Originally posted by Darkbloom
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Beethoven's 8th Symphony: Your Opinions
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Originally posted by Darkbloom View PostLikening conductors to batsmen is a very dangerous path to go down. Klemperer was obviously the Geoff Boycott of conductors. Carlos Kleiber maybe Kevin Pietersen. Daniel Barenboim was Graeme Hick - you expect him to be good but he always seems to disappoint.
OK, I'll stop now.
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I've dipped in and out of this thread, though probably haven't read everything. Of course Conchie is perfectly entitled not to like the 8th. I wonder what he'd have thought of it it had it been B's first ever symphony, i.e. with only Haydn/Mozart to compare it with? It's an old saw (sore?) that Beethoven had to relax from being revolutionnaire on the even numbers (though that doesn't quite explain No 6) and as someone suggested way upthread, orchestral players love to play them...and they are mostly scored for chamber-sized orchestras (even if timps are sometimes tuned outside the soh-doh spectrum) which suits the smaller outfits. As for 'even the lumpen Edward Heath could conduct it', well that assumes that 'waving bits of wood' is what it's all about.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
. . . they are mostly scored for chamber-sized orchestras . . .
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Bryn. I was misleading on that point. A chamber orchestra can play 1,2,3,4, 7 and 8 without the cost of hiring in extras. My thinking was that one might have expected Beethoven to use trombones, piccolos etc in Nos 7 & 8....but he doesn't. I've conducted [or should I say waved a bit of wood at] all the symphonies except No 9, most of them several times, and down at the grass roots level where I operate, the extra expense is always uppermost in an orchestra's finances!
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostAnother very enjoyable account is that of VPO/Bernstein - I have not heard his NYPO recording but that appears to have had very good reviews in the past.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostBernstein's NYPO & VPO recordings of the Pastoral Symphony are my absolute favourite versions so I would expect his No.8 to be outstanding too. I MUST listen to this work tomorrow!
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostIf they play at modern pitch in this recording -- which they demonstrably do -- I suppose it's feasible they're playing on HIPP instruments, but not likely ? Whatever they're doing in this piece, it works !
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Been listening to various Eighths on my shelf and cannot resist putting in a word for the Gewandhaus legend Franz Konwitschny from 1961 (the year the Berlin Wall went up), controlled energy and dynamic contrast in a beautifully delineated performance with superb orchestral playing. Certainly a favourite.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI have now got round to listening and would suggest that at least the trumpets and horns sound natural, i.e. not valved, to me. However, the bassoons sound modern, so perhaps a mix of historical and modern.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIndeed, I've got the LP. I vaguely recall some comment by Beecham (or was it Boult?) along the lines of " What do you do with that final movement, hopping about all over the place?" Can anyone supply the context?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI vaguely recall some comment by Beecham (or was it Boult?) along the lines of " What do you do with that final movement, hopping about all over the place?" Can anyone supply the context?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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