Comparing 5 conductors VERY different openings of Beethoven 5th Symphony (& why they chose that)

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • Today I have a look at Beethoven's 5th symphony opening bars, to see what he wrote and why it's so open to many different interpretations. I'll discuss the tempo, what's the deal with the fermatas and what conducting challenges there are, and for this I will use versions from Carlos Kleiber, Claudio Abbado, Herbert von Karajan, Pierre Boulez, Bruno Walter and John Eliot Gardiner.
    VIDEOS ON THE WHOLE METRONOME DEBACLE
    ~~ Jaime Altozano's great summary video (only in Spanish but worth it!!) • el ENIGMA del metrónom...
    ~~ HOWEVER, in this video he discusses a study on Beethoven's metronome which IS in English from Almudena Martin-Castro and Iñaki Ucar:
    journals.plos.org/plosone/art...
    ~~ Authentic Sound (Wim Winters) thesis: / authenticsound
    THE ULTIMATE BEETHOVEN 5TH COMPARISON VIDEO
    Beethoven - Symphony No. 5 opening (42 conductors + 1 pianist)
    • Beethoven - Symphony N...
    MORE VIDEOS!!
    CONDUCTING
    Same piece, different conductor • Same symphony, differe...
    Flipping through my conducting scores • Flipping through my co...
    .
    OPERA
    Opera Antiheroes ep1: Wozzeck • Wozzeck, opera's darke...
    Tosca vs Game of Thrones • Puccini’s opera Tosca ...
    This video uses very small fragments of Beethoven's 5th symphony conducted by Carlos Kleiber, Claudio Abbado, Herbert von Karajan, Pierre Boulez, Bruno Walter and John Eliot Gardiner for educational purposes

Комментарии • 523

  • @howimettheopera
    @howimettheopera  Год назад +134

    In 3:55 I use the word "slurred" when I actually mean "tied". Sadly those two words are almost identical in Spanish and brain went no good speak bad. I think what I meant is still clear but just in case ;)

    • @lloydbotway5930
      @lloydbotway5930 Год назад +5

      Thanks for explaining that -- before I left a critical comment! Thanks for this video.

    • @TheConsarnedCitizen
      @TheConsarnedCitizen 6 месяцев назад +2

      Holy cow. Been a musician for 60 years (including 10 years in a major symphony orchestra) and never knew of this distinction! Not that I would have played anything differently....

    • @jessicadebernard8210
      @jessicadebernard8210 5 месяцев назад

      @@TheConsarnedCitizenInteresting! I wish I could say I had your background! I went to college for music many moons ago but never did anything with that degree. I came to the comments specifically for this reason. They look the same but a slur connects two or more different notes and a tie connects two or more of the same note (usually one tie connecting only two notes and additional ties if more than two notes tied together). Very cool video and crazy to see the vast variations in interpretations!

    • @johannesvonedelmann
      @johannesvonedelmann 5 месяцев назад

      ❤️♥️❤️!

    • @mastick5106
      @mastick5106 5 месяцев назад +9

      "...brain went no good speak bad."
      Even though I'm a native English speaker, I am SO stealing that phrasing for the next time what my brain sends to my mouth doesn't match the idea I had.

  • @captainrobertcowley9507
    @captainrobertcowley9507 Год назад +187

    Hello Anna, I am a Classical Music Presenter on FM Radio in Melbourne Australia. You are outstanding as a teacher too. I have had 60 years in Classical Music and you are one of the best voices I have heard with great authority and clarity of understanding. Thank you ROBERT

    • @katrinat.3032
      @katrinat.3032 6 месяцев назад +1

      You wrote a book about Kleiber?? What’s it called??

    • @adrianjanssens7116
      @adrianjanssens7116 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@katrinat.3032 Who wrote a book? Also who is Robert?

    • @voornaam3191
      @voornaam3191 4 месяца назад

      ​@@adrianjanssens7116 He is an influencer in Melbourn.

  • @SquidzitAce
    @SquidzitAce 6 месяцев назад +70

    Not sure why RUclips suggested this 2 year old video to me, but I truly enjoyed it. 😊

    • @ebbenielsen7
      @ebbenielsen7 6 месяцев назад +3

      Same here ...

    • @artursandwich1974
      @artursandwich1974 5 месяцев назад +1

      And here

    • @cr-pol
      @cr-pol 5 месяцев назад

      ditto !

    • @arvandvarahram
      @arvandvarahram 5 месяцев назад

      I can confirm.

    • @madEsiak
      @madEsiak 5 месяцев назад +2

      Hi, i am not alone :D But i need to add we are talking about classical music, what is 2 years compare to this? xD And good content is more important, then "fresh" content.

