Reference Recordings: The Second Viennese School (Orchestral Works)

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  • čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
  • Works by Schoenberg, Berg and Webern. Berlin Philharmonic, Herbert von Karajan (cond.) DG
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Komentáře • 62

  • @zdl1965
    @zdl1965 Před měsícem +5

    Karajan's Verklarte Nacht simply blew my mind. The string sound....
    I thought I was listening to Mantovani!

  • @bobsala7780
    @bobsala7780 Před měsícem +10

    I like how the R's get held longer in each episode of this series of RRRRRReference RRRecordings!

  • @petterw5318
    @petterw5318 Před měsícem +5

    Berg's Lyric Suite is gorgeous in that Karajan interpretation. Amazing stuff.

    • @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist
      @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist Před měsícem

      an so precise in the 2nd movement . This is particularly apparent when you compare with Ashkenazy and the Berlin Radio Symphony Orch.

  • @DullSwain
    @DullSwain Před měsícem +2

    Thank you. Not a twinge of cavil here. One thing that impressed me was how often HvK and the band clarified music that could be muddled or tortured or could simply drown in “chromatic sludge” elsewhere. I thought I knew Pelleas pretty well, but when I heard this it was like someone had turned on the lights.

  • @gomro
    @gomro Před měsícem +2

    I have no doubt that I gravitated to this sort of thing because of youthful exposure to scores like Sawtell's KRONOS, Ifukube's GODZILLA, Frontiere's OUTER LIMITS, and Lubin's ONE STEP BEYOND. I once heard a story about a first-grade teacher playing classical music for her class and their favorite piece was Crumb's BLACK ANGELS. We absolutely accept this sort of dissonance in films, you bet.

  • @bbailey7818
    @bbailey7818 Před měsícem +4

    A slam dunk. Plus, a LaSalle Quartet 2nd Viennese School set on DG I've always associated with the Karajan. I recall buying them on vinyl very close to each other.

    • @jimcarlile7238
      @jimcarlile7238 Před měsícem +1

      And the fabulous documentation that came with both. Do you remember how much you paid for those boxes at the time? I was always curious. The Karajan came with a complete book!

    • @bbailey7818
      @bbailey7818 Před měsícem

      ​@jimcarlile7238 I don't recall how much but I'm sure it wasn't more than standard price. No extra freight for the extra documentation.

  • @steveevans6241
    @steveevans6241 Před měsícem

    Excellent appraisal of the music & recordings. Despite the hype around Karajan, he turned in some really great accessible & ideology free performances as on this set - Boulez & some others notwithstanding. So many moods here along with superb & atmospheric playing from the Berliners opens up these dark worlds in ways never to be forgotten.

  • @toniokroeger64
    @toniokroeger64 Před měsícem +6

    It's a shame Karajan never got around to recording Schoenberg's 5 Orchestral Pieces, op. 16, which are such remarkable pieces ! I'd love to know what you consider to be the best recordings of these !

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Před měsícem +4

      I'd have to go back and do some intense listening to answer that question. I love the music, but it's not the sort of thing that sticks firmly in the memory--at least not mine!

  • @sjc1204
    @sjc1204 Před měsícem

    I like how you framed this discussion because it now has me thinking about how a top tier conductor and orchestra can legitimize works.
    This set was a mystery to me when I was first listening to classical and I never really related to it until I heard the Berg pieces performed live.

  • @davidhowe6905
    @davidhowe6905 Před měsícem +2

    5:55 Reminds me of an interview with Elisabeth Lutyens, who wrote dissonant concert music as well as (dissonant) music for horror movies.

  • @JackBurttrumpetstuff
    @JackBurttrumpetstuff Před měsícem +7

    While they were recording these great discs (much of it over the space of a few months) in between those sessions they also recorded the two-discs of German and Austrians Marches (otherwise known as (Nazis on Parade… 😂)…

    • @bbailey7818
      @bbailey7818 Před měsícem

      Variety is the spice of life. I guess.

    • @jensguldalrasmussen6446
      @jensguldalrasmussen6446 Před měsícem

      Actually, the title of the album is: "Prussian and Austrian marches", indicating that the marches stem from before the great cataclysm, i.e. WW1, and, in the wake of the war, the dissolution of the Austrian-Hungarian double monarchy (K&K) and the abdication of Wilhelm II, the last German Emperor and King of Prussia.
      Some time before anyone thought of any nazis...although, it's difficult not to shudder by the title of one of the marches, "Alte Kameraden" ('Old Comrades in Arms'). This was, I think, one of the ways former nazis after WW2, referred to each other.
      A cryptic euphemism, as when Winifried Wagner after WW2 wasn't thinking of the United States, when she in correspondance to some 'Alte Kameraden' mentioned USA. She instead hinted to "Unser Seligen Adolf" ('Our Blessed Adolf')!

