Simon Rattle Talks About Karajan....

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  • Conchis
    Banned
    • Jun 2014
    • 2396

    Simon Rattle Talks About Karajan....

    Not a new interview, so apologies if some have seen it already.

    I think S.R. has some fascinating insights here ..... and I'd agree with him, overall. He's not the first person to talk about being 'repelled, while being impressed' by a Karajan performance and he's very illuminating on the reasons as to why there will never be 'another Karajan'.

  • Alison
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 6468

    #2
    Yes good interview.

    All the same that ‘repelled/impressed’ phrase is not a bad way of putting how I’ve felt about some of SSR’s performances!

    Comment

    • jayne lee wilson
      Banned
      • Jul 2011
      • 10711

      #3
      I listened to Karajan’s recordings and performances all through the 1970s, on LP and extensively on Radio 3. Gorgeous, glorious, thrilling, beautiful, unique….. I would arrange my week or my weekend to ensure I was at home for the next Vienna or Berlin taping of his Brahms 2, Bruckner 8, Mahler 6….
      A musical phenomenon I would never dare to miss.

      But It would never have occurred to me to call any of them “repellent”. What do people - actual listeners - mean when they say that? Too…what? Perfect, powerful?
      Or are they just jumping on a particular bandwagon? A recent denigratory fashion? “Too smooth, too slick”.. too…oh yes…legato.
      That one again…
      I don’t find that true of his Schoenberg, Honegger, Stravinsky - or even of his Bruckner - at least not consistently.
      I sometimes found it true of his Haydn or his Mozart.

      Was the sound-palette or character too consistent across different composers and musical styles? Possibly, sometimes. The character of Karajan’s Berliners was always distinctive. But his Honegger or his Stravinsky is still differentiated enough from his Beethoven, his Sibelius or his Bruckner. They don’t all sound the same - and were often vividly evocative - of landscape, an atmosphere. And that especial orchestral character was a source of profound musical pleasure for many of us, even if we would ask for greater range of colour, texture, dynamic and overall characterisation from a given conductor and orchestra now.

      Anyway, didn’t other conductors display a similar tendency to create their sound upon their orchestra? Szell in Cleveland, Solti in Chicago, Dorati in London …
      That earlier stereo era was characterised by those partnerships - whose sound their listeners relished, compared and contrasted, for and in themselves.

      Nor is it entirely absent today…Yannick Nézet-Séguin with the COE - a certain purity, refinement and transparency; tonal beauties often encouraged...

      Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 10-01-19, 03:24.

      Comment

      • BBMmk2
        Late Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 20908

        #4
        Do people still think that orchestras’s sound is homogeneous? I think there are orchestras who still have their sound, eg LSO, Weiner and Berliner Philharmonikers, etc.
        Don’t cry for me
        I go where music was born

        J S Bach 1685-1750

        Comment

        • Conchis
          Banned
          • Jun 2014
          • 2396

          #5
          Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
          I listened to Karajan’s recordings and performances all through the 1970s, on LP and extensively on Radio 3. Gorgeous, glorious, thrilling, beautiful, unique….. I would arrange my week or my weekend to ensure I was at home for the next Vienna or Berlin taping of his Brahms 2, Bruckner 8, Mahler 6….
          A musical phenomenon I would never dare to miss.

          But It would never have occurred to me to call any of them “repellent”. What do people - actual listeners - mean when they say that? Too…what? Perfect, powerful?
          Or are they just jumping on a particular bandwagon? A recent denigratory fashion? “Too smooth, too slick”.. too…oh yes…legato.
          That one again…
          I don’t find that true of his Schoenberg, Honegger, Stravinsky - or even of his Bruckner - at least not consistently.
          I sometimes found it true of his Haydn or his Mozart.

          Was the sound-palette or character too consistent across different composers and musical styles? Possibly, sometimes. The character of Karajan’s Berliners was always distinctive. But his Honegger or his Stravinsky is still differentiated enough from his Beethoven, his Sibelius or his Bruckner. They don’t all sound the same - and were often vividly evocative - of landscape, an atmosphere. And that especial orchestral character was a source of profound musical pleasure for many of us, even if we would ask for greater range of colour, texture, dynamic and overall characterisation from a given conductor and orchestra now.

          Anyway, didn’t other conductors display a similar tendency to create their sound upon their orchestra? Szell in Cleveland, Solti in Chicago, Dorati in London …
          That earlier stereo era was characterised by those partnerships - whose sound their listeners relished, compared and contrasted, for and in themselves.

