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- Newsgroups: rec.music.classical
- Path: sparky!uunet!visual!rwh
- From: rwh@visual.com (Rob Holzel)
- Subject: Re: Greatest Conductors: Why?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.123351.17765@visual.com>
- Sender: rwh@visual.com (Robert W. Holzel)
- Organization: Visual
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 92 12:33:51 GMT
- Lines: 43
-
- Brian Haag writes:
-
- > I would
- >say that Bernstein ranks as one of my favorite conductors for those moments
- >when he creates an incredible electricity.
-
- And I'd say I agree entirely. Your caveat, naming "those moments when
- he creates an incredible electricity," is a wise on. But I can honestly
- say that, to me, those "incredible moments" make it worth sifting through
- some of those times when his approach misses the mark. When he's on-target,
- he's really "on".
-
- I've raved elsewhere about his last Tchaikovsky Sixth on DG. Last night
- I saw it in a used-CD store for $4.99 and grabbed it -- a perfect gift for
- one of those friends of mine who've borrowed my copy and fallen in love
- with it (one said he wept openly during the first movement -- and this
- is one tough dude! Now if I can ever get the damned thing back from
- him and his roommate....)
-
- Reportedly, another major triumph is the Sibelius First on DG. I've
- got some good intelligence that this will be waiting for me under the
- tree on Christmas morning, and I'm looking forward to it, you can believe.
-
- His recording of the Copland Clarinet Concerto on DG is also transcendently
- magical. As are the Ives Second, the Copland Third, the Mahler Fifth,
- Mahler First, and on and on.... Someday I hope to indulge myself with
- his BSO Mahler Ninth. I first have to be able to justify owning a third
- copy of that work, though.
-
- There are occasional misses, too, like the DG Sibelius Second -- that
- just didn't jell for me. But you and I definitely agree on one thing: he
- seemed to enjoy an amazing renaissance toward the end of his life.
- Perhaps as he felt the years ebbing away, he felt free to break away
- from the commonplace and venture into uncharted depths. Perhaps, too,
- (like I read somewhere) his last years found him accepting himself with
- more honesty and clarity than ever before, leading to insights in other
- arenas. How generous of him to share this bounty with us through the
- music he loved most. What a wonderful legacy!
-
- Rob
-
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-