It has just been announced that Raymond Leppard has passed away. 11-8-1927 - 22-10-2019
Raymond Leppard
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Richard Tarleton
A great life. I heard him conduct at ROH and ENO (Figaro with Kiri te Kanawa etc., Poppea with Janet Baker) and have his fabulous Glyndebourne recordings of Orfeo ed Euridice and La Calisto....
A few years ago I took AMcG to task for being dismissive on CDR of one of Leppard's pioneering but now dated interpretations, not giving it the respect it deserved, and received an equally dismissive reply
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Are many of his recordings still available? I may have had some tapes of the Brandenburg Concertos, but sonically they weren't great (see thread about cassette tapes). I may have a few other recordings, but I do wonder how many made it to CD, and how many were remastered to acceptable sound.
Nevertheless an influential musician and conductor who championed some early music before it became fashionable again, and the period/authentic/HIPP movement took over. He was a few years younger than a near contemporary - Thurston Dart, another enthusiast for baroque and early music, whom he outlived by a considerable number of years.
RL RIP
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAre many of his recordings still available? I may have had some tapes of the Brandenburg Concertos, but sonically they weren't great (see thread about cassette tapes). I may have a few other recordings, but I do wonder how many made it to CD, and how many were remastered to acceptable sound.
Nevertheless an influential musician and conductor who championed some early music before it became fashionable again, and the period/authentic/HIPP movement took over. He was a few years younger than a near contemporary - Thurston Dart, another enthusiast for baroque and early music, whom he outlived by a considerable number of years.
RL RIP
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostHe also in 1973 became Principal Conductor of BBCNSO to broaden his repertoire.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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I used to have a number of his recordings way back when... I remember Handel and CPE Bach in particular, and Monteverdi madrigals. His Monteverdi and Cavalli performances were certainly informed by a love for the music and a strong imagination, although it's a shame he put those in the service of "modernising" the music according to the character of much later styles (including cutting Poppea to less than half of its original duration!), which clearly was a conscious decision on his part, given that he was born within a couple of years of Nikolaus Harnoncourt and Gustav Leonhardt so he wasn't so much pre-HIPP as anti-, I think.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Postso he wasn't so much pre-HIPP as anti-, I think.
A pity he didn't record more of the later repertories - for me, there is where his "staying power" is for me. Also available is a rather wonderful Live Das Lied von der Erde with Jon Mitcheson, Janet Baker, and the BBCNSO. Rather appropriate here, I think (if perhaps somewhat ironic, given his reported disparaging comments on the composer:
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Tarleton
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