Arturo Toscanini "Prelude and Good Friday Music" Parsifal

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • Prelude and Good Friday Music from Parsifal
    by Richard Wagner (1813-1883)
    BBC Symphony Orchestra
    Arturo Toscanini, conductor
    London, Queen`s Hall 05.VI.1935

Комментарии • 96

  • @robertdemler1625
    @robertdemler1625 Год назад +8

    I have been listening to this on Good Friday for years. I love the old recordings that I consider heavenly as I like to imagine that these long passed players are now angels creating a similar kind of heavenly music.

    • @gmnotyet
      @gmnotyet Год назад +3

      The euphemism nurses use when a patient passes: JOINED THE ANGELS.

  • @77anderj
    @77anderj 11 лет назад +10

    most magnificent music ever!

  • @bernardbaert1990
    @bernardbaert1990 4 года назад +19

    "Sehr langsam" (very slow) wrote Wagner on the score, and Toscanini respects this marvellous.

  • @AnP865
    @AnP865 Год назад +2

    The textures shimmering

  • @mujerado
    @mujerado 12 лет назад +18

    The BBC Symphony of the 1930s had the finest wind section in the world, and it shows in this recording. Toscanini saw the long arches of music in a score, and the harmonies straining at each other in this work brought out the best in him, and he the best in the orchestra. This is a stunning performance.

    • @kodybaker8499
      @kodybaker8499 3 года назад

      i realize Im kinda randomly asking but do anybody know of a good place to stream new series online ?

    • @coltongenesis1517
      @coltongenesis1517 3 года назад

      @Kody Baker Flixportal :)

    • @kodybaker8499
      @kodybaker8499 3 года назад +1

      @Colton Genesis thank you, I signed up and it seems like a nice service :D I appreciate it!!

    • @coltongenesis1517
      @coltongenesis1517 3 года назад +1

      @Kody Baker happy to help :)

  • @MrJojitown
    @MrJojitown 13 лет назад +7

    Just the best....it makes one feel alive

  • @mariechristinesaunard1328
    @mariechristinesaunard1328 6 лет назад +5

    Un pur moment de magie : recueillement, sentiments poignants ; grandiose ; pur ; mystique ; beauté ; et tant d'autres sentiments... et ressentis.....Depuis si longtemps......

  • @carlolamberti1
    @carlolamberti1 12 лет назад +11

    all is possible to speak about toscanini, but in front of parsifal's prelude, so long and unique as interpretation, for me is the toscanini's testament, as for us is to be in front of a great cathedral with gothic prayer before to enter in paradise...
    carlo lamberti

  • @Jazznocracy1
    @Jazznocracy1 7 лет назад +7

    What I like about this recording is that it was done in a concert hall, with decent reverberation. Much of Toscanini's recorded output was done with the NBC Orchestra, at 30 Rock, and in those days recording engineers thought that all music should be recorded in anechoic environments. So there are many great Toscanini recordings done in absolutely dead rooms, much to the music's detriment.

    • @dthomases1
      @dthomases1 7 лет назад +1

      Regrettably, how true

  • @timothymacdonnell9079
    @timothymacdonnell9079 Год назад +2

    Awesome!

  • @jmpriess
    @jmpriess 10 лет назад +17

    Amazing! Wonderful! A treasure. Thanks so much for uploading this. It so great to hear Toscanini with orchestras other then the NBC Symphony. The sound is remarkably good for 1935. Enjoy - it doesn't get better than this ...

  • @raticida123456
    @raticida123456 13 лет назад +7

    just i love parsifal, is the most beautyful work of wagner! i love his work so much!!

    • @gmnotyet
      @gmnotyet Год назад +1

      Bruckner kissed Wagner's hand after hearing this and said MASTER, I ADORE YOU.

  • @edmahl3365
    @edmahl3365 2 года назад +2

    The quality of this 1935 recording is impressive.

  • @martinstremlow2997
    @martinstremlow2997 3 года назад +3

    Toscanini um dos maiores maestros de todos os tempos. Ele consegue interpretar esta música com uma perfeição fantástica.
    A ochestra em briga constante com o concerto de tocidas!

  • @mariavaldengo2317
    @mariavaldengo2317 Месяц назад

    Always great...

  • @rjwagner3292
    @rjwagner3292 8 лет назад +4

    I can only say that this F.........AWESOME -JUST TOO INCREDIBLE !!!

