A game to play, perhaps, in these peculiar times.
Some works have recordings that are regarded by the great and good as canonical, always appearing at or near the top of recommendation lists. One such is the Ansermet-Crespin recording of Ravel’s Scheherazade, whose vaunted virtues I’ve never been able to appreciate. Right from the start, the languorous oboe repels, sounding sour rather than alluring; but it is Crespin who sounds altogether too old, distant (and bored) to my ears.
Are there revered recorded versions of works that you just don’t get on with? (No need to provide your favoured alternatives - that would surely lead to opprobrium being heaped upon your own exquisite taste!)
Some works have recordings that are regarded by the great and good as canonical, always appearing at or near the top of recommendation lists. One such is the Ansermet-Crespin recording of Ravel’s Scheherazade, whose vaunted virtues I’ve never been able to appreciate. Right from the start, the languorous oboe repels, sounding sour rather than alluring; but it is Crespin who sounds altogether too old, distant (and bored) to my ears.
Are there revered recorded versions of works that you just don’t get on with? (No need to provide your favoured alternatives - that would surely lead to opprobrium being heaped upon your own exquisite taste!)
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