  • @timothyseaman
    @timothyseaman 5 месяцев назад +13

    I've always been fascinated as I listen to the varied openings of this symphony (for 70 years now!) --- your discussion is right on the mark and appropriately gracious, and extremely interesting!

  • @charlesbarber8166
    @charlesbarber8166 Год назад +82

    I appreciated your careful observation of the 'extra' bar that Kleiber shows, tied to the second fermata. That precision was actually quite common to his work. He had a reputation as a supremely charismatic and inventive-rhapsodic conductor, and it was earned. BUT: the depth and concision of his score study was extraordinary. His players were aware of this, at all times. He marked his parts fastidiously, and additionally left his players little Kleibergrams with further detailed instructions, plus flattery and jokes.
    They always knew what he wanted, and why. When he would occasionally stop conducting altogether -- mid-performance -- he could pay his players no higher compliment. CK had the gift of showing everything, and nothing, as required. This is indeed most unusual, and helps account for his unique reputation. Michael Walsh of TIME Magazine, on hearing Kleiber's recording of the Fifth with Vienna, realized what Kleiber had achieved: "It was as if Homer had come back to recite the Iliad." Indeed.

    • @ahujeffrey
      @ahujeffrey 6 месяцев назад +3

      Very well put! Thanks 👍

    • @donaldallen1771
      @donaldallen1771 6 месяцев назад +6

      What he did adds clarity. Beethoven wrote it the way he did for good reason, and Kleiber is showing it to the orchestra explicitly. I can’t think of a conductor who respected the score more than Kleiber. And that includes Toscanini, who said one thing and did another, e.g., Bolero, En Saga.
      I loved your book about Kleiber. He left us too soon.

    • @charlesbarber8166
      @charlesbarber8166 6 месяцев назад +5

      It's a paradox, eh? CK was concise and precise as required by the scores he knew so well. This acquitted him the freedom he needed in order to explore as imaginatively as his fabulous ear and technique permitted. He had it both ways, and this is rarity.
      YES re Toscanini. In my early education he was a god of authenticity. One day, my teacher gave me a recording of his Brahms 1, iv, an urtext of same, and an assignment: come back with a report on the differences. Good Lord. I had no idea.
      I'm glad you enjoyed the book. Thank you. It will be 20 years this July... You would have liked him. He really was as witty as advertised.
      @@donaldallen1771

    • @laurielyon7740
      @laurielyon7740 6 месяцев назад +3

      Yes! Well said.
      I’m 76 and when I was about 14 (?), Beethoven’s 5th was probably the my first introduction to orchestral music.
      All of a sudden, the musical universe was revealed.
      I LOVED THIS SYMPHONY.
      And, of course I still do.
      I have perhaps 7 or 8 versions by various conductors. The Kleiber is my favourite, so I’m pleased Anna’s discussion used his example….. 11:31

    • @laurielyon7740
      @laurielyon7740 6 месяцев назад

      Wonderfully done and entirely insightful. Who doesn’t love the 5th?

  • @inabendis6204
    @inabendis6204 5 месяцев назад +3

    My name is Ina and I'm a 76-yo classical music lover who started swimming laps in my late 60's; I met the challenge of remembering which lap I'm up to at any given time by playing a theme in my head from some favorite piece associated with that particular number; e.g., Bach's Brandenburg #1 for Lap-1, 2nd movement of Beethoven's 2nd symphony for Lap-2, etc. Naturally, lap 5 would be the opening of Beethoven's 5th, but until I saw this wonderful presentation I ultimately got somewhat bored with that -- it felt so "war-horsey", if you get my drift, to the extent that for awhile I switched to The Trout which as a quintet was a reasonable proxy for "Number-5". But your education here about "the second time around" fremata made that opening so amazingly interesting that now I'm back to my old fave, making sure to pay attention to that longer pause and relishing in it. Now I'm sure you didn't make this video to help septuagenarians keep in shape, but I gotta tell you I never stop my swim-workout before Lap #5 because I don't want to miss that long-pause ... So, Thanks!

  • @markeddy9169
    @markeddy9169 6 месяцев назад +15

    Insanely edge trivia here, but morse code uses dit-dit-dit-dah for V is because of Beethoven's V symphony. Which comes around to the movie The Longest Day using Beethoven's Fifth because "V-for-Victory" is shown by three short flashes followed by a long one.

    • @katrinat.3032
      @katrinat.3032 6 месяцев назад +1

      I love classical music trivia like that!!