  • @danielpincus221
    @danielpincus221 2 года назад +1

    So many film scores sprouted from this music…

  • @dchiapello
    @dchiapello 10 лет назад +7

    Parts of Parsifal are surprisingly lyrical - the Good Friday music stands out in this regard. Those dissonances in the last several bars are very reminiscent of the Siegfried Idyll.

  • @ahmadaliahmad6296
    @ahmadaliahmad6296 6 лет назад +4

    AWESOME
    Conducted Wonderfully by Toscanini
    Astonishing Orchestral Music
    Thanks for uploading
    Ahmad Ali Ahmad
    Heap of thanks "WeicheWotanWeiche"
    Good Friday 6.04.2018
    8:50pm

  • @jhb134
    @jhb134 11 лет назад +10

    Well, no one's saying that a (certain) conductor is a "god" ... but the legacies of Toscanini and Furtwangler (among others) might even be MORE-secure than they were, shortly after their deaths, in the 1950s. The discipline, extraordinary (baton) techniques and the overall GREATness of those two, with the great PLAYINGS of their Orchestras are, undoubtedly, the most-enduring parts of a legacy that will NOT be surpassed. OK?

  • @MegaClassicguy
    @MegaClassicguy 11 лет назад +7

    The extracts of parsifal by Karl Muck are very good indeed. It is a pitty that we have just a part of the opera.

  • @johnareiter73
    @johnareiter73 7 лет назад +6

    wonderful respectful version of that Wagner piece

  • @raticida123456
    @raticida123456 9 лет назад +4

    Great conduction, great tempo

  • @jsbach2346
    @jsbach2346 10 лет назад +5

    Increíble. Los "tempi" del supuestamente ultrarápido Toscanini son extraordinarios. Ni que fuera Celibidache. ¡Qué plenitud!. ¡Que musicalidad!. Un Parsifal fuera de serie, aunque la orquesta es manifiestamente mejorable o quizás sea la grabación. Pero, ¡qué música!, ¡qué dirección!.

    • @clodoalzer
      @clodoalzer 10 лет назад +1

      Perfeito! Exatamente minha impressão.

  • @BrianJosephMorgan
    @BrianJosephMorgan 3 года назад +2

    Bravo.

  • @修-x6r
    @修-x6r 3 года назад +2

    Toscanini is singing and crying!

  • @MrPrincetrumpet
    @MrPrincetrumpet 3 года назад +6

    It is such a pity that this music has fallen out of favor for performance. In my 45 years of playing professionally, we have played it once! One will hear Dutchman, Rienzi, Meistersinger, and the Tristan Prelude and Liebestod but Parsifal? Hardly a performance anymore. This takes a lot of sheer technique on the part of both conductor and orchestra to pull off, never mind thoughtful interpretation.

  • @RModillo
    @RModillo Год назад +1

    Somewhat pre-modern brass, and some very odd woodwind intonation. But a valuable document. It had been only four years before that AT conducted the whole thing at Bayreuth. Management was star-struck, even though he set records for slow elapsed time. When he opted out in 1933, Richard Strauss took over and trimmed a half hour off the first act.

  • @MrAndrimoro
    @MrAndrimoro 2 года назад +2

    Che linea,che tensione armonica!!! Non c'è un buco...peccato un po' l' intonazione dei fiati, ma da quegli anni sono cambiate tante cosa sia a livello tecnico che meccanico stesso degli strumenti.Pensando la data di questa registrazione,ha del.miracoloso l'effetto e la resa.Stupendo!

  • @jamesbrennan6022
    @jamesbrennan6022 2 года назад +1

    At some point this appears to have been remastered in stereo. And acoustically heavily tweaked as well. Late 1930s recordings made in the Queen's Hall and released in the day don't sound much like this. But it probably is Toscanini conducting. Another issue at a slightly different pitch but purporting to be the same performance, claims the orchestra is not the BBCSO at all but the LSO. I have to say that neither sounds much like either of them. But the original MIGHT just have been the BBC orchestra, if we are to believe it really is a London recording ( and the coughs suggest that - but on the other hand the EMI on-the-spot recordings with the equipment in the Hall itself were NOT public performances. Live performances were recorded from land-line links). There are one or two points in the Prelude which sound very like the NBCSO brass at work with pinpoint "sung" chording ensemble the BBCSO of the thirties just didn't use. ButToscanini made no Wagner recordings in London intended for commercial issue, ever, so it can't be ruled out that he might have got this effect in performance with a British orchestra, though it sounds very American - particularly after around 15 minutes of the Prelude where the level is reduced almost exactly in the RCA style to avoid overloading at the climax in a way Gaisberg - who was in charge in London - usually didn't have to do.

