Originally posted by Barbirollians
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I think that Beecham was rather clever (or lucky?), in that he created a sort of monopoly in Delius conducting that made it difficult for his contemporaries to 'compete'. Certainly it can seem that Beecham was the one great champion. But Wood, Barbirolli and Sargent also played much Delius (Boult had a rare blind spot) and there are fine recordings from Constant Lambert and Anthony Collins, too. Beecham was truly great in Delius, but it is easy to become blinded into thinking there can be only one authoritative approach to the music, or (and this is more important) that it's 'special' music that needs a 'secret' to conduct successfully. For many years now, conductors have demonstrated that there can be different valid approaches.
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