本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Symphony No. 1 - Furtwangler is somewhat weighty for this piece, but it
is affectionate and warmly inflected nonetheless. Best is probably the
EMI Studio recording (Nov. 24, 1952 - EMI CDC 7 47409 -2) - one of his
better studio discs; the live Nov. 30, 1952 on Music & Arts (CD 711) is
also pretty good. I find the 1954 live performance a bit too heavy.
Symphony No. 2 - That's easy since there is only one - on EMI CDH 7
63192 2. This performance is fine, but the recorded sound (live, Royal
Albert Hall, 1948) is dreadful, and it would probably never have been
released were it not the only Furtwangler performance of Beethoven 2
that exists.
Symphony No. 3 ("Eroica") - The choosing is tougher here, but in the end
for most people, I believe December 8, 1952 is best, as released by
Tahra on FURT 1008-1011. The sound is terrific, as good as most early
1950s mono studio recordings, and the performance fabulously balanced
between nobility, drama, power and depth. The Wartime Eroica is a great
alternative, more intense and incisive, wider in dynamic and tempo
extremes, and I've just heard a very fine new CD release of it on
Preiser 90251.
Symphony No. 4 - I like the wildly intense wartime version from June 30,
1943 - on Music & Arts CD 824 (earlier on DGG 427 777-2), also on
Grammofono 2000 AB 78502 in a good transfer. A somewhat more sedate,
but still wonderful later performance is from Sept. 4, 1953 - on
Virtuoso 269.7192.
Symphony No. 5 - Here again the choice is very difficult, but partly
because the performances are powerful and the sonics are so good, I'd
recommend Tahra 1008-1011 (this also helps because it's the same
purchase as for the Eroica). The performance is from May, 1954, and it
is broad, weighty, noble and still dramatic. The cleaned up sound on
Tahra has made the performance sound better than earlier, more
compressed and colorless transfers. There is much to be said for the
more sedate, controlled 1937 studio HMV recording (best transfer is
Biddulph WHL 006), and for the May, 1947 BPO performance on Music and
Arts CD 789 -- which is the wildest of all in its extremes, because it
is from the first concert in Berlin that he was allowed to give after
de-nazification, having not conducted his orchestra for 2 years. You
can imagine the drama.
Symphony No. 6 ("Pastorale") - Again - the May 1954 performance on Tahra
FURT 1008-1011 (see, if you get that set you get three recommended
performances, Nos. 3, 5, and 6, along with a great Schubert 9th). This
is really beautiful. Again, the wartime 1944 one is more dramatic, (M&A
CD 824).
Symphony No. 7 - Here the wartime one is my favorite - 1943 - Music &
Arts CD 824 - a hair-raising performance. But close by is DG 415 666 2,
a 1953 performance of power and breadth -- particularly warm in the
second movement. The fire is missing from the August 30 1954 Salzburg
Festival prerformance, but the beauty and warmth is still there, and the
sound on Orfeo, taken from master tapes from the Austrian Radio, is by
far the best of all. This is on Orfeo C293921 (See No. 8)
Symphony No. 8 - As with Symphony #1, some will find WF a bit heavy
here, though I like the weight; this may be a lighter work than No. 9,
but it is still late Beethoven, and Furtwangler does have a quirky sense
of humor that comes through. Orfeo C293921, as with No. 7 above, has
great sound and is a livelier performance than the 7th from the same
concert. But the best is still Berlin 1953 - which has been on DGG 415
666 2 (same as #7), and also on Rodolphe RPC 32522.24. Hard to find,
however.
Symphony #9 - I continue to think that the safest recommendation is the
1951 Bayreuth performance - a great statement that balances passion and
inner spirit perhaps as well as any of his readings, and available in
many different EMI pressings. But there is of course much to be said
for the 1954 Lucerne performance (his last of this work, 3 months before
his death) -- a very broad, deeply felt, poetic reading, heard
wonderfully on Tahra FURT 1003. And, one must mention the wartime
reading (1942) on Music & Arts CD 653 -- a performance on fire from the
first notes. This is white heat defined, and one cannot listen to it
too often, which is why I never recommend it as a first choice, but it
makes a remarkable impact if heard on occasion.
As for the complete EMI set, I don't recommend it - not that any
performance in it is bad (some of the above are included), but because
some of the performances of EMI studio recordings are not at the most
incisive or dramatic level.