  • @jensguldalrasmussen6446
    @jensguldalrasmussen6446 Před měsícem +1

    I wholeheartedly agree that the Karajan Second Vienese School set is a non-contentious no-brainer... Even people, who normally don't like this kind of music, tend to like it! 😂

  • @MrEdmundHarris
    @MrEdmundHarris Před měsícem

    It was through that recording of the Schoenberg Variations that I first 'got' dodecaphony. Scorching performance.

  • @JPFalcononor
    @JPFalcononor Před měsícem +1

    I remember owning these fine recordings and had me looking for a Karajan performance of Webern's one romantic foray, Im Sommerwind. I never could find a Karajan take on the piece. I think it would have been fun to hear.

  • @georgesdelatour
    @georgesdelatour Před měsícem +5

    They were great recordings.
    Isn’t it also the case that Schoenberg was, at heart, a Romantic composer, who wanted a very lush, Romantic style of performance? He wasn’t like Stravinsky, who wanted a more straight, cool, modernist style.

    • @pianomaly9
      @pianomaly9 Před měsícem +2

      Both lived in the greater L.A. area in the 40's, I wonder if they got together with Ernst Toch or Tibor Serly for rounds of Texas hold 'em.

    • @jimcarlile7238
      @jimcarlile7238 Před měsícem

      Stravinsky lived in LA until the late 60s Then he got into a fight with Ernest Fleischmann or Martin Bernheimer or someone and said he's moving to Paris because no one appreciates him in Los Angeles. And so he did!

    • @georgesdelatour
      @georgesdelatour Před měsícem

      @@jimcarlile7238 I thought he moved to New York.

    • @dennischiapello7243
      @dennischiapello7243 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@pianomaly9 Or perhaps at Norma Desmond's place for bridge, with the "waxworks."

    • @pianomaly9
      @pianomaly9 Před měsícem

      @@georgesdelatour He died there, I remember the news broadcast and had the L.A. times clipping.

  • @stephenschroth3616
    @stephenschroth3616 Před měsícem +1

    Yes. Those recordings were ground breaking. I remember 4 LPs as well, although it might have been 3.

    • @fred6904
      @fred6904 Před měsícem +2

      It was 4 LPs. Schoenberg's Pelleas and Melisande took up one for itself.

  • @dem8568
    @dem8568 Před měsícem

    I learned to love this music when i learned to let go of my notions of what music is "supposed" to be. It's scary to realize all our beloved rules are made up, but also liberating. Is all such music "good"? Ultimately that's up to each of us as liberated individuals to decide for ourselves.

  • @e.heckscher1576
    @e.heckscher1576 Před měsícem

    I'd say not only that movie and TV music is "the same" as these works, but that it was a direct result of them.

    • @jimcarlile7238
      @jimcarlile7238 Před měsícem

      Absolutely -- if you grew up on 50s and 60s TV and movie soundtracks this 2nd Viennese stuff is like the Beach Boys.

  • @phamthanh4785
    @phamthanh4785 Před měsícem +3

    While I still don't like Schoenberg and Berg's music, Karajan certainly changed my mind on Webern. I have listened to Webern a few times before, but they were by third rate orchestras with third rate conductors who were trying so hard to tell the world that they are deep and profound. But their performance was honestly trash. Karajan however, showed me what Webern can sounds like when played right, and it just blew my mind. Nowadays if I am somehow in the mood to hear 12 tone, Webern is my go-to.

  • @hoifcheu7533
    @hoifcheu7533 Před měsícem +1

    It is interesting that you often state Karajan's weaknesses (correctly so), yet so many reference recordings (also correctly so) reviewed in this series are his.

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Před měsícem +3

      Quality is not the only criterion for something being a reference.

  • @stevemcclue5759
    @stevemcclue5759 Před měsícem

    If - as has often been said - Karajan "paid" for these recordings himself, do we know how much it would have cost him (and how much was the conductor paid?!)

  • @Warp75
    @Warp75 Před měsícem

    These are very tasty discs & some of the first classical music I ever bought. Apparently his wife hated it

  • @mikeraymondwood160
    @mikeraymondwood160 Před měsícem

    Some of us still have the LPs Dave !

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Před měsícem

      And I can't imagine why! Webern in particular really demands a silent background and even mint condition LPs don't offer optimal results.

  • @MarauderOSU
    @MarauderOSU Před měsícem +1

    Dave, do you think Sir Colin Davis's 1969 recording of Berlioz's Les Troyens would qualify as a reference recording?

