Originally posted by waldhorn
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Harnoncourt
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Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostWhat exactly did he report Klemperer saying about Szell? I couldn't catch it despite repeated listening.
"What Szell did in America, and what he tried to do with us, was, for me, he didn't know anything about music. So, and a man like Klemperer, he said, 'Szell....forget him'. But he was a kind of a god then."
BTW, for those who want to express their appreciation about this interview via Facebook, there's an entry on the BBC Radio 3 page (or BBCRadio3, to find it) about this program, and you can "like" the entry and comment positively (hint, hint).
This was indeed an excellent interview and chance to hear the great man speak. Sadly, I don't think the chance will ever come my way again to hear him live, as the only time I've ever seen him conduct live was in Vienna back in 1999, with the Concentus musicus Wien. I don't see him crossing the pond again with a touring orchestra, unless he comes to NYC, so I'd have to cross over to hear him again live if I want to.
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I think the brassiest - and the most splendid - I've ever heard them sound, is when recorded in the lamented Medinah Temple - especially the 1972 Barenboim recording of Bruckner 4...
And I wonder if their string sound was ever, really, their strongest suit...? Conductor-dependent, of course.
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Just caught up with this thread. Thanks for the Harnoncourt interview link. We're off to the Barbican on Sunday for the Missa Solemnis and it was a good appetizer. I have only a few CDs (Poppea, Brandenburgs, Beethoven Violin + Kremer) and we've never seen him live before and, given his age, we probably won't see him again. I have read that he is being given his Royal Philharmonic Society Gold Medal at the concert. I am really looking forward to it. It will also be the first performance I will have heard after recently having sung in an amateur Missa down here in Wilts. Having sung in a work even as an amateur gives you new perspectives on a work, especially in one with some fiendishly difficult choral bits.
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Originally posted by Chris Newman View PostI guess it was probably NH's age but his conducting of a very pleasant Bartered Bride performance (in German) last week on R3 was fairly leisurely paced, almost Klemperer-esque. Not the fire-brand he was sometimes of old.
Fritz Wunderlich - Smetana, Die verkaufte Braut 1966Szene Kezal - Hans:Komm mein Söhnchen auf ein Wort
with Kurt Böhme, not quite as good as Frick, but almost. A pity this opera seems to be rather out of fashion now, at least in this country.
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