          Nor is it entirely absent today…Yannick Nézet-Séguin with the COE - a certain purity, refinement and transparency; tonal beauties often encouraged...


          Karajan once made the notorious analogy of music being like 'a beautiful woman in a fur coat. It would be shocking if she had a cold sore on her lips.' His quest for 'beauty of sound' was lifelong and unapologetic. I like his Second Viennese School recordings but I think the charge that he 'smooths over the jagged edges' carries some weight.

          His films are fascinating for different reasons. Contrary to popular belief, he didn't direct all of them - I think Henri-Georges Clouzot collaborated with him on the Verdi Requiem film. Clouzot was a born misanthropist and his film is all about depicting the fallibility of orchestral musicians (but not Karajan, of course).

          Comment

          • ferneyhoughgeliebte
            Gone fishin'
            • Sep 2011
            • 30163

            #6
            Originally posted by Conchis View Post
            Karajan once made the notorious analogy of music being like 'a beautiful woman in a fur coat. It would be shocking if she had a cold sore on her lips.'
            Did he? Do you have a source for this quotation please, Conchis?
            [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

            Comment

            • ferneyhoughgeliebte
              Gone fishin'
              • Sep 2011
              • 30163

              #7
              Originally posted by Alison View Post
              All the same that ‘repelled/impressed’ phrase is not a bad way of putting how I’ve felt about some of SSR’s performances!
              With me it's more a case of some of Rattle's performances deeply impress me, whilst the others I find deeply repellant.
              [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

              Comment

              • richardfinegold
                Full Member
                • Sep 2012
                • 7737

                #8
                Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
                I listened to Karajan’s recordings and performances all through the 1970s, on LP and extensively on Radio 3. Gorgeous, glorious, thrilling, beautiful, unique….. I would arrange my week or my weekend to ensure I was at home for the next Vienna or Berlin taping of his Brahms 2, Bruckner 8, Mahler 6….
                A musical phenomenon I would never dare to miss.

                But It would never have occurred to me to call any of them “repellent”. What do people - actual listeners - mean when they say that? Too…what? Perfect, powerful?
                Or are they just jumping on a particular bandwagon? A recent denigratory fashion? “Too smooth, too slick”.. too…oh yes…legato.
                That one again…
                I don’t find that true of his Schoenberg, Honegger, Stravinsky - or even of his Bruckner - at least not consistently.
                I sometimes found it true of his Haydn or his Mozart.

                Was the sound-palette or character too consistent across different composers and musical styles? Possibly, sometimes. The character of Karajan’s Berliners was always distinctive. But his Honegger or his Stravinsky is still differentiated enough from his Beethoven, his Sibelius or his Bruckner. They don’t all sound the same - and were often vividly evocative - of landscape, an atmosphere. And that especial orchestral character was a source of profound musical pleasure for many of us, even if we would ask for greater range of colour, texture, dynamic and overall characterisation from a given conductor and orchestra now.

                Anyway, didn’t other conductors display a similar tendency to create their sound upon their orchestra? Szell in Cleveland, Solti in Chicago, Dorati in London …
                That earlier stereo era was characterised by those partnerships - whose sound their listeners relished, compared and contrasted, for and in themselves.

                Nor is it entirely absent today…Yannick Nézet-Séguin with the COE - a certain purity, refinement and transparency; tonal beauties often encouraged...

                Let us not forget Stokowski/Ormandy in the Conductor/Orchestra Sound Pairings.
                I was listening to Karajan/Berlin In Bruckner 9 on Monday night, after a long grueling day at work and while struggling with a nasty cold. Although I badly needed to go to bed, I just couldn’t rouse myself out of the listening seat. So much sheer beauty and layering of sound requires no other justification. There were a couple of times one can detect a bit of manipulation for effect, but who cares? The end result feels spiritual, as if one has been transported off this mortal coil and given a vista of what lays beyond Human Experience. Could the intentions of the Composer possibly have been better served?
                I like Karajan’s Second Viennese School recordings precisely because they seem to show continuity with the Art that preceded them, the milieu from which they arose. I often wonder if those Composers themselves would have preferred his recordings.
                Karajan had a remarkable range. By temperament he was a Romantic and yes his Mozart and Haydn aren’t as stirring as his other music making (the analogy of driving a Rolls Royce in a parking lot comes to mind) but they are enjoyable and Solti, Ormandy and other contemporaneous Conductors didn’t thrive in that repertoire either. His Bach was anachronistic but so was everyone else of that era.
                Repellant? Only if one is somehow embarrassed by unabashed perfection in sound, if one feels that something is somehow scary if it doesn’t have the blemish that makes us human. One doesn’t criticize Michelangelo for not placing a syphillitic chancre on his David, and if HvK wanted to present us with otherworldly beauty, I will gladly accept the offering

