Ottorino Respighi - Pines Of Rome (NBC Symphony / Toscanini - 1952 Telecast)

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  • Опубликовано: 23 сен 2020
  • This white-hot performance by the great Toscanini has never looked or sounded better.
    NBC Symphony Orchestra
    conducted by Arturo Toscanini
    1952 Telecast
    The picture quality... well, there's not MUCH that can be done, but I managed to achieve a bit. It is what it is; a 1952 TV broadcast recorded on kinescope and then transferred back to analog videotape...
    ...but the sound is the real star of this show... and the performance is just magical.
    Minimal distortion during tuttis, but otherwise immaculate.
    Toscanini is certainly an acquired taste for some... but this is just magnificent.
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Комментарии • 114

  • @CreationistConservtv
    @CreationistConservtv 4 месяца назад +8

    My brother played the 1955 album recorded by the same orchestra, I was 5 in 1961... What memories, brings me to tears, he is 77 now, I am 10 years younger. All my musical tastes were developed by me listening to his music😅

  • @Bobbnoxious
    @Bobbnoxious 3 года назад +122

    Toscanini was 85 years old here and on his feet, conducting without a score. How badass is that?

    • @lwskiner
      @lwskiner 3 года назад +6

      He had Maynard Ferguson chops!

    • @Mezzotenor
      @Mezzotenor 3 года назад +6

      He also pretty much plowed through this piece, keeping time in the 1st and 4th movements.

    • @gaetanomariapiscopo5637
      @gaetanomariapiscopo5637 3 года назад +3

      You don't know so much about him...

    • @All2Meme
      @All2Meme 3 года назад +12

      Toscanini was a colleague of Respighi in Italy in the early part of the 20th century, so I would imagine this is as close to how Respighi wanted it to sound without conducting it himself.

    • @pablov1973
      @pablov1973 3 года назад +19

      He can´t read very clear at that age, he had a problem with his eyes, so, an score wouldn´t help him so much. Anyway, he had an amazing memory, he knew 103 operas from memory, and once he read a score he never forgetted.

  • @martywinick
    @martywinick Год назад +21

    I was 10 when I saw this performance live on our newly installed 17” RCA tv. It captivated me then and still does today.

    • @1fattyfatman
      @1fattyfatman 9 месяцев назад +7

      17" was high style then!

  • @robinblankenship9234
    @robinblankenship9234 3 года назад +48

    A real treasure of Western Civilization, in so many ways. Thanks so much for uploading.

  • @francescoleo7573
    @francescoleo7573 Год назад +10

    Straordinario, immenso Toscanini.
    Mai.vista una così perfetta sincronia tra gesto direttoriale ed esecuzione orchestrale.
    Ritengo Toscanini il più grande direttore del Novecento.

  • @nestoringles6679
    @nestoringles6679 Год назад +12

    Toscanini, one of the very greatest, no doubt about that. A surprising excellent recording sound, btw.

  • @michaelboyd4233
    @michaelboyd4233 2 года назад +31

    Via Appia has perhaps the greatest paced crescendo I've ever heard. Just when you think it's reached a maximum level there's another peak. And to be able to watch him conduct this piece which he has such a connection to is such a gift. Many thanks for posting.

    • @denismorel5089
      @denismorel5089 Год назад +4

      Particularly clear in the tympani, which crescendoes, then subsides, then crescendoes again, and again...
      Another great Toscanini crescendo is Sunrise from the Grand Canyon Suite.

  • @jayvigdior6844
    @jayvigdior6844 10 месяцев назад +3

    Amazing the way Toscanini carefully controls the dynamic nuances of the music with his left hand.

  • @r.i.p.volodya
    @r.i.p.volodya 10 месяцев назад +3

    TREMENDOUS performance of a TREMENDOUS piece!

  • @fernandopasqualetti1845
    @fernandopasqualetti1845 10 месяцев назад +1

    Impensabile oggi riascoltare in diretta una esecuzione così perfetta da qualsiasi Orchestra di livello mondiale diretta dal genio DIRETTORIALE quale quello del l'immenso Maestro TOSCANINI!!!!!!!!!!
    GRAZIE a chi ci ha lasciato una testimonianza irripetibile della genialità compositiva RESPIGHIANA !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @alexanderthompson2254
    @alexanderthompson2254 9 месяцев назад +9

    Thank you for posting this, in such shockingly-excellent sound given the source and age. Brilliant composer, conductor, perfect handling. What a gift to live in an era where something like this can be rescued from obscurity and shared with the world. Bravo - !

  • @alanmishael5013
    @alanmishael5013 2 года назад +8

    Simply stunning. A perfect few moments in time.

  • @hans-detlevv.kirchbach2787
    @hans-detlevv.kirchbach2787 3 года назад +19

    While I am sitting on the balcony in the setting sun, I let the recording run. At the end of the third movement (I pini del Gianicolo), when the birds - trained hard by Maestro Toscanini - began to intone, answered the blackbird, which has erected its palazzo in the tree opposite. The composer and the conductor would certainly have liked this kind of dialogue between the birds of Rome and their Cologne colleagues.