    • @kamalhashmi9851
      @kamalhashmi9851 5 месяцев назад

      Erm... people have forgotten this now‽😂

    • @annoyingbstard9407
      @annoyingbstard9407 5 месяцев назад

      😂

    • @markeddy9169
      @markeddy9169 5 месяцев назад

      @@kamalhashmi9851 It was only a couple of years ago that I found out that ..._ for V was a tribute to Beethoven. I didn't realize that the time gap was long enough: 1808 (Beethoven's 5th) to 1840 (Morse Code gets letters).

    • @kamalhashmi9851
      @kamalhashmi9851 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@markeddy9169 Sigh. Unfortunately it isn't - the choice of '...-' for V was made totally independently. It was approx as common a letter as B which was chosen to be '---.' In Morse (the very common letters like E have shorter codes and the rare letters like X longer codes). Nothing to do with Beethoven. Also, symphonies (& quartets, concertos etc) are numbered 1, 2, 3, 4 etc not I, II, II, IV, etc - no-one writes it as Beethoven's Symphony V. During the Second World War: "it became the BBC European Service's call sign and interval sign. Across Occupied Europe people hummed and whistled the tune, and in Britain the V made its way onto badges and other items. Prime Minister Churchill made the sign his trademark." The 'V' actually started in Belgium! See www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0gbz0y1 (you may need a VPN from overseas. Shhh, I never told you)

  • @paullewis6213
    @paullewis6213 5 месяцев назад +2

    Fascinating and entertaining analysis! I had no idea so much is packed into those few opening bars.

  • @andrewweiss1300
    @andrewweiss1300 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Anna, here’s another Classical Music Presenter on FM radio in Australia, this time in Brisbane. I agree with my colleague in Melbourne. Your explanations are lucid and informative. The Kléber was especially fascinating. As someone who’s played in orchestras, I appreciate his signalling the tempo before the downbeat and giving that gesture at the connection-point between the two tied notes that keeps the tempo going for the musicians. Thank you for what you’re offering and I hope a lot of people get to learn from your videos.

  • @adiemlaetiel
    @adiemlaetiel 6 месяцев назад +1

    Congratulations! As a listener who is new to these details, it was very important for me and other listeners to notice such striking details in an interpretation of a classical piece. Thanks. My perception was expanded in many ways.

  • @honda412000
    @honda412000 6 месяцев назад +1

    Love these micro lectures about whatever concerning music. Very nicely explained and commented Anna. Wish there were more.

  • @jeaneltawil
    @jeaneltawil 2 года назад +69

    I liked the video just from the title, anything with Beethoven in it is paradise for me :) Then I watched the video and I now wish there was a double like button! I'm loving your videos of this format, explaining the music's technical side in a way that someone like me, who can't even read notes, let alone more details about how to interpret them, can understand... Thanks for these videos and keep up the good work!

    • @howimettheopera
      @howimettheopera  2 года назад +5

      Thank you so much for this comment and for watching :)

    • @ericleiter6179
      @ericleiter6179 6 месяцев назад +4

      I share your love for anything Beethoven too!!!...plus this channel

    • @katrinat.3032
      @katrinat.3032 6 месяцев назад +3

      I am also a Beethovenophile. I just found this channel and it’s interesting so far

    • @1zaj34
      @1zaj34 6 месяцев назад +2

      Although there is no double like button, you can express your feelings by triple liking. Or, if you want to go above and beyond, do a quintuple like.
      Just make sure to use an odd number of likes and not an even one.
      😀

    • @jeaneltawil
      @jeaneltawil 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@1zaj34 Sounds like you don't like marches and are a big fan of waltzes 😄

  • @ohrusty
    @ohrusty Год назад +1

    This was indeed interesting. Like I wrote in another comment on another of your videos explaining this, I'm in awe that I am kiiiiind of sort of really being able to understand what you mean. And showing the example twice that you are talking about helps a lot with understanding it more.

  • @Brianbrianbrian71
    @Brianbrianbrian71 2 года назад +6

    Loved this, and your layering in context (eg. Mahler’s student) as well. I appreciate your work very much. Thanks!

  • @vincentellin3821
    @vincentellin3821 11 месяцев назад +16

    As an orchestra principal player, I find your videos quite interesting, thank you! Many times when doing Beethoven's 5th the first rehearsal ends up taking a considerable amount of time to get the 1st movement opening right. Frequently the cut-off for the 2nd fermata will be(or in my mind, should be)the down beat to the next bar, and the orchestra will commonly hesitate coming in, and that's where the problems of ensemble happen. I have to say I LOVE Kleiber's Vienna Philharmonic 5th recording very much....but as far as I'm concerned Kleiber can do no wrong in my mind.

