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Thursday, August 29, 2019

Ludwig van Beethoven - Egmont (George Szell)


Information

Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Complete incidental music to 'Egmont', Op. 84

Pilar Lorengar, soprano
Klaus-Jürgen Wussow, narrator
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
George Szell, conductor

Date: 1969
Label: Decca

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Review

When my son asks me, as I fear one day he will, “Daddy, did they have proper conductors when you were young?” I shall take this record from the shelves and play the overture. Later, I will also play him Furtwangler’s May 1947 performance of the piece (DG, 4/62 – nla), pointing out how, at the moment of Egmont’s execution, this uniquely imaginative man could create an entire drama, not out of the music, but out of the silence. Yet, as a simple demonstration of what it is to conduct a great orchestra properly, Szell and the Vienna Philharmonic in the Egmont music will do very nicely.

It is, indeed, a classic set that is likely even now to remain unsurpassed for many years to come. Masur’s live New York performance is good, too, superior to Karajan’s often brash and superficial play-through of the music, but not quite in the Szell/Vienna Philharmonic class. Some may object to short measure on the new disc (48 minutes); others may have been happier with an earlier CD reissue which simply attached highlights from the Egmont recording (no spoken contribution) to Szell’s famous LSO recording of Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony (Decca, 4/91 – nla). But the new CD, like the original LP, will appeal to the tidy-minded library builder. In any case, why should a great recording have to rub shoulders with some distracting fill-up? Why should it not assert its singularity?

The original 1969 recording was indeed in ‘classic sound’ – sound, that is, which comes from a great orchestra directed and balanced at source by a great conductor (not by the engineers) in a hall that is entirely sympathetic to the matter in hand. (If people do, in all seriousness, ask in years to come about the disappearance of proper conductors it will largely be because meddlesome technology has rendered them about as useful as a spavined horse.)

In the circumstances, there is little Decca’s engineers can usefully do to ‘improve’ the sound, apart, that is, from reassert and redefine once and for all the peerless quality of the original. This they have done. The timpani sound is 0.002 per cent cleaner; Szell’s groans in the overture’s coda 0.003 per cent less ghostly. The result: perfection. And all this lavished on words and music which – the overture apart – might not be given the time of day were the name of Beethoven not associated with it. Here, though, it makes compelling listening from first to last.

-- Richard Osborne, Gramophone

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Ludwig van Beethoven (baptized 17 December 1770 – 26 March 1827) was a German composer and pianist. A crucial figure in the transition between the Classical and Romantic eras in Western art music, he remains one of the most famous and influential of all composers. Beethoven is acknowledged as a giant of classical music, and his influence on subsequent generations was profound. His best-known compositions include 9 symphonies, 5 piano concertos, 1 violin concerto, 32 piano sonatas and 16 string quartets. Many of his most admired works come from the last decade of his life, when he was almost completely deaf.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_van_Beethoven

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George Szell (June 7, 1897 – July 30, 1970) was a Hungarian-born American conductor and composer. He is widely considered one of the twentieth century's greatest conductors. Szell is remembered today for his long and successful tenure as music director of the Cleveland Orchestra (1946-70), and for his recordings of the standard classical repertoire. His repertoire consisted mostly of the core Austro-German classical and romantic repertoire. Szell's manner in rehearsal was that of an autocratic taskmaster, with a well-known reputation as a perfectionist and a deep knowledge of instruments.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Szell

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4 comments:

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