This being the current issue on our benighted shores, and I just having finished it, a couple of interesting points.
1) Their retrospective analysis of Horenstein/Mahler 3. The lp was my introduction and only version of it for a few decades, by the time it was released on CD I had moved on, purchased the CD but hardly listened to it and not for a few years. The article attacked the CD issue, which was absolutely justified, as I just played it. Someone should really take another crack at digitalizing it. As for the performance, they saved most of their admiration for the finale, and seemed to think that JH was a bit po faced elsewhere and had been superseded by numerous subsequent recordings. There probably is something to that as well, as I had transferred my allegiance to a few of these, but the authors do point out that at the time of the recording Mahler’s idiom wasn’t the known quantity with Orchestral Players as today.
2) RO had a look at Beethoven Nine on record. I would have thought that he would have chosen a Karajan but instead he plunked for Furtwangler (Bayreuth, 1954). The Reiner/CSO version that is my current love didn’t rate a mention. Ah, well
1) Their retrospective analysis of Horenstein/Mahler 3. The lp was my introduction and only version of it for a few decades, by the time it was released on CD I had moved on, purchased the CD but hardly listened to it and not for a few years. The article attacked the CD issue, which was absolutely justified, as I just played it. Someone should really take another crack at digitalizing it. As for the performance, they saved most of their admiration for the finale, and seemed to think that JH was a bit po faced elsewhere and had been superseded by numerous subsequent recordings. There probably is something to that as well, as I had transferred my allegiance to a few of these, but the authors do point out that at the time of the recording Mahler’s idiom wasn’t the known quantity with Orchestral Players as today.
2) RO had a look at Beethoven Nine on record. I would have thought that he would have chosen a Karajan but instead he plunked for Furtwangler (Bayreuth, 1954). The Reiner/CSO version that is my current love didn’t rate a mention. Ah, well
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