  • @user-zs7eb5uc9r
    @user-zs7eb5uc9r 2 года назад +11

    지휘하는 모든 동작에서 단 하나의 불필요함도 없이 정확하게 오케스트라를 인도해내는 거장의 솜씨! 몸짓만으로로 소리를 바로 보여주는 거 같음.
    지금봐도 여전히 대단하다.
    그명성이 아직도 회자되고 로마의 소나무 명연으로 손꼽히는게 이래서지.
    너무도 찬란하고 숨막히게 긴장감이 터지는 연주다.

    • @glagolitic
      @glagolitic  2 года назад +1

      동의합니다 - 댓글 주셔서 감사합니다! Google 번역에서 - 오류가 없기를 바랍니다.

  • @toddmichaelwillis
    @toddmichaelwillis 3 года назад +104

    My flute teacher, Paul Renzi, was in this orchestra!

    • @Ciiiroo
      @Ciiiroo 2 года назад +2

      Ok

    • @Charbanog95
      @Charbanog95 Год назад +2

      What memories about working with Toscanini? :)

    • @armandogabba8966
      @armandogabba8966 Год назад +5

      Even his Dad Paolo played as a oboist.great paisanos.cheers from Parma,Italy...i live about 1 block from Toscanini's birthplace

    • @maurocoimbra9624
      @maurocoimbra9624 Год назад +4

      What an honour!!

    • @MurderbyGravy
      @MurderbyGravy Год назад +1

      My trumpet teacher, Ray Crisara was in this orchestra!

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 2 года назад +18

    Indescribable beauty
    Indescribable feeling
    Indescribable
    comfort
    and something indescribable
    This footage is a treasure
    This performance is unrivaled by any other performances
    Toscanini holds an unchallenged position as an interpreter of Respighi
    I deeply love the pines of the Via Appia

    • @avvocatostyle
      @avvocatostyle Год назад

      He conducted Pini della Via Appia with his fucking ass

  • @DMWill65
    @DMWill65 2 года назад +6

    Simply outstanding!

  • @ellisfahrengart1069
    @ellisfahrengart1069 Год назад +13

    0:16 Borghese
    2:49 Catacombs
    9:31 Janiculum
    15:40 Appian

  • @michaeljeran4941
    @michaeljeran4941 3 года назад +10

    Fantastisch!

  • @clarisguate8293
    @clarisguate8293 12 дней назад

    What a treasure this is

  • @novagerio9244
    @novagerio9244 2 года назад +9

    By the way, the piano part is played by Earl Wild!

  • @776sopipa9
    @776sopipa9 Год назад +1

    It's an old video, but it's a great performance that doesn't make you feel old at all.

  • @scuunjieng
    @scuunjieng 10 месяцев назад +2

    wow many thanks and such excellent quality. deeply appreciated

  • @MikesPOV
    @MikesPOV Год назад +2

    Wonderful!

  • @dmntuba
    @dmntuba Год назад +1

    FANTASTIC!!!!! 👍

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima Год назад +3

    It seems I am in a Via Appia and I watching the glorious Roman Imperial Army marching majestically

  • @donaldwhittaker7987
    @donaldwhittaker7987 23 дня назад

    Good stuff. We need more of his videos.

  • @jillferri1164
    @jillferri1164 Год назад +1

    So great to hear this. Thank you.

  • @donaldallen1771
    @donaldallen1771 2 года назад +14

    I have owned Toscanini's recording of the Pines and Fountains since I was a kid and I"m pushing 80 now, hard. Not much to say about this that hasn't already been said many, many times. I will observe, though, that Toscanini, who professed to do what the score says -- no more, no less -- marches the army down the Appian Way at about 80 to the quarter note. Respighi asks for 66. Toscanini is 21% faster than the composer requested. It's exciting as hell, no question. But listen to Bernstein's 1970 performance with the NY Philharmonic. He's right at 66 and it's also exciting as hell -- the pulse gets more and more intense without ever wavering. I know this score pretty well and in my opinion, Bernstein is closer to the composer's intention, at least in the last mvt of the Pines.
    Toscanini had a famous dispute with Maurice Ravel. He conducted the first US performance of the Bolero quite a bit faster than Ravel's marked tempo. Ravel was in the audience and expressed his objection to the conductor afterwards. Toscanini said "it was the only way to save the piece". Ravel said "well, then maybe you shouldn't conduct it". Ravel grew up in the Basque region of France and knew this dance. He was also one of the rarest musical geniuses the human race has produced. I've listened to Ravel's own performance as well as Toscanini's. You can guess which one I prefer.

    • @riccardoberlese6932
      @riccardoberlese6932 Год назад +2

      Mi dispiace per lei ma anch'io posseggo il disco RCA dei Pini oramai da circa 60 anni (era appena arrivato in Italia dall'America) e posseggo, fra le altre, anche la versione di Bernstein ma il crescendo Toscaniniano è talmente terrificante da far oscurare tutte le altre versioni quindi................EVVIVA