                Comment

                • Richard Barrett
                  Guest
                  • Jan 2016
                  • 6259

                  #9
                  I think like everyone else HvK was good at the things he was good at. When I hear people talk about "perfection in sound" I always wonder why they think there's actually some kind of agreed definition of that term, since obviously there isn't. One person's "perfection in sound" is someone else's... something else. His Berlin Philharmonic sound was a unique musical phenomenon, either you like it or you don't, but none of the orchestra's subsequent musical directors seem to have been inclined to go for something so individual. My admiration for Claudio Abbado as a conductor, for example, is enormous, but I don't much like listening to his Berlin recordings, preferring what he achieved in London and Lucerne before and after that period. Returning to Karajan, his recording is the only Ring des Nibelungen I am happy to hear from start to finish - every other one loses me at some point. Same for most of Strauss.

                  Comment

                  • cloughie
                    Full Member
                    • Dec 2011
                    • 22182

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
                    I think like everyone else HvK was good at the things he was good at. When I hear people talk about "perfection in sound" I always wonder why they think there's actually some kind of agreed definition of that term, since obviously there isn't. One person's "perfection in sound" is someone else's... something else. His Berlin Philharmonic sound was a unique musical phenomenon, either you like it or you don't, but none of the orchestra's subsequent musical directors seem to have been inclined to go for something so individual. My admiration for Claudio Abbado as a conductor, for example, is enormous, but I don't much like listening to his Berlin recordings, preferring what he achieved in London and Lucerne before and after that period. Returning to Karajan, his recording is the only Ring des Nibelungen I am happy to hear from start to finish - every other one loses me at some point. Same for most of Strauss.
                    I think I agree witn a lot of what you said there and maybe what you say about Abbado appllies also to Rattle. What Rattle achieved with the CBSO was in many ways more memorable than that with the BPO, and maybe both Abbado and Rattle were less able to stamp their individuality, nor maybe did not feel the need to, when working with the BPO, well oiled machine. They were not in an orchestra building mode - the love of the music was there but, and I hesitate to say this because I do not know enough about the relationships with the orchestra, was the love of the music makers there? Also with Rattle and EMI was he as well served by recording engineers in Berlin as he was in Birmingham or London?

                    Comment

                    • Once Was 4
                      Full Member
                      • Jul 2011
                      • 312

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Conchis View Post
                      Karajan once made the notorious analogy of music being like 'a beautiful woman in a fur coat. It would be shocking if she had a cold sore on her lips.' His quest for 'beauty of sound' was lifelong and unapologetic. I like his Second Viennese School recordings but I think the charge that he 'smooths over the jagged edges' carries some weight.

                      His films are fascinating for different reasons. Contrary to popular belief, he didn't direct all of them - I think Henri-Georges Clouzot collaborated with him on the Verdi Requiem film. Clouzot was a born misanthropist and his film is all about depicting the fallibility of orchestral musicians (but not Karajan, of course).
                      With regard to the Karajan Second Viennese School recordings: somebody in the recording industry told me that these were, yes, wonderful but totally unlike any possible live performance as the orchestra layout was not only unusual but changed radically between different sections of each work. Can anybody confirm or deny this?

                      And listen to:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCAEtEnm9j4

                      As students we used to talk about 'Karajan Smooth' playing. Smooth this aint but it certainly, as somebody said, kicks ass! Karajan at this time was living in the Adler Hotel where he had the indignity of having to cower in the air raid shelter with the hoi poloi. He eventually fled just before the hotel was bombed.

                      I prefer to speculate on what was about to happen to the wonderful players that we can hear.

                      Comment

                      • Conchis
                        Banned
                        • Jun 2014
                        • 2396

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Once Was 4 View Post
                        With regard to the Karajan Second Viennese School recordings: somebody in the recording industry told me that these were, yes, wonderful but totally unlike any possible live performance as the orchestra layout was not only unusual but changed radically between different sections of each work. Can anybody confirm or deny this?

