The Fourth movement of this work has a long Passacaglia played by the low strings over which there are some brief intermittent wind solos. I recently obtained the Haitink/Concertgebouw recording, made in the excellent late analog Decca era, and the passacaglia is played in what for me is an unfamiliar manner. The previous recordings with which I am familiar generally treat sotto voce, almost as a gentle barcarolle. In this recording the passacaglia seems to veer in dynamics from pppp. to pp, and instead of conjuring images of limp exhaustion, as most recordings do, this recording conveyed a menace that I found most effective.
I wondered if this truly was an individualistic approach, or if I simply hadn’t noticed it before in my previous years of acquaintance with the piece. I then pulled out a Blu Ray of Andriss Nelsons conducting the same orchestra and to my ears the result is the more subdued, low background feel of the passacaglia, what for me is the standard technique , without the dynamic shadings that make the Haitink recording so effective (What is interesting is that on the podium, Nelsons seems to be trying to coax degrees of dynamic shading, even dropping to one knee and holding his hands close to the floor, but if one ignore all that I don’t hear the results in the playing).
As a non musician, I cannot read the score, and while I’ve tried to pull up a few references on line, most writing on the work doesn’t consider the passacaglia. So I'm curious if Haitink is obeying dynamic instructions that most Conductors ignore , or if Haitink is taking a Liberty, or if most recordings are actually doing what the Haitink recording is doing and the engineering doesn’t capture the subtle variations in dynamics. I have a few other versions that I can sample but I was curious what those more knowledgeable than me had to say
I wondered if this truly was an individualistic approach, or if I simply hadn’t noticed it before in my previous years of acquaintance with the piece. I then pulled out a Blu Ray of Andriss Nelsons conducting the same orchestra and to my ears the result is the more subdued, low background feel of the passacaglia, what for me is the standard technique , without the dynamic shadings that make the Haitink recording so effective (What is interesting is that on the podium, Nelsons seems to be trying to coax degrees of dynamic shading, even dropping to one knee and holding his hands close to the floor, but if one ignore all that I don’t hear the results in the playing).
As a non musician, I cannot read the score, and while I’ve tried to pull up a few references on line, most writing on the work doesn’t consider the passacaglia. So I'm curious if Haitink is obeying dynamic instructions that most Conductors ignore , or if Haitink is taking a Liberty, or if most recordings are actually doing what the Haitink recording is doing and the engineering doesn’t capture the subtle variations in dynamics. I have a few other versions that I can sample but I was curious what those more knowledgeable than me had to say
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