I'm currently working my way through the Giulini in Vienna DG box set. So far, I've enjoyed his Beethoven Piano Concertos, but they are more remarkable for Michaelangeli's performance than for the conductor's.
His Brahms symphonies left me fairly unmoved, though I will return to them.
The Requiem, though, was a different matter: serene and expertly paced. Interesting to hear a committed Catholic conduct a religious work by an agnostic.
Currently, I'm listening to the Bruckner 7 (the final three symphonies are included here) and it is shaping up to be one of the best I've heard. Giulini brings out the sensuousness in this music, without neglecting the architecture. Though that could be said of most 'name' Italian conductors in the German repertoire.
Any opinions on Giulini? The 'party line' seems to be that he was an exciting conductor up until the early seventies, when he became a bit somnambulistic. I love his Philharmonia recordings form the 60s, but I'm not convinced that he 'lost the plot' so comprehensively in later life....
His Brahms symphonies left me fairly unmoved, though I will return to them.
The Requiem, though, was a different matter: serene and expertly paced. Interesting to hear a committed Catholic conduct a religious work by an agnostic.
Currently, I'm listening to the Bruckner 7 (the final three symphonies are included here) and it is shaping up to be one of the best I've heard. Giulini brings out the sensuousness in this music, without neglecting the architecture. Though that could be said of most 'name' Italian conductors in the German repertoire.
Any opinions on Giulini? The 'party line' seems to be that he was an exciting conductor up until the early seventies, when he became a bit somnambulistic. I love his Philharmonia recordings form the 60s, but I'm not convinced that he 'lost the plot' so comprehensively in later life....
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