Showing posts with label Consecration of the House Overture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consecration of the House Overture. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Annals of serendipity, Beethoven edition: Wouldja just listen to these horns go?

And that's some spiffy clarinet-playing too!
[With assorted UPDATEs]

No, not these particular horns, I mean the ones on the recording --


I wish I knew who our horn players -- and clarinetist -- were so I could credit them. (The regular recording credits are coming up momentarily.)

by Ken

What we just heard -- and I'll sort-of-explain in a moment how we got here -- is the Trio section of the minuet, or I should probably say the Tempo di Menuetto (not quite the same thing; what we have is a tempo marking, not necessarily a simple declaration that what follows is a minuet), of the Beethoven Eighth Symphony. It's nestled inside this performance:

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 8 in F, Op. 93:
iii. Tempo di Menuetto


London Symphony Orchestra, Carlo Maria Giulini, cond. EMI, recorded November 1972

What's happened is that, in the course of our pursuit of the "lesson" of Fidelio, following our pursuit of the "lesson" of Don Giovanni, we are finding outselves knocking around Beethoven's workshop. As readers of recent installments may recall, our path to Fidelio is also leading us beyond, to Beethoven's seeming repository of all musical and perhaps human knowledge, his Ninth Symphony. Which has naturally had me scouting assorted musicscapes for the musical signposts we'll want to pass by.

One of which is a recording of the Beethoven Ninth that Carlo Maria Giulini made for DG, with the Berlin Philharmonic, in 1989, which is lodged in my memory as an especially powerful and personal statement. (For some reason I feel a compulsion to mention that I reviewed it in the New York Times, even though this really isn't here or there, except as it underlines the powerful effect the performance had on me.) It occurred to me that I have an earlier Giulini Beethoven Ninth, done with the London Symphony for EMI, and I was pretty sure I even had it on CD, and mightn't it be interesting to rehear both performances?


IT TURNED OUT THAT IT WAS INTERESTING,
AND NOT IN QUITE THE WAYS I EXPECTED

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Sunday Classics diary: I love this theme, especially when it's played like this





by Ken

I love this theme. It's majestic, maybe even monumental, irresistibly forward-moving, even swaggering, and at the same time tender and uplifting -- if I could put it into words, I guess I wouldn't need the music.

Now, the theme can be played kinda fast:



And it can be played kinda slow:



And it can be played the way we just heard it:




THIS LAST PERFORMANCE IS THE ONE
THAT GOT MY ATTENTION THIS WEEK