Looking forward very much to this projected cycle, with the Leipzig Gewandhaus orctester! To me this seems rather mouth watering, to say the least. Anyone else?
Bruckner, Andris Nelsons
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostLooking forward very much to this projected cycle, with the Leipzig Gewandhaus orctester! To me this seems rather mouth watering, to say the least. Anyone else?
There is a Nelsons live CBSO performance out there that was a BBC Music Mag CD issue and I like that more."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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One can hear how he deals with the 6th here:
And, if impatience to hear what he does with the 4th wins out:
Saturday, June 23, 20188:00 PMEncore broadcast from Saturday, November 25, 2017The Austrian pianist is the guest soloist in Beethoven's trailblazing Piano…
(and I've just noticed his DSCH 11th:
http://classicalwcrb.org/post/paul-l...hoven#stream/0)
The talking gets a bit tedious but the sound quality is OK
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HIs 1889 Nowak 3rd has reviewed well and has good sound, but sampling it on Qobuz I found it rather grand.. the finale coda seemed over-emphatic. I never played it complete though, that could change things....
But I'm biased these days, spending so much time with 1950s and earlier Bruckner performances and performance traditions on the one hand, Venzago (and sometimes Nézet-Séguin, at least in the 6th) as a kind-of successor to that on the other....
I'm in medias res just now with the Andreae (1890 Rattig) 3rd. Got up to the adagio this morning. Again, stunned and startled by the extraordinary 1st Movement, the clear-sighted dramatic extremity of it.... no-one I know plays Bruckner anything like this now. More on the Listening thread later....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostHIs 1889 Nowak 3rd has reviewed well and has good sound, but sampling it on Qobuz I found it rather grand.. the finale coda seemed over-emphatic. I never played it complete though, that could change things....
But I'm biased these days, spending so much time with 1950s and earlier Bruckner performances and performance traditions on the one hand, Venzago (and sometimes Nézet-Séguin, at least in the 6th) as a kind-of successor to that on the other....
I'm in medias res just now with the Andreae (1890 Rattig) 3rd. Got up to the adagio this morning. Again, stunned and startled by the extraordinary 1st Movement, the clear-sighted dramatic extremity of it.... no-one I know plays Bruckner anything like this now. More on the Listening thread later....Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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