  • @pradeepkheruka810
    @pradeepkheruka810 6 месяцев назад

    I absolutely love what you are doing! This is very energising! I listen to the same composition performed by different conductors to hear their interpretation of what the composer wrote!😊

  • @michaelstearnes1526
    @michaelstearnes1526 6 месяцев назад +6

    Thanks for your interesting analysis of this familiar but always intriguing work. The two recordings that I listen to most often: The 1937 Furtwangler Berlin (one of his best studio recordings). And the Klemperer Philharmonia (earlier mono) And yes I agree the Walter is quite interesting. Thanks again.

  • @JonMurray
    @JonMurray 5 месяцев назад +1

    Really enjoyed a detailed explanation of the different interpretations! New subscriber ✌🏻

  • @mlthed
    @mlthed 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you. Fascinating!! I remember when Gardiner released the Beethoven Symphonies played at what he considered the correct (faster) tempi and with instruments made in the style of the time. Blew me away!!

  • @fabiopaolobarbieri2286
    @fabiopaolobarbieri2286 6 месяцев назад +2

    I heard ,many convincing Fifths, but the one that sticks in my mind is Toscanini's 1931 version that I first heard right here on RUclips. I had never really made any sense of the second movement, but that one made me understand it. Which is quite a nice feeling when you have had thirty years or more to understand a piece and still you hadn't got there. Your explanations are very interesting, and I'll be back. Thank you.

  • @durban55
    @durban55 Год назад +2

    This is a great video! Very informative! You just earned yourself a new subscriber 😊

  • @lark5986
    @lark5986 4 месяца назад

    This was so interesting! As a violinist and devotee of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, your analysis gave me a new insight into my favorite composer.

  • @edgardodelossantos2590
    @edgardodelossantos2590 Год назад +4

    Buen video, entre más escucho comentarios de directores de orquesta sobre alguna obra, más disfruto la música. Felicidades!

  • @markanthonychao2912
    @markanthonychao2912 Год назад +11

    When I count the Karajan one... the first fermata minim is virtually the same as 12 quavers in length. Then the second long note is exactly 16 quavers... so it is exactly longer than the first one by 4 quavers...and 4 quavers is the same length as a minim...Hence Karajan made the second long note EXACTLY one minim longer than the first...EXACTLY what Beethoven indicated in the score. I think your stop watch actually was paused too early when measuring the second long note.

    • @yassinet.benchekroun5087
      @yassinet.benchekroun5087 6 месяцев назад

      Checks out with Karajan's craziness and his germannness hahahaha. Nice observation

  • @ungavaproductions
    @ungavaproductions 6 месяцев назад

    Very very interesting....I love this. Thanks for that, you do a very good job.

  • @anthonybates8670
    @anthonybates8670 6 месяцев назад +5

    I found your discussion and demonstrations very interesting as one who is not a musician but listens to a lot of recordings.

    • @NagarajanVasudevaRao61
      @NagarajanVasudevaRao61 6 месяцев назад

      I too feel the same, very interesting for music listeners who won't know the technical details of notes and tempos. The presenter is very articulate. 👍

  • @Casutama
    @Casutama 2 года назад +3

    I just found your channel and this is such great content! Conducting is really so interesting!

  • @vladimirhrovat8100
    @vladimirhrovat8100 4 месяца назад

    Hi Anna! A few days ago I wrote you in an "extra" letter also about how special and fantastic it was for me as a "first violinst in the symhony" to play Beethoven's 5th with Carlos Kleiber - and now I see your great analysis about the different interpretations of it's entering. Among so many different times played it with many other conductors - i administer an oath to Kleiber, yes!

  • @garygary-tp9hc
    @garygary-tp9hc 6 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed this talk and I also found it enlightening. Thank you.

  • @pablovogel6986
    @pablovogel6986 8 месяцев назад +7

    I think the purpose of starting in a silence is to not stress the first note, so it's dadadaDA otherwise would be DAdadaDA. Beethoven manages to start the gesture always that way thru de movement. The other thing I heard is that a slur implied a diminuendo, a tapering on volume according to 19th practice. Some conductos do that on "period" performances.

  • @clemenciarodner2339
    @clemenciarodner2339 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks Anna. This was sooooo great!

  • @patricktulher
    @patricktulher 2 года назад +23

    What an amazing video! ^^
    I think Beethoven's fifth symphony is SO famous that most conductors prefer to push themselves into new interpretations, so that there aren't too similar versions. "Everyone knows this, so i will be a little bit different".

    • @howimettheopera
      @howimettheopera  2 года назад +9

      Thank you! It’s true that it’s probably quite challenging to approach such a popular piece!

  • @russpalmeri
    @russpalmeri 6 месяцев назад +1

    Very interesting. Well presented. Liked and subscribed.

  • @caltechharvard
    @caltechharvard 5 месяцев назад +1

    Most fascinating. Thank you. I learned a lot.