  • @roberthanff4354
    @roberthanff4354 Год назад +1

    The brass are only marginally better than with the NBC, where they blare mercilessly at the expenses of one's ears.
    But only Toscanini could adopt such a broad the tempo in the first two phrases without dragging (like Muck).

  • @jhb134
    @jhb134 11 лет назад +3

    ("just a part") - It's a pity, in a way ... but we're very-fortunate to have the Muck recordings of PARTS of Parsifal, esp. the excerpts with Ludwig Hoffman ("Gurnemanz"). The latter are some of the GREAT recordings of Wagner, even though they might seem "old" (from 1927, or thereabouts).

  • @MegaClassicguy
    @MegaClassicguy 12 лет назад +3

    I have heard this recording more than 15 years ago : it is as fantastic as in my memory. Toscanini was really a prodigious conductor, although Furtwängler in 1938 for Parsifal is even better.

  • @markone6015
    @markone6015 8 лет назад +5

    tempo is brilliant, quite similar to James Levine´s conduction

  • @beethoventoday
    @beethoventoday 11 лет назад +4

    aboutr randy ross's comment: toscanini was a vehement anti fascist and anti nazi. he supported mussolini before 1919 when the dictator advocated a socialist platform. when mussolini switched to the extreme right, toscanini broke with mussolini. when furtwangler decided to remain in germany and conduct for hitler, toscanini broke with furtwangler.

    • @joedeegan3870
      @joedeegan3870 6 лет назад +3

      Furtwangler stayed in Germany to conduct for the German people most of whom were not NAZI s

  • @ricardocoxjr7997
    @ricardocoxjr7997 10 лет назад +3

    Forgive me but, does anyone know why this sounds a semi-tone lower than what is written!?

    • @EriqKoontz
      @EriqKoontz 9 лет назад +2

      Why would you need forgiveness for this question?

    • @ricardocoxjr7997
      @ricardocoxjr7997 9 лет назад +3

      Eriq Koontz
      It's just the way I speak. Some have accused me of being too polite. That said, I reiterate: why does this recording sound a half step lower than written? Anyone?

    • @CJBrewification
      @CJBrewification 9 лет назад +1

      +Ricardo Cox Jr maybe they used baroque tuning? ;-)

    • @mrlatreo
      @mrlatreo 7 лет назад +2

      Porque el diapasón de afinamiento en Inglaterra así se acostumbraba. Pero en realidad no afecta la música, ¿o sí?

    • @joedeegan3870
      @joedeegan3870 6 лет назад +1

      I can't tell. I have no sense of absolute pitch.

  • @pierrehouin5467
    @pierrehouin5467 2 года назад +1

    VOICI LE SEUL TEMPO DE PARSIFAL

  • @johnfalstaff2270
    @johnfalstaff2270 7 лет назад +2

    This version here differs from recording made with his NBC Orchestra. I guess Toscanini as a guest conductor here did not have enough time to rehears this Wagner music piece with BBC orchestra.

  • @MegaClassicguy
    @MegaClassicguy 11 лет назад +4

    For the relationship between Toscanini and Furtwängler, it is much more complicated. Toscanini was angry awithFurtwängler because Furtwängler did not go to New York to suceed him in 1936. Furtwängler has never been a nazi and saved many Jews. Anyway that's true that Toscanini has had an examplary political behavior but it has nothing to do with musics.

    • @MFuria-os7ln
      @MFuria-os7ln 3 года назад +1

      It has to do with MEN, their mentalities and personalities.

  • @jhb134
    @jhb134 11 лет назад +2

    (Toscanini/Furtwangler) - That's right, beyond ANY shadow of a doubt ... but have you ever listened-to a forgotten conductor ... Karl Muck ... in this music?

  • @arbiterveritatis1063
    @arbiterveritatis1063 10 лет назад +11

    Following the rigorous moral arguments agst. Furtwangler presented here, I wonder whether it's ethically acceptable to listen to Shostakovich? "He received accolades and state awards and served in the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR (1947-1962) and the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union (from 1962 until his death)." Hmm. Or Prokoviev. Or the famed Soviet conductor, Kurt Sanderling. How selective moral judgements are in the West!

    • @jhb134
      @jhb134 10 лет назад +3

      Arbiter - Well, let's NOT forget that Shostakovich composed, even after the Stalin-type crackdown ... and produced MANY works, worthy of his (Shostakovich's) name. THOSE works, incl. the Symphonies 1 through 3, are some of the most-ORIGINAL of all of a Russian composer of the 20th Century, and we could include the originality of Prokofiev, also. ... Stalin wanted certain composers to CONFORM to a socialist/realist type of false framework, that great, Russian composers could NEVER accept, explicitly.

