Furtwangler Conducts Brahms - Complete Symphonies, etc / North German RSO, Berlin PO
Facts
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Furtwangler Conducts Brahms - Complete Symphonies, etc / North German RSO, Berlin PO
Music Price: $43.98 As of Jan 9 5:47 EST (details)
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| Studio | Music & Arts Program |
| Release Date | November 16, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 017685494123 |
| Buy this item | $43.98 at Amazon.com As of Jan 9 5:47 EST (details) 4 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set |
About Furtwangler Conducts Brahms - Complete Symphonies, etc / North German RSO, Berlin PO
Perhaps the most viscerally thrilling account here is of the First Symphony, from 1951, which, as John Ardoin brilliantly describes it in The Furtwängler Record, has the "magnificent rawness of a Michelangelo." But, when you think you've reached an untoppable high at its conclusion, listen to the finale from Furtwängler's final wartime concert in Berlin, 1945 (the only extant movement on disc), included in this set. The symphonies presented here are a far cry from the stuffy, pedantic, anachronistic Brahms served up by so many lesser lights. Furtwängler grasps and conveys the subtly layered ambiguities in these scores, the blending--particularly in the Second's Adagio (1945) and the final measures of the Third (1943)--of deep shadow with serene sunlight. His Brahms Four from 1943 at times verges on the terrifying; ultimately it passes beyond tragedy into new wisdom as Furtwängler scoops, caresses, sculpts, and simply builds musical contours. The set also includes two interpretations of the Haydn Variations (1943 and 1951) and the legendary 1942 Second Piano Concerto featuring Edwin Fischer as soloist--a touchstone of musical partnership. There's a varying level of background hiss and distortion throughout the set, but in general this is an extraordinary CD transfer. And in Furtwängler's presence, any distracting artifacts of the recorded sound soon fade into insignificance. This is a must not only for listeners serious about Brahms but for anyone intrigued by the art of musical interpretation. --Thomas May Amazon.com essential recording
Tracks
Disc 1- Un poco sostenuto... Allegro
- Andante sostenuto
- Un poco Allegretto e grazioso
- Finale, Piu Andante... Allegro non troppo, ma con brio
- 4th Mvt:Finale
- Allegro non troppo
- Adagio non troppo
- Allegretto grazioso
- Allegro con spirito
- Allegro con brio
- Andante
- Poco Allegretto
- Allegro
- Allegro non troppo
- Andante moderato
- Allegro giocoso
- Allegro energico e passionato
- Allegro non troppo
- Allegro appassionato
- Andante
- Allegretto grazioso
- Theme
- Variation 1
- Variation 2
- Variation 3
- Variation 4
- Variation 5
- Variation 6
- Variation 7
- Variation 8
- Finale: Andante
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Everything everyone around here says is true |
The few comments about bad sound quality from the detractors are also true. These are not high fidelity recordings; they are mainly radio recordings remastered by Arts & Music, one of the better labels specializing in realizing older recordings and radio broadcasts. Until Andante and Naxos came along and showed everyone how good an older recording could be, this label was probably the best available for older recordings. But no one can make recordings emanating from the 1940s and 1950s sound like new and these don't. But, like other reviewers here said, they are often as good as any available from Furtwangler. A notable exception here is the 1943 Symphony 4, which is musically the equal to the 1948 Japanese EMI recording, but is also sonically inferior to the later recording, carrying a noticeable radio buzz throughout the fourth movement.
For the unitiated wondering, "Why should I spend money on 50- and 65-year-old recordings?", the answer is to hear Furtwangler's unique way with mainstream German repertory. Furtwangler held sway with the Berlin Philharmonic in two different eras -- from 1922-45 and again from 1954-55. He directed the orchestra after such luminaries as Hans von Bulow and Artur Nikish and before the ascent of Herbert von Karajan. Sergiu Celibadache, a cult conductor known for his disdain of studio recordings and glacial interpretaions, filled the time after the war until Furtwangler returned in 1954.
Furtwangler's way was unlike anyone of his time or ours although certain wilful conductors of the recording era -- Leonard Bernstein, Leopold Stokowski and Daniel Barenboim among them -- demonstrated some of his characteristics of rapid increase in tempo and dynamics followed by tenuto or massive slowdown and quiet. None of the named conducotrs did it as frequently as Furtwangler, and none with such universal acclaim. However, like Bernstein and Stokie in their most individual moments, a Furtwangler interpretation is more an adaptation of the score than a reading of it -- adapting the conductor's ideas into the fabric of the music.