  • @RobertJWaid
    @RobertJWaid 6 месяцев назад +2

    Nice analysis. As someone in the orchestra, I preferred conductors who communicated what they wanted by their movements above the metronome. Thank you for pointing out “extra” movements from Kleiber. Hopefully, others will follow.

  • @Helloyoudude9999
    @Helloyoudude9999 4 месяца назад

    Incredible!!! Thank you for this!!!

  • @FernandoLXIX
    @FernandoLXIX 6 месяцев назад +4

    It's interesting to see the thought process behind conducting

  • @1389Chopin
    @1389Chopin 6 месяцев назад

    Great vid! Showing and listening 😅s so helpful.

  • @Starlite4321
    @Starlite4321 5 месяцев назад

    Loved this ! Thank you Anna !

  • @FloydMaxwell
    @FloydMaxwell 5 месяцев назад +1

    Most interesting. Beethoven has always been my favorite classic composer (by far). My all-time favorite work is his 4th Piano Concerto. I find it very inspirational.

    • @melonwee6450
      @melonwee6450 5 месяцев назад +1

      The subtle piano introduction is just perfect.

  • @smuconn
    @smuconn 6 месяцев назад

    Exceptional video: passion, intellect, and cogent diction married to produce insights galore. Favorite Beethovan 5th recording? Christoph von Dohnányi's with the Cleveland Orchestra (with, of course, credit to George Szell whose imprint on the ensemble can still be heard today).

  • @andrelousada
    @andrelousada Год назад +1

    nice! I am happy that i found your channel.

  • @agerven
    @agerven 4 месяца назад

    Very nice and to the point.
    i'm very curious to what you have to say about the opening of Beethoven's ninth symphony. Had the good luck to see a local performance of that, long ago. The conductor literally took a rather high vertical jump, while coming down the first two notes were played, and after landing the second two notes. Spectacular.

  • @aateyya
    @aateyya Год назад +1

    Great video.. your content is very underrated!

  • @vonofi
    @vonofi 2 года назад

    This was really nice! Thank you for the video!

  • @martinpinola7859
    @martinpinola7859 6 месяцев назад

    Very interesting topic and very good research. You have a new subscriber! 😊

  • @ramanlo66
    @ramanlo66 4 месяца назад

    Hi Anna, Very interesting topic and thank you so much for your explanation. It is a great job especially adding the video and point out some "small action" , it is great help for "layman" like me......😅😅😅

  • @pablov1973
    @pablov1973 2 года назад +1

    For several years my favorite 5th symphony recording was Karajan's 1962 cycle. But I wasn´t the only one I listen, I have Toscanini, Walter, Szell. Actually my favorite 5th is Stokowski last recording of the work with the London Philharmonic made in 1968.
    Now it looks like is quite easy to solve the beginning but I believe that is quite tricky.
    I don´t know if is true, but once I read that Walter used to say to his musicians "you can start to playing when the batoon is in front of the penultime button of my suit".
    I told that to a retired conductor that used to live here in Uruguay, now sadly he passed away, and he told me that it make sense, since Walter was establishing an space reference for the musicians about how the tempo is gonna be beated.
    Thank you for your videos, every single I watch makes me like most the channel.

    • @howimettheopera
      @howimettheopera  2 года назад +2

      thank you for watching and for your thoughtful and interesting comments!

  • @TonyAngel
    @TonyAngel 5 месяцев назад

    I only came across your site here last night and this video really gladdened my heart. About 50 years ago there was a programme on BBC 3 (UK) about this very subject, but did not note down which conductor used which tempo. Fate knocking at the door was a much used expression. Roughly four years later (I was 30) I was in a conducting class and the others before me took it at quite lick. My turn and I mentioned that I was going take note of the expression Fate knocking at the door and considered that if it was true then Fate would not be a doing fast ratatataaa on the door but would be more steady and determined. Any way I took it steadier and the conducting professor was not amused, compounded because I could not cite an example that backed me up. I was similar to Boulez´s tempo (not sure when that was dated from, but my effort was in early 1979). I know that I compounded my "error" by introducing an accelerando just after the motif. I now need to work my way through the rest of your videos. Very enjoyable.

  • @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist
    @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist 5 месяцев назад

    fascinating talk and thanks for clarifying the slur/ tie thing as it threw me for a bit! Telling maybe that with Karajan the duration is evened out.