    • @arbiterveritatis1063
      @arbiterveritatis1063 10 лет назад +3

      John B I take your point, but I was commenting on the moral situation of a Furtwangler or Strauss who remained in Germany duting the NAZi era, as Shos. remained within and continued to work and produce music in the Soviet Union. Not the quality or "independence" of their work.

    • @MifuneBoBune
      @MifuneBoBune 9 лет назад +1

      Should you buy a lotto ticket from a Muslim at a convenience store?

    • @EriqKoontz
      @EriqKoontz 9 лет назад +1

      Arbiter Veritatis - As a fine flower, one can either bloom where planted, or wither and die with the lack of water.

    • @arbiterveritatis1063
      @arbiterveritatis1063 9 лет назад +2

      Eriq Koontz I can agree with that observation. That is why it is perilous to make moral judgements about concrete, flesh and blood human beings.

  • @francescaemc2
    @francescaemc2 10 лет назад +3

    "bloody time beater" Furtwangler said..... be, non del tutto!!!!

    • @dthomases1
      @dthomases1 7 лет назад +4

      Furtwangler was insanely jealous of Toscanini, yet another indication of his inferiority, Toscanini took no notice of him and hardly considered him a rival.

    • @joedeegan3870
      @joedeegan3870 6 лет назад

      I wonder about the 1936 endorsement. It might have been a trap Barbirolli fell into when Furtwangler declined. Toscanini poisoned the Orchestra against Furtwangler and Barbirolli's career was collateral damage.

  • @hendrixxxm637
    @hendrixxxm637 Год назад

    Höchste Konzentration und größte Diffusion spiegeln in Inhalt und Form als Tonmalerei Sein und Wesen des Menschen. Das ist das Geheimnis des Werkes Wagners ... aber auch dieser unbeschreiblichen Interpretation Toskaninis (die einem das Herz zerreißt).
    ruclips.net/video/2sBtSOCWDC8/видео.html

  • @TheTympanist
    @TheTympanist 12 лет назад +2

    Que dire?

  • @jhb134
    @jhb134 11 лет назад +2

    Cesare - W/all due respect, I don't think that Furtwangler ever wanted to "glorify" Hitler and the Nazis. It's been said that the relationship with Hitler was of a benefit to them, both. In other words, the madman could use Wagnerian music for HIS purposes, and Furtwangler could be allowed to continue as head of a GREAT Orchestra.

  • @telephilia
    @telephilia 6 лет назад +1

    Can't they edit out that coughing now?

  • @joedeegan3870
    @joedeegan3870 6 лет назад +2

    Queen's Hall was great. Too bad the Luftwaffe destroyed it.

  • @millerforester6237
    @millerforester6237 7 лет назад +7

    Blah - blah- blah. All I care about is the music.

  • @beethoventoday
    @beethoventoday 11 лет назад +4

    Furtwangler stayed ijn Germany and conducted for Hitler and allowed himself to be used to glorify the Nazis and Hitler. That decision cost Furtwangler his relationship with Toscanini, who found this decision unacceptable behavior.

  • @TheFunkyKingston
    @TheFunkyKingston 10 лет назад +7

    Great democrat conductor.May he rest in peace!

    • @johnfalstaff2270
      @johnfalstaff2270 7 лет назад +1

      Toscanini was not a democrat. Do not smear the name of this genius.

  • @RandyRossTheOilBoss
    @RandyRossTheOilBoss 11 лет назад +1

    I think all of you people need to chill out on thinking some conductor is a god. You know Richard Wagner was one of Hitlers favorite composers and his music was played in Dachau concentration camp to "re-educate" the prisoners. And dont forget toscanini ran for Fascist parliamentary candidate in Milan....

    • @philipkuttner7945
      @philipkuttner7945 5 лет назад +5

      No, he never ran for office. He supported Mussolini early on when M. was a socialist. When M. became a fascist, T. broke with him, and stood up to him courageously.

    • @MrAndrimoro
      @MrAndrimoro 2 года назад

      Hai scritto una serie di cazzate Studia che è meglio....Toscanini era socialista come lo era Pertini all' epoca,e Mussolini dirigeva il giornale socialista : l'Avanti...quando Mussolini mostro' il suo vero volto,Toscanini divenne il suo più feroce oppositore.