I’m currently listening to these as part of the Kubelik centenary box set that I acquired for an absolutely bargain price back in 2014.
They make for pleasant background listening but I find them almost completely lacking in individual character. These are symphonies that could have been written by any mildly competent person of that timeframe; and the influences - Beethoven and Wagner - are all too obvious.
I can’t think of any other ‘major’ symphonist (I’m not sure Dvorak is considered a major symphonist, though he’s certainly a popular one) who found his voice so late in his career. It was clear that Bruckner had something original to say, even in his early symphonies. Ditto Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky and, of course, Beethoven. But Dvorak’s early stuff strikes me as sheer musical wallpaper.....
They make for pleasant background listening but I find them almost completely lacking in individual character. These are symphonies that could have been written by any mildly competent person of that timeframe; and the influences - Beethoven and Wagner - are all too obvious.
I can’t think of any other ‘major’ symphonist (I’m not sure Dvorak is considered a major symphonist, though he’s certainly a popular one) who found his voice so late in his career. It was clear that Bruckner had something original to say, even in his early symphonies. Ditto Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky and, of course, Beethoven. But Dvorak’s early stuff strikes me as sheer musical wallpaper.....
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