Rather surprised to see comments on this forum expressing some astonishment at the beauty of Solti's Mozart as well as comments that certain works were not known to be in Solti's repertoire (Brahms PC1 and Schumann 2 in this case).
If ever there was a conductor in real need of re-assessment it's Solti. His reputation for producing hard driven performances has tended to obscure his many other qualities as a musician and while he certainly did produce hard driven performances, often to thrilling effect, it's only half the story.
His recording of Handel's Messiah, for example, is a thing of wonder aided and abetted by glorious singing from the Chicago Symphony Chorus yet the mere glance at his name on the cover would have some dismissing it without hearing a note because of preconceptions surrounding Solti's reputation.
I was lucky enough to meet Solti on a number of occasions, post-concert, and was present at a rehearsal with the Chicago SO in the Royal Albert Hall where he did something I've never seen any other conductor do. He handed the baton over to his assistant and went racing around the Albert Hall stopping at various locations to listen to what it sounded like before returning to the stage.
The recording of the Brahms PC 1 with Schiff and the VPO mentioned above is one of the most thrilling accounts I've heard and a clear first choice for me but many will never know of its existence. There have been no big box(es) of recordings as there have with many others and that hasn't helped matters.
Time for a re-assessment, I think, of one of the great conductors of the 20th century.
If ever there was a conductor in real need of re-assessment it's Solti. His reputation for producing hard driven performances has tended to obscure his many other qualities as a musician and while he certainly did produce hard driven performances, often to thrilling effect, it's only half the story.
His recording of Handel's Messiah, for example, is a thing of wonder aided and abetted by glorious singing from the Chicago Symphony Chorus yet the mere glance at his name on the cover would have some dismissing it without hearing a note because of preconceptions surrounding Solti's reputation.
I was lucky enough to meet Solti on a number of occasions, post-concert, and was present at a rehearsal with the Chicago SO in the Royal Albert Hall where he did something I've never seen any other conductor do. He handed the baton over to his assistant and went racing around the Albert Hall stopping at various locations to listen to what it sounded like before returning to the stage.
The recording of the Brahms PC 1 with Schiff and the VPO mentioned above is one of the most thrilling accounts I've heard and a clear first choice for me but many will never know of its existence. There have been no big box(es) of recordings as there have with many others and that hasn't helped matters.
Time for a re-assessment, I think, of one of the great conductors of the 20th century.
Comment