  • @ahujeffrey
    @ahujeffrey 6 месяцев назад +4

    As an armchair conductor (super amateur), I really appreciate your professional perspective. I had dreamed of conducting, using birthday money to buy a conducting manual and baton when I was in my early teens. Unfortunately, I am not inherently gifted, particularly in note reading. So, thanks again! ❤

    • @HomerNarr
      @HomerNarr 5 месяцев назад

      @ahujeffrey
      I had to smile over this comment. " I had dreamed of conducting"
      Because i remembered a Manga/Anime where the Maincharacter dreams of being a famous conductor, but because he is afraid of flying, he can't travel to Europe (of course he is from Japan). -> Nodame Cantabile

  • @marcosPRATA918
    @marcosPRATA918 6 месяцев назад +5

    Tempo, andamento, acentos, articulações, dinâmica, textura. Como cada maestro trata isso é minha permanente curiosidade e prazer da escuta. Estou apreciando com prazer seus comentários, comparações, exemplos.

  • @franklinmount4068
    @franklinmount4068 3 месяца назад

    excellent discussion!

  • @notmyworld44
    @notmyworld44 5 месяцев назад +1

    My all-time favorite was an RCA vinyl recording I had in the early 1960s with Serge Koussevitzky conducting. As a career performer on the double bass viol I played this symphony many times.

  • @justforever96
    @justforever96 Год назад +5

    I don't really know much about music. I knew nothing at all about it not that many years ago it seems like, other than that I liked it and appreciated more different types than most of my friends. finally taught myself to read shape notes, and that is about as far as I have got so far, but it is one of those things that the more you learn about it, the more interesting it becomes. anyway, I always thought of Beethoven's Fifth as being the most perfect piece of music I knew of. but it is cool to learn more about the technical details, I was always amazed at the complexity of classical music, it makes the music I am familiar with seem so basic and primitive. the whole idea that one could create such a complex and impressive tapestry of sounds, and convey it to other people, and record it so that people could still repeat it hundreds of years later is amazing. even the idea that one upon a time the only way one could hear this kind of thing at all was to assemble an entire orchestra of trained musicians and have them play it live for you is very appealing to me. people really don't appreciate what they have enough these days.

  • @diogenes_of_therapia
    @diogenes_of_therapia 6 месяцев назад +1

    Very educating. You're great👌

  • @serbanudrea9429
    @serbanudrea9429 6 месяцев назад

    Looking forward to you conducting it. 🙂

  • @garrettcampbell47
    @garrettcampbell47 Год назад +6

    Anna, not only am I a musician -- I'm an opera singer - but I'm an aspiring conductor. I'd LOVE if possible to discuss with you composers, conductors, compositions, technique, inspiration, etc. I have several ''favorite'' interpretations of Beethoven 5. Overall, nowadays I gravitate toward Karajan's interpretation from the early 1980s. However, Szell's interpretation from the early-mid 1960s with the Concertgebouw is thrilling and brilliant as well. The ''best'' interpretation of the ''Scherzo: Allegro'' (3rd Movement) is from a mono, 1953 recording of the Concertgebouw under Erich Kleiber. Incidentally, I have written a film short that's directly inspired by this Symphony. It's entitled, ''Beethoven's Fifth; OR: A Design For Living.''

  • @ctr2090
    @ctr2090 6 месяцев назад

    Brilliant exposee. U r doin' a great job.

  • @rb-ex
    @rb-ex 4 месяца назад

    i loved this discussion. everything was communicated in a precise and lively way and nothing got in the way of the message. i know very little about conducting or musical interpretation but as i read it the half note linked to the 2d fermata means to hold the 2d fermata exactly one half note longer than the 1st fermata. also thought bruno walter's interpretation was extraordinary, introducing a kind of metrical madness as a literary foreshadowing of what we're in for in

  • @micklean
    @micklean 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for the examples! I'm an "old school" (born in 1953) rocker and never understood what a conductor did! 😘

  • @arturcortez5555
    @arturcortez5555 6 месяцев назад

    That video was amazing!!! So much in 4 bars. 😱

  • @riversky33
    @riversky33 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you for excellent explanation!

  •  9 месяцев назад +1

    Well done, clearly explained, very useful for conductors or simple listeners! Thanks. And most of all, true! Sound changes inside our minds if the seconda fermata is shown. Kleiber is right, as he usually is...

  • @malcolmclancy6120
    @malcolmclancy6120 4 месяца назад

    Hello Anna
    Thank you for the video. And the memories sixty years ago as a child discovering music and "acting" as a conductor. By the age of 10 I knew I wanted to be a conductor or an architect. Sixty years on I'm an architect but with a conductor inside still trying to get out. I salut you as a fellow professional of the arts.

  • @yetanotherjohn
    @yetanotherjohn 4 месяца назад

    How wonderful! It seems to me that the silence immediately after the long note is part of the system as well.