Furtwangler was perhaps most renowned for his beat; or perhaps it is better to say he was renowned for not having a beat. There is an old joke, told by one of his players, about his how to pick up his beat when the old man's batonless right hand would quiver as if he were having a heart attack or rigor mortis were trying to set in: stand up, look about you and listen, walk around the chair three times, and sit down.
Yet, as these recordings will tell you, Furtwangler did indeed have a defined beat and members of his orchestras picked it up pretty readily. When he is straightforward -- as he is accompanying Edwin Fischer's playing in the Second Piano Concerto here or in his famous rendering of the Schubert Symphony 9 and Haydn Symphony 88 on DG -- Furtwangler is a compelling voice for German reason and emotion. When his conducting tends to be all over the place, as it is in the first movement exposition of the Symphony 4 in this box, he is, by my reckoning, somewhat less of an authority on the music.
There are plenty of people that continue to believe Furtwangler has special authority in the core Romantic German repertory of Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Strauss and Wagner. As Third Ear Classical Music said in its discussion of his Beethoven Symphony 9, "Furtwangler is thought to have a special authority in this music, and he does present a very interesting philosophical argument about how to approach it." This final section of this statement tells you everything you need to know about Furtwangler -- that he often has a philosophical argument in his recordings. It is never enough for him merely to lead the music; he must adapt it to his views as no one has ever done. For, make no mistake, a Furtwangler interpretation is as much as adaptation of the score as a Hollywood movie script is an adaptation of the book from which the idea came.
And this is the razor's edge on which people spill their blood either supporting or rebuking the greatness in this conductor's approach. I was curious about Furtwangler's Brahms and bought this set during a time when I was listening to a lot of this composer including the symphonic sets by Karajan, Hans Schmidt-Issersted (available from Amazon.com.UK) and Ernest Ansermet. While Eugen Jochum's Bruckner represents a direct descendent of Furtwangler's way with that composer, the closest any modern conductor has come to Furtwangler's style is the way Stokowski rather "Stoki"izes the Brahms Symphony No. 3 on his old Everest recording or possibly the way Bernstein interpreted the Schumann symphonies for DG.
In our period-induced era, where the score is sacrosanct and must be adhered to with conviction, it's unlikely another Furtwangler will be forthcoming anytime soon. He represents a time in the past when music and its expression was different than today. That expression and that time is perfectly represented in this set. August 7, 2008
| Unsurpassably great |
| The best Brahms cycle I have heard so far |
| Furtwangler's best Brahms symphony recordings |
"Brahms music is boring and his orchestration is too thick," is one of my least favorite of the countless cliches' about romantic era composers and their music. When I worked at a record store several years ago, I was playing a really good and exciting recording of a Mendelssohn symphony, and a lady came in and, after listening to it for a few minutes, she asked, "What is this? It's really good." "Mendelssohn's (I think it was the 3rd) Symphony," I responded. "Really?!" she said, surprised; "I thought Mendelssohn was boring." "That's because you've never heard any GOOD Mendelssohn," I said. She bought the CD. I am not a big Mendelssohn fan, but the point of this anecdote is that you frequently get the same kinds of opinions about Brahms, based on cliches' about his music that preclude people from giving it serious consideration: "Oh yeah, Brahms; thick and boring. Not my cup of tea." Then you hear some GOOD Brahms, and you are a fan for life.
I would not pretend that this is the only Brahms set you should have. The sound quality is variable, and Furtwangler's style is unique, but if you have any interest in Brahms' symphonies, and you have some more modern recordings that you like, then you really need to have this one; esp. since you can probably get an inexpensive copy on the Marketplace.
I have listened to many of Furtwangler's numerous Brahms recordings, and there is no question in my mind that M&A have assembled the best ones here. Part of the magic of Furtwangler's Brahms is that, despite the weight of the sound that he gets from these great orchestras, plenty of detail can be heard, and surprisingly little apology needs to be made for the sound, even though these recordings are from widely different sources.
