Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro
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Bernard Haitink - the last remaining 'grand master’?
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI am aghast that there are cymbals and a triangle used in a Bruckner symphony!!
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A fresh tranche of live Dutch radio recordings of Haitink have just appeared on the Dutch Radio 4 website:
Some have been on before but all are worth hearing. Included is the Bruckner 5 from May 18 2012 with the Concertgebouw given two days before they gave it in the Barbican. That performance had an interesting tale which I don't think I've told on here before.
A couple of days before that Barbican concert the box office rang me to say that Princess Maxima and Prince Willem of the Netherlands (now King and Queen) wished to attend the performance, would I mind giving up my seat and be offered an alternative? As I'd booked a year in advance yes I jolly well would mind but in the end I caved in and the alternative seat was actually very good. So my claim to fame is that I've been booted out of my seat by the Dutch King and Queen!Last edited by Petrushka; 08-02-17, 20:51."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Alison View PostNo cash adjustment Pet? Hope they were grateful.
Dutch relatives of a friend of mine have never seen them let alone been kicked out of their seat by them!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Alison, I succumbed and bought a Presto download of uncle Bernie’s LPO live Don Juan. Wonderful it is! That build up passage to the horn-call signifying Don getting his nuts in, is soo delicate that Nicholas Busch’s entry (fna, fna) is all the more dramatic. Excellent stuff. Thanks for the recommendation, I shouldn’t have dithered.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostAh that's great Beefy. Is there a more glorious sound than those LPO horns when on top form?? I'd have that in my top half dozen or so Bernie recordings.
With this Don Juan, I think you have to crank the volume up and get all the subtle, unforceful detail and smooth orchestral timbre that Bernie focuses on. It’s easy to miss how he gets every nuance of the music without being demonstrative - then Bam! the climax, whether it be a huge LPO brass call or crescendo, is there, almost from nowhere, but never bombastic, just so.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostSpot on Oven.
I don't know the Karajan recording(s) but even Tennstedt can't match Bernie here and certainly not Solti or Abbado.
Can't recall Mr Petrushka enthusing over this disc. Must be on his big stack of unplayeds!
Beefy's comments about Haitink's methods here apply to much of what he does."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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My Mahler 3 with the Bavarian Radio SO just arrived. I also ordered Haitink's CSO Resound Mahler 1 in the same shipment from Presto.
I've listened to both of them once and so impressions are preliminary. The M1, however bowled me over. I was present at one of the Concerts that was used for the recording and it was one of my most memorable. Sometimes when I hear a recording taken from a memorable concert I am disappointed, as somehow the magic can't be recreated, but this record kept me enthralled. Haitink has such a firm grasp of the architecture of these large symphonic canvases. The repeated themes gain such cumulative power , and the irony seems to make it's point by understatement (compared to an 'overstater' such as Bernstein. Marvelous.
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