  • @BDNADLER
    @BDNADLER 5 месяцев назад +1

    I would love to see you analyze other Beethoven Symphonies as well. In particular, Symphonies 3, 6, 7, and 9.

  • @wiktorutracki6469
    @wiktorutracki6469 4 месяца назад

    I love this video.
    I don't have any one fav recording but I like Karajan (that was the first one I've even heard cuz I had a CD) and Harnoncourt (it's very... defined? I'm not sure how to say it, his interpretation is clearly segmented, and put into small parts, something like when you play baroque and you strictly keep this metric-accent/bar/phrase distinction - I like it)

  • @AntoinneBarnes
    @AntoinneBarnes Год назад +2

    the one thing to consider in addition to everything you mentioned is that they may have been using different scores from different editors. it occurs to me that some scores may not have the slurred half notes at all. we know now that bad editions are available but 30, 40, 50 years ago they may not have been so aware.

  • @SoCalPackerFan
    @SoCalPackerFan 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video, it was very interesting to see the differences. For Beethoven, I have always gravitated to George Szell.

  • @martig1000
    @martig1000 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks a lot Anna !!!!

  • @jeffholston5443
    @jeffholston5443 5 месяцев назад

    Cool video! If you can get a video of Klaus Tennstedt conducting the 5th, I saw him live in London many years ago, and I always though his approach was rather unique!

  • @Folkstone1957
    @Folkstone1957 6 месяцев назад

    Quite informative & very interesting.

  • @daveanddd3731
    @daveanddd3731 6 месяцев назад

    Great video. speaking as one who has conducted amateur orchestras, I can think of nothing more terrifying than the opening of Beethoven No. 5

  • @jazzfan7491
    @jazzfan7491 6 месяцев назад

    Great explanation!

  • @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek
    @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek 6 месяцев назад +2

    I Only Came to Beethoven in My Middle Twenties, when I Found an Unabridged Bernstein/New York Philharmonic Recording that Was Enchantingly Powerful and Beautiful!!!!
    Beethoven DEMANDS OUR ATTENTION!!!! No Wasted Notes; Every Note Has Meaning. The Message is the Hero’s Triumph Over Struggle!!!!

    • @ericleiter6179
      @ericleiter6179 6 месяцев назад +1

      VERY well put!!! Nothing wasted in Beethoven...every note counts and feels inevitable...plus the ultimate pay off and satisfaction of his finales; which reveal the compelling Big Picture he had in mind from the start!!!...he is still the high water mark for all composers...period

  • @GabiNavarro
    @GabiNavarro 4 месяца назад

    ¡Felicidades! Excelente vídeo.

  • @leebarker539
    @leebarker539 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this delightful explanation. I share these very notes as saying, "Hey, this is important. (fermata) HEY! REALLY IMPORTANT!"

  • @StinkinGoodAle3241
    @StinkinGoodAle3241 5 месяцев назад +1

    My dad was a conducting teacher, so I both enjoyed your talk, and, I have to admit, have heard them before around the dinner table. One point I didn't hear you mention is that there is a question as to whether Beethoven meant, with the notation of the second fermata, for it to be a fermata on a whole note, rather than what it literally is - to me it sounds like something Furtwängler did.

  • @richardhoffman4683
    @richardhoffman4683 Месяц назад

    Great video!

  • @Sergio1Rodrigues
    @Sergio1Rodrigues Год назад

    That's so interesting, thank you very much

  • @gregorprozesky
    @gregorprozesky 2 года назад +4

    I wish to hear a hear a crescendo in the bar 2 and 4,5. It brings more energie into the opening. The most condutor dont do that. Thank you very much for the interesting analyse.

  • @feynthefallen
    @feynthefallen 4 месяца назад

    Interestingly, as radically different as those interpretations are, they all kinda work for me. The most radical interpretation I ever heard played the second pair of opening bars at half the speed of the first, then paused until it almost became unpleasant, before launching into a furious allegro for the rest of the introduction. I found it deeply emotional and extremely refreshing.

  • @swoolf3
    @swoolf3 5 месяцев назад

    Loved this lesson and look forward to more! I noticed in a couple of the examples the first 3 eighth notes seemed uneven, almost like a quarter
    plus two eighths, and the second 3 eighths sound even, as written. Any comment on that?

  • @ricardojuricic9027
    @ricardojuricic9027 5 месяцев назад +1

    What observations could you please point out about Barenboin's conducting?
    I liked the way you approached and explained the matter.
    I Do remember having heard different LP recordings of that symphony and tempos weren't quite the same, depending on the conductor & orchestra.
    I DO appreciate your comment.
    Cheers
    🤙🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
    🇦🇷🤗

  • @communityorganizer5645
    @communityorganizer5645 2 года назад +3

    Am I alone in absolutely loving her hair?