  • @pianomaly9
    @pianomaly9 Před měsícem +1

    If you haven't done so already, a comparison of the Pelleases by Faure, Debussy, Sibelius and Schoenberg would be interesting. Heard Schonberg's decades ago, I think Karajan, the piece impressed me as a roiling mass of chromaticism pushed to its tonal outer limit. Few years ago I got Mitropoulos' recording on Music and Arts, liked it better. Got to tour the Schonberg archive at UCLA in the early 80's, I think, with the 20th Century Music prof and class. She knew Larry, his son. Saw the manuscript of Friede auf Erden.

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Před měsícem

      Already done, three years ago.

    • @jimcarlile7238
      @jimcarlile7238 Před měsícem

      I think it was at SC, right? Not UCLA. And then the family got pissed for some reason and moved it to Vienna as I remember.
      UCLA has that Schoenberg Square place on campus --'which a few years ago they wanted to rename for David Geffen, and there was such an outcry at the idea that he told them to forget about it. He took the medical school instead!

    • @pianomaly9
      @pianomaly9 Před měsícem

      @@jimcarlile7238 You could be right, been so long ago.

  • @classicalemotion
    @classicalemotion Před měsícem

    Dear Dave, I would love to pop here something totally out of topic, but wanted to share with you an observation about Gustavo Dudamel. I was casually listening to a few of his recordings. I am a big fan of Constantin Silvestri, and I love his Tchaikovsky 5th and his Dvorak 8.
    Listening the recordings have done Dudamel, I find so so clearly the influence of that recordings on him. As I found before the horrible influence of Barenboim in his Beethoven. Apparently he doesn't have so many ideas, maybe he has his favorite records and just copy them. Is that something that you have casually observed also? Would love to know your view on this detail. Thanks !

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Před měsícem +2

      I have not noticed that. It's an interesting point, though. I just think he's pretty mediocre most of the time.

  • @geshtin
    @geshtin Před měsícem +2

    Since you mention Karajan and Shosty - does anyone know why he only did the 10th? It sounds to me like he really got along with Shosty so why didn't he do others?

    • @joshuadavis2416
      @joshuadavis2416 Před měsícem +2

      And he did the 10th twice.

    • @stevouk
      @stevouk Před měsícem +2

      For the reasons mentioned in the clip. When Karajan did a non-standard work (and DS was non-standard at the time) he wanted the field to himself. The Seventh already had a bit of history, and the Fifth had also several recordings and associations. The Tenth - at the time Karajan first tackled it - was comparatively new and largely unknown outside the USSR. I think in the West the only other recording was by Mitropoulos (I think Stokowski's was contemporaneous with Karajan's first one). Plus it was *the* showpiece of the Berliners' trip to Moscow.

    • @stevenbugala8375
      @stevenbugala8375 Před měsícem +6

      According to Richard Osborne’s biography of Herb, he did make efforts to record the Fifth and the Eighth. But EMI said no. He evidently liked the Sixth, but felt Mravinsky’s recording couldn’t be bettered.

    • @AlexMadorsky
      @AlexMadorsky Před měsícem

      Karajan also apparently once said that if he wrote music, it would strongly resemble that of Shostakovich.

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk Před měsícem +3

      @@stevenbugala8375 I've always thought that HvK would have done an amazing Eighth. Such a shame that EMI didn't grant him his wish.

  • @DeflatingAtheism
    @DeflatingAtheism Před měsícem

    I have the first Boulez-conducts-Webern box, and I always thought of Webern’s 6 pieces for orchestra as a lesser work, lesser than the immediately surrounding works. Maybe it’s a bad performance- even the recording quality seems worse to me!

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Před měsícem +1

      Well then, try some better performances. It won't take long to listen.

  • @johannesortmann2789
    @johannesortmann2789 Před měsícem

    And, I suppose, it will be Karajan with Mahler‘s fifth symphony as the old reference recording, again. It is incredible, how influential and style forming this guy and the DGG were - back in the days. At times, it was somewhat annoying. I remember very vividly buying very reluctantly his very expensive integral recording of Pelleas and Melisande (Debussy) only because there was no alternative recording to be bought at the time or in a foreseeable future.

    • @edwinbelete76
      @edwinbelete76 Před měsícem

      The Karajan Mahler 5th is excellent and my personal favorite. However, I suspect that the reference is either the Barbirolli or Bernstein with Vienna.

    • @johannesortmann2789
      @johannesortmann2789 Před měsícem +1

      @@edwinbelete76 I am looking forward to that one…

    • @jensguldalrasmussen6446
      @jensguldalrasmussen6446 Před měsícem

      "It is incredible how influential and style forming this guy and DGG were..." - except that Karajan's Pelléas et Mélisande was on EMI (now Warner)!
      I agree, that Karajan's Mahler 5th might be a strong contender for a reference, but, personally, I would put my money on Bernstein in Vienna!

    • @johannesortmann2789
      @johannesortmann2789 Před měsícem

      @@jensguldalrasmussen6446 Yes, it was EMI. The coverart was dreadful. The DGG played no part in that story, of course.