Originally posted by Barbirollians
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Karajan documentary! BBC4 Friday 5th December 2014 at 1930-2100
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI thought it was grotesque, the shameless vanity, the unforgivable rudeness to orchestras and apparent delight in the humiliation of individual orchestral members. Indeed, his whole attitude to music-making seemed dehumanising - just as the orchestral players were airbrushed out of his carefully supervised films and only he himself and the instruments appeared, as if he alone was responsible for the sound that was made. It was good to hear of the Philharmonia violinist who had the courage to stand up to him.
I think it would have been good to have had some commentary from critics about the discography, rather than just comments from those who had been involved in the recordings - from people who admire it like Richard Osborne for instance and perhaps people who don't, like David Cairns (who wrote a highly critical review of a concert given by HvK and the BPO in London in the late 1950s).
What I mainly felt at the end of the programme was relief that the age of the tyrant-conductor is gone, never to return. Surely no orchestra nowadays would put up with the kind of behaviour exhibited by Karajan (and not just him). The conductor to whose will everything and everyone has to bend, and who sees himself as the supreme (and only) fount of musical understanding is simply not credible now.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postkeep wishing , Ards.
BBC1 , (for example) has a remit to show a mighty 40 hours of music and arts programmes per year.
Oops - apologies for the earlier link to a an audio cable!Last edited by Dave2002; 06-12-14, 17:23.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostDidn't Bohm also record with them in the 70s?Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 06-12-14, 16:29.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post... a thoughtful little essay on HvK's ambition
Four things are present in ambition: you want power; you want approval; you want people to envy you; and you want to show off. To be ambitious means you want to do things to people and to have them like you at the same time.
The tragedy of von Karajan's life--and every man can learn from him--is that with all his ability at music, he preferred contempt to art.
On Brahms' First Symphony:
The strings sound strained, and there is an executive quality to the conducting. One should be hearing the warmth, confidence and depth of Brahms' great melody. In stead there is a jittery, edgy effect. The technical reason has to do with tempi: von Karajan is constantly imposing unnecessary accelerandi, rushing the music. Again and again the music lurches forward in a way that doesn't make sense. Struggling to keep up, the musicians end many phrases in a brusque manner. Though von Karajan manages to keep the orchestra together, the music seems no longer bound by a unifying pulse. It seems willful.
The author, with commendable candour, admits that, in the past at least, he was prone to the personality defects that he perceives in Karajan's Music-making:
My care for music was polluted by a hope to use it for contempt and superiority.I wanted in life to act lofty and maintain a picture of myself as deeper than other people--too deep, in fact, for anyone to understand me.
As I write about Herbert von Karajan, I understand myself better and see with a fresh sense of gratitude how much pain I was spared because I had the god fortune to meet and study Aesthetic Realism.As I learned how to be a critic of my purposes with people, things, and music, what I despaired of, happened: I began to write music again. My gratitude for this will last a lifetime. And even more importantly, I became a warmer person, capable of love,
Bruno Walter (to return to a much more interesting topic) also wrote this:
I want, however, to stress once again the fact that the decisive quality of his conducting and the source of its power was the warmth of his heart. That gave his interpretations the impressiveness of a personal message. That rendered unnoticeable the meticulous study lying behind the result that he achieved: its virtuosity and accomplishment. That made his Music-making what it was - a spontaneous greeting from soul to soul. Here, in the borderland between Art and Humanity, the nobility and potency of his mind were revealed. The secret of his lasting fame as a conductor and director is his ideal of high artistic gifts with the ardent sensibility of a great heart.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI checked my links and I need a 3.5 to 3.5 for around 66p, preferably delivered before Xmas. Any ideas?Last edited by teamsaint; 06-12-14, 18:44.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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amateur51
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
He is writing about Mahler - a conductor whose tyranny on the podium makes Karajan look like a kitten.
Re Mahler - yeah but he got the order of the middle movts of his symphony no. 6 right in the end
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I find it strange how we think it acceptable for a conductor to bully his orchestra on the basis of the results he obtains. Do we accept this kind of behaviour in other walks of life? "Ah, that Wackford Squeers is a bit of a tyrant with the Lower Sixth, but just look at the A-level results..." And in the field of music, dealing with some of the finest creations of the human mind, you would think that it ought to be a collaborative endeavour.
Here is a different philosophy from the late and much-missed Colin Davis, a conductor who started out as a bit of an autocrat with a temper but who realised that this was not the way to go:
A SKELETON hangs in the window of Sir Colin Davis's London house, taking a passive interest in the life of Highbury Fields outside. Next to it sits Davis himself, brooding and biting his pipe and maybe smirking (or maybe it's the way he holds the pipe between his teeth) as he talks about 'finishing up' and 'the satisfaction of coming home for one's final years'. He takes out the pipe (yes, it's a smirk) and waits for me to protest. 'Final years?' I say, on cue. 'You can't be serious.'
I like particularly this comment of Davis': "'Making music is an ethical activity: it requires you to to work with other people for an idealistic result. And it's an adjunct to civilised existence, because it promotes a vision of order, of how it's possible to co-operate.'"
The end never justifies the means.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI find it strange how we think it acceptable for a conductor to bully his orchestra on the basis of the results he obtains. Do we accept this kind of behaviour in other walks of life? ....
...The end never justifies the means.
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Andreas Blau (principal flute, BPO) was asked if the modern, democratic way was better. He said it was easier with players getting on better, but he didn't know if they could [still] reach the highest point on the musical mountain.
Toscanini apparently said 'in life democracy, in the arts aristocracy'.
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