                        And listen to:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCAEtEnm9j4



                        As students we used to talk about 'Karajan Smooth' playing. Smooth this aint but it certainly, as somebody said, kicks ass! Karajan at this time was living in the Adler Hotel where he had the indignity of having to cower in the air raid shelter with the hoi poloi. He eventually fled just before the hotel was bombed.

                        I prefer to speculate on what was about to happen to the wonderful players that we can hear.

                        Yes, the famous 'experimental stereo' recording of Bruckner &. Shame that that one movement is missing?

                        Comment

                        • Conchis
                          Banned
                          • Jun 2014
                          • 2396

                          #13
                          Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
                          Did he? Do you have a source for this quotation please, Conchis?
                          It's in the Conversations with Karajan book by Richard Osborne.

                          Comment

                          • Conchis
                            Banned
                            • Jun 2014
                            • 2396

                            #14
                            Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
                            Let us not forget Stokowski/Ormandy in the Conductor/Orchestra Sound Pairings.
                            I was listening to Karajan/Berlin In Bruckner 9 on Monday night, after a long grueling day at work and while struggling with a nasty cold. Although I badly needed to go to bed, I just couldn’t rouse myself out of the listening seat. So much sheer beauty and layering of sound requires no other justification. There were a couple of times one can detect a bit of manipulation for effect, but who cares? The end result feels spiritual, as if one has been transported off this mortal coil and given a vista of what lays beyond Human Experience. Could the intentions of the Composer possibly have been better served?
                            I like Karajan’s Second Viennese School recordings precisely because they seem to show continuity with the Art that preceded them, the milieu from which they arose. I often wonder if those Composers themselves would have preferred his recordings.
                            Karajan had a remarkable range. By temperament he was a Romantic and yes his Mozart and Haydn aren’t as stirring as his other music making (the analogy of driving a Rolls Royce in a parking lot comes to mind) but they are enjoyable and Solti, Ormandy and other contemporaneous Conductors didn’t thrive in that repertoire either. His Bach was anachronistic but so was everyone else of that era.
                            Repellant? Only if one is somehow embarrassed by unabashed perfection in sound, if one feels that something is somehow scary if it doesn’t have the blemish that makes us human. One doesn’t criticize Michelangelo for not placing a syphillitic chancre on his David, and if HvK wanted to present us with otherworldly beauty, I will gladly accept the offering

                            Of course we'll never know, but I suspect you may be right about this. The 2ndVSers would have been pleased as punch to hear Karajan conducting the BPO in their works, I'm pretty sure.

                            Comment

                            • cloughie
                              Full Member
                              • Dec 2011
                              • 22182

                              #15
                              Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
                              Let us not forget Stokowski/Ormandy in the Conductor/Orchestra Sound Pairings.
                              I was listening to Karajan/Berlin In Bruckner 9 on Monday night, after a long grueling day at work and while struggling with a nasty cold. Although I badly needed to go to bed, I just couldn’t rouse myself out of the listening seat. So much sheer beauty and layering of sound requires no other justification. There were a couple of times one can detect a bit of manipulation for effect, but who cares? The end result feels spiritual, as if one has been transported off this mortal coil and given a vista of what lays beyond Human Experience. Could the intentions of the Composer possibly have been better served?
                              I like Karajan’s Second Viennese School recordings precisely because they seem to show continuity with the Art that preceded them, the milieu from which they arose. I often wonder if those Composers themselves would have preferred his recordings.
                              Karajan had a remarkable range. By temperament he was a Romantic and yes his Mozart and Haydn aren’t as stirring as his other music making (the analogy of driving a Rolls Royce in a parking lot comes to mind) but they are enjoyable and Solti, Ormandy and other contemporaneous Conductors didn’t thrive in that repertoire either. His Bach was anachronistic but so was everyone else of that era.
                              Repellant? Only if one is somehow embarrassed by unabashed perfection in sound, if one feels that something is somehow scary if it doesn’t have the blemish that makes us human. One doesn’t criticize Michelangelo for not placing a syphillitic chancre on his David, and if HvK wanted to present us with otherworldly beauty, I will gladly accept the offering
                              Interesting you mention Stokowski - I think his case was different to other conductors in that he could deliver his wizardry at will with any orchestra as is shown in his later recordings for Decca!

                              Comment

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