I'd be interested in hearing opinions on this conductor.
I heard Dohnanyi a lot when I lived in London, as my time there coincided with his Philharmonia tenure. The impression I had then was that, while he was very strong in the post-Romantic repertoire (an excellent concert Woyzeck), he tended to dispatch anything Classical or Romantic with an impatience that suggested he couldn't wait to get it over with; or that he was anxious to 'de-prettify' the scores.
His conducting of Die Frau Ohne Schatten at Covent Garden impressed me a lot back in 2001 (the last outing of the Hockney designs).
Currently listening to his (incomplete?) Cleveland Bruckner cycle on Decca - I notice the same things I noticed in concert:there does seem to be a deliberate strategy to make the 'big moments' underwhelming, imo.
His close physical resemblance to Derek Jacobi always intrigued me, too.
I heard Dohnanyi a lot when I lived in London, as my time there coincided with his Philharmonia tenure. The impression I had then was that, while he was very strong in the post-Romantic repertoire (an excellent concert Woyzeck), he tended to dispatch anything Classical or Romantic with an impatience that suggested he couldn't wait to get it over with; or that he was anxious to 'de-prettify' the scores.
His conducting of Die Frau Ohne Schatten at Covent Garden impressed me a lot back in 2001 (the last outing of the Hockney designs).
Currently listening to his (incomplete?) Cleveland Bruckner cycle on Decca - I notice the same things I noticed in concert:there does seem to be a deliberate strategy to make the 'big moments' underwhelming, imo.
His close physical resemblance to Derek Jacobi always intrigued me, too.
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