "Spring" that (at that time, mid 1970s) this was the first recording using the horns in the pitch Schumann originally intended.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostBach...?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
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