Brahms recorded multiple good Brahms' Firsts, but this one from 1951 with Schmidt-Isserstedt's wonderful Hamburg orchestra is my favorite, and it has the best sound of any Furtwangler Brahms recording. The Tahra release of the First has slightly better sound than the M&A, but not enough to diminish the appeal of this set. The wartime Second might have the most thrilling account of the wonderful finale ever recorded. The Third, recorded in the last few months of Furtwangler's life is deeply ruminative, and is the most idiosyncratic of all of the readings here in that much of it is very slow, but it is easily the best of his Thirds, and I find it to be a uniquely satisfying reading. It has often been commented on the Brahms' music has an autumnal feel to it, and it seems to me that this is particularly explicit in the Third, with its luminous woodwind coloring, esp. the clarinet parts: the third was the last of the Brahms symphonies that I fell in love with-- courtesy of the Szell recording--and there is a palpable feeling of deep autumnal reflection in Furtwangler's reading, esp. in his achingly beautiful account of the third movement; and in the closing bars of the quiet coda, you can almost see the last autumn leaves slowly wafting down to the earth. The wartime Fourth is one of the most overtly tragic readings you will ever hear, with an amazing forward thrust to the finale; again, this is easily Furtwangler's best reading.
The fact that there are later Furtwangler Brahms recordings with somewhat better sound is not really a factor, such is the quality of the performances assembed in this M&A set. If you have this set you don't really need any other of Furtwangler Brahms symphony recordings. The EMI References set is good, but those performances are all runners-up to all of those in this set. March 1, 2005
| Simply Mandatory For Brahms Lovers |
Sym. #1: This 1951 Hamburg with the North German Radio is, to my mind, the finest Brahms 1st on record. It is also on Tahra FURT 1054/7, but this M&A transfer is distinctly SUPERIOR: the Tahra has lots of extra hiss and a midrange that sounds rather hollow. However, you MUST have that Tahra set because it contains Furtwangler's majestic 1954 Lucerne Beethoven 9th in its best transfer. The only Furtwangler 1st to rival this Hamburg is the 1952 Berlin Phil. (deleted DG 415662-2). More mellow and less dramatic, it and this Hamburg are sonically just about the best of ALL Furtwangler recordings.
Sym. #2: The 1945 Vienna Phil. here is also available on 6-disc DG set 474030. They are close in sound quality, but I would give the edge to M&A. Incidentally, you must have the DG set for its 1944 Vienna Phil. Bruckner 8th in a finest-ever transfer. This Brahms 2nd is VERY dramatic, but the lesser 1948 with the London Phil. (Dutton) has grown on me of late - if it were the only Furtwangler available, most of us would be raving about it! My favorite Furtwangler Brahms 2nd remains the more reflective, less hectic 7 May 1952 Berlin Phil. account (mine is on an Electrola Da Capo LP).
Sym. #3: This 1954 Berlin is the best of 3 Thirds - it was also on DG 423572-2 (deleted) in sound that was the same as this M&A (the DG was coupled with my favorite Furtwangler account of the Schubert 8th from 1952). He isn't as persuasive in the 3rd, but the closing pages have a lovely autumnal, valedictory quality.
Sym. #4: This dynamic 4th from 1943 is his best, and this is its best-ever transfer.
2nd Piano Concerto: The 1942 live sound is congested (it's the only poor sound in this set). The transfer on DG 471294-2 is somewhat better, but both are pretty bad.
Haydn Variations: This 1951 Hamburg and the Berlin 1950 (DG) are my two favorites: both have excellent sound.
Brilliant as these are, there are accounts by other conductors that I also cherish. Some are foils that help to appreciate the greatness of Furtwangler's readings, and a few of them offer insights that are different and perhaps equally valid. In the 1st, Abendroth is stunning (his best: the live 1955 Berlin Radio on Tahra 145/146). If there were no Furtwangler Brahms 1st, this would be my favorite.
For the 2nd, my other favorites are Schuricht/VPO (London LP) and Fritz Busch (EMI). The Max Fiedler and Walter Damrosch 2nds (on different Biddulph CDs) are weirdly hypnotic - a trip back to the past. In the 3rd, I love Kna (Tahra), Schuricht (Greenhill), and Mengelberg (Naxos). For the 4th, three worth hearing are Abendroth (Arlecchino), Busch (Dante LYS), and Schuricht (Ades).
Edwin Fischer isn't my top choice in the 2nd Concerto, despite the lovely slow mvt. I prefer Curzon with Kna/VPO on a Decca LP. And for the Haydn Variations, I also like the pokey Kna/VPO (Decca) and the Schuricht (Ades).
But make no mistake: if my house were on fire and I could keep only one Brahms set, it would be this Furtwangler. If I could grab two, the old Weingartner (deleted EMI) would come along for contrast. As Fielding once observed, "what is a jewel without its foil?" May 25, 2004
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