    • @aldoczavala8540
      @aldoczavala8540 6 месяцев назад +2

      No, you are not. And smart is the new sexy

  • @markmuch1295
    @markmuch1295 6 месяцев назад +2

    PBS once showed a live performance of the 5th by the NY Philharmonic led by Kurt Masur that was the best I ever heard.

  • @fiddiehacked
    @fiddiehacked 6 месяцев назад +1

    Many years ago I saw a bit of film with Toscanini rehearsing Beethovan's Fifth. He was so animated in his old age! IIRC, he was calmer and minimalistic during performances. Yes, I agree that this piece should begin as a whirlwind.

  • @philright8197
    @philright8197 5 месяцев назад

    This is really interesting thanks a lot.

  • @georgenorris2657
    @georgenorris2657 4 месяца назад

    I´ve often followed the score of this piece but I had never noticed that extra bar in the second phrase!

  • @maurozanchetta648
    @maurozanchetta648 Год назад +1

    Wonderful video! What do you think of Celibidache's recording?

  • @user-mx7ui8nm9c
    @user-mx7ui8nm9c 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for this interesting discussion.
    There is another issue with the first 4 notes of the 5th: most orchestras play the 3 short notes as if they were a triplet, with the same accentuation on each note (the 'fate knocking at the door' effect). Whereas Beethoven wrote 3 quavers preceded by a silence on the first beat of the bar. The first quaver is thus 'upbeat' and should not be accented. In a way, we 'feel' a silent accent on the first beat (if that is possible). In this interpretation, the conductor's first gesture will show the silent beat, not the first played note. This approach is also more consistent with a true allegro tempo.

  • @essttebanmatematicas410
    @essttebanmatematicas410 Год назад +2

    Good explanation.
    Thanks!!!
    For me, Karajan is at the top

  • @embodiedconducting
    @embodiedconducting 11 месяцев назад +1

    Nice job. I wish you would have addressed how conductors choose to hande the transition from m. 2 to 3 vs the transition from m.. 5 to 6. Is there a release after either fermata (or both)? If yes, what kind of release, quick or full?

  • @faville
    @faville 4 месяца назад

    In my conducting class as a student we studied this a bit. We asked the professor (an excellent conductor himself) about conducting that tied half note and he said absolutely we should. It’s written there, so show it.
    Obviously many pros do not, but I never forgot that lesson and it always makes me think about the interpretative process at different levels of performance.

  • @RichardGreen422
    @RichardGreen422 7 месяцев назад +5

    One thing that is really tough for community orchestras to get is that it is three eight notes instead of triplets.

    • @muzluv33
      @muzluv33 6 месяцев назад

      This is very true. I had an ear training teacher in college who beat this into us incessantly and it bore fruit. I am an organist and my teachers likewise were fastidious in this regard. I also wish to mention when one has a 2 against 3 (duple and triple) rhythm at the same time. Very challenging for a beginning musician or ensemble. One tends to have the second of the duple land on the last note of the triple - yet another challenge. To illustrate this, go to the exposition in the first movement of Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony (No.6) where Beethoven has duple rhythm in the violins and triple in the basses.

    • @alanckay
      @alanckay 6 месяцев назад

      Thanks for bringing this up (I have a comment above about this that includes the emphases on the weak and strong beats.

  • @katrinat.3032
    @katrinat.3032 6 месяцев назад

    My favorite Beethoven symphony #5 recording is actually on RUclips. It’s conducted by a young Franz Welzer-Most. It’s got to be from the 90’s. I think it’s the London symphony orchestra. I love it because it’s so energized! And about three quarters of the way through it FWM realizes this is good and it’s happening and he let’s go and has fun. I love it.

  • @hrvojebartulovic7870
    @hrvojebartulovic7870 5 месяцев назад

    It'd be interesting to hear your oppinion on different lenghts of pause between 1st and 2nd movement when executing `Mahler's 2nd!

  • @partituravid
    @partituravid Год назад +2

    showing the bar before the 2nd fermata makes perfect sense to me...not conducting sound, conducting the SCORE; what Beethoven wrote, therefore what his thought process was. If he wrote the 2nd differently, you should "show" it 1st to yourself, then to the players.
    BTW, I was taught the count-in technique by my conducting teacher, who was not an academic, but was concertmaster for Szell and Ormandy, and played for Stokowsky (and has his Romeo+Juliet score).

  • @frenchhorn1969
    @frenchhorn1969 Год назад +2

    Thank you! I think, that I am the biggest Kleiber Fan in the world!
    The reason of his conducting is the Rhythm. You can beat "through" all the way of the first movement
    That makes the difference to all the others