Originally posted by Ferretfancy
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Mozart Horn Concertos
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On the Membran Meisterkonzerte Box they have Brain/Karajan for 1,3,4 but slip in a 1946 variant with Walter Susskind conducting for No2. Also well worth hearing.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostOn the Membran Meisterkonzerte Box they have Brain/Karajan for 1,3,4 but slip in a 1946 variant with Walter Susskind conducting for No2. Also well worth hearing.
He also recorded the 4th concerto (K 495) in 1943 with the Hallé orchestra and that performance was conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent for the first movement but the baton was taken over for the second and third movements by the orchestra's leader, Laurence Turner, because Sir Malcolm was taken ill at the last minute.
HS
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Yes that recording somehow makes his tone and general approach too - dare I say it - timid and cautious, but the fact is that his approach was definitely not like that at all. 'Fearless' is a word I would use to sum up his playing and this is much more in evidence on his later recording with Marriner and the ASMF.
On the valveless 'natural horn' Hermann Baumann's pioneering 1970s recording with Harnoncourt and the VCM has never been bettered, in my opinion. His vibrato may not be to everyone's taste, though.
Another interesting feature of his version is that, alone among all hand-horn recordings, the pitch that they play at is IMV the correct one for late 18th century instruments, i.e. A=435 ( or as the 'Das Alte Werke' booklet expresses it, A=870!).
All subsequent recorded 'authentic' versions play at the lower pitch of A=430, giving a rather dull, lifeless sound.
I have played many old natural horns and have never ever encountered a single one that plays happily and well at this A430 pitch without having to have its tuning slide hanging out much too far, or needing specially constructed modern extra tubes to extend the tuning slide.
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amateur51
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostYes, the Baumann is indeed very good. But I find Halstead with the AAM irresistibly cheeky and great fun. Ditto Halstead with the Hanover Band in the Weber Horn Concertino for Nimbus - that recording never fails to raise my spirits.
HS
Baumann was one of the pioneers of horn technique but for me, as a Brain disciple, that thick tone and huge vibrato sounds more like a Euphonium than a horn.
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