Originally posted by Petrushka
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Mahler Symphony no. 9
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Originally posted by Alison View PostYes there were at least two live performances of Mahler 9 made around the time of the Tennstedt recording.
One of the earlier symphonies to be recorded circa 1979.
In those days you might get a Thursday evening followed by a Sunday afternoon rendition of the same concert."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostPerhaps this thread should be merged with this one
http://www.for3.org/forums/showthrea...Mahler+haitink[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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And possibly my rather more narrowly focused Haitink Mahler 1970 thread too ...
Meanwhile I played the Barbirolli in its analogue format today for the first time in ages . Took me right back to the day I bought the 2 cassette set on Farringdon Records for £3.99 and the Mahler 6 the same day for the same price. It is a great record with a wonderful account of the finale in particular .
What records he and the BPO might have made together had he been given another ten years of life .
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostFor me the 1938 Walter has a very special place, but the most devastatingly affecting for me is the 2008 Norrington, rightly Gramophone Editors Choice - May 2010.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIIRC, those Audite recordings (from about ten years later than the DG Studio recordings) are from Live recordings - individual concerts, too, rather than edited from different events and rehearsals.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostWhat is thought about Bernstein's fanciful suggestion that the very opening depicts Mahler's faltering heartbeat?
Returning to recordings of this piece, I guess I should check out Kubelík's later recordings - the only problem is I know every corner of the earlier ones so well that anything that differs from them might well come across as sounding "wrong"! Yesterday I listened again to the Nott. Somehow I was less aware of its individuality than I had previously been, but maybe I wasn't paying sufficient attention. It's good to be reminded of the Norrington, which I found to be a revelation; but I could actually say the same about Barbirolli or Ančerl; I can see another concentrated session on this piece about to begin...Last edited by Richard Barrett; 06-01-18, 10:52.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIIRC, those Audite recordings (from about ten years later than the DG Studio recordings) are from Live recordings - individual concerts, too, rather than edited from different events and rehearsals.
Is it due to improvements in recording techniques from the late sixties to the late seventies? Were there just better engineers for the live performance than DG had in the Studio? A difference in venue? Or, is it due to improvements in the Orchestra, currently one of the best in the world, and captured at two different points in time as they developed?
Some reviews that have compared the two recordings attribute it to last factor. I don’t know the reason but I was wondering if anyone who has had the good fortune to hear the Orchestra over the years had an opinion.
I would love to hear the Bavarians live. I wonder if they will be invited to play in Hamburg’s New Elb Philharmonie. I would cross the pond just for that
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI’m aware of that. I didn’t fully elaborate my point, which is why is it that the Audite recording sounds so much better?
Is it due to improvements in recording techniques from the late sixties to the late seventies? Were there just better engineers for the live performance than DG had in the Studio? A difference in venue? Or, is it due to improvements in the Orchestra, currently one of the best in the world, and captured at two different points in time as they developed?
Some reviews that have compared the two recordings attribute it to last factor. I don’t know the reason but I was wondering if anyone who has had the good fortune to hear the Orchestra over the years had an opinion.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNot (yet) having heard the later recordings I would be inclined to attribute the improvements to engineering. The DG recordings embody a certain aesthetic of studio recording which aims primarily at clarity of detail rather than the kind of conglomerate sound one experiences in a concert hall, and many people would prefer the latter. As far as I'm concerned the orchestra was already a top-class ensemble in the 1960s. Having said that, I think it's gone on improving in the meantime. The last time I heard them was in 2010 when I had the privilege to work with them on a new orchestral composition that was premiered in the Herkulessaal in Munich, which was a greatly inspiring experience.
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Haitink's Mahler 9 knocks the massively overrated cold as marble HVK versions into a cocked hat.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 21-06-19, 15:19.
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