Hope the above helps.
Henry Fogel更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
is affectionate and warmly inflected nonetheless. Best is probably the
EMI Studio recording (Nov. 24, 1952 - EMI CDC 7 47409 -2) - one of his
better studio discs; the live Nov. 30, 1952 on Music & Arts (CD 711) is
also pretty good. I find the 1954 live performance a bit too heavy.
Symphony No. 2 - That's easy since there is only one - on EMI CDH 7
63192 2. This performance is fine, but the recorded sound (live, Royal
Albert Hall, 1948) is dreadful, and it would probably never have been
released were it not the only Furtwangler performance of Beethoven 2
that exists.
Symphony No. 3 ("Eroica") - The choosing is tougher here, but in the end
for most people, I believe December 8, 1952 is best, as released by
Tahra on FURT 1008-1011. The sound is terrific, as good as most early
1950s mono studio recordings, and the performance fabulously balanced
between nobility, drama, power and depth. The Wartime Eroica is a great
alternative, more intense and incisive, wider in dynamic and tempo
extremes, and I've just heard a very fine new CD release of it on
Preiser 90251.
Symphony No. 4 - I like the wildly intense wartime version from June 30,
1943 - on Music & Arts CD 824 (earlier on DGG 427 777-2), also on
Grammofono 2000 AB 78502 in a good transfer. A somewhat more sedate,
but still wonderful later performance is from Sept. 4, 1953 - on
Virtuoso 269.7192.
Symphony No. 5 - Here again the choice is very difficult, but partly
because the performances are powerful and the sonics are so good, I'd
recommend Tahra 1008-1011 (this also helps because it's the same
purchase as for the Eroica). The performance is from May, 1954, and it
is broad, weighty, noble and still dramatic. The cleaned up sound on
Tahra has made the performance sound better than earlier, more
compressed and colorless transfers. There is much to be said for the
more sedate, controlled 1937 studio HMV recording (best transfer is
Biddulph WHL 006), and for the May, 1947 BPO performance on Music and
Arts CD 789 -- which is the wildest of all in its extremes, because it
is from the first concert in Berlin that he was allowed to give after
de-nazification, having not conducted his orchestra for 2 years. You
can imagine the drama.
Symphony No. 6 ("Pastorale") - Again - the May 1954 performance on Tahra
FURT 1008-1011 (see, if you get that set you get three recommended
performances, Nos. 3, 5, and 6, along with a great Schubert 9th). This
is really beautiful. Again, the wartime 1944 one is more dramatic, (M&A
CD 824).
Symphony No. 7 - Here the wartime one is my favorite - 1943 - Music &
Arts CD 824 - a hair-raising performance. But close by is DG 415 666 2,
a 1953 performance of power and breadth -- particularly warm in the
second movement. The fire is missing from the August 30 1954 Salzburg
Festival prerformance, but the beauty and warmth is still there, and the
sound on Orfeo, taken from master tapes from the Austrian Radio, is by
far the best of all. This is on Orfeo C293921 (See No. 8)
Symphony No. 8 - As with Symphony #1, some will find WF a bit heavy
here, though I like the weight; this may be a lighter work than No. 9,
but it is still late Beethoven, and Furtwangler does have a quirky sense
of humor that comes through. Orfeo C293921, as with No. 7 above, has
great sound and is a livelier performance than the 7th from the same
concert. But the best is still Berlin 1953 - which has been on DGG 415
666 2 (same as #7), and also on Rodolphe RPC 32522.24. Hard to find,
however.
Symphony #9 - I continue to think that the safest recommendation is the
1951 Bayreuth performance - a great statement that balances passion and
inner spirit perhaps as well as any of his readings, and available in
many different EMI pressings. But there is of course much to be said
for the 1954 Lucerne performance (his last of this work, 3 months before
his death) -- a very broad, deeply felt, poetic reading, heard
wonderfully on Tahra FURT 1003. And, one must mention the wartime
reading (1942) on Music & Arts CD 653 -- a performance on fire from the
first notes. This is white heat defined, and one cannot listen to it
too often, which is why I never recommend it as a first choice, but it
makes a remarkable impact if heard on occasion.
As for the complete EMI set, I don't recommend it - not that any
performance in it is bad (some of the above are included), but because
some of the performances of EMI studio recordings are not at the most
incisive or dramatic level.
Hope the above helps.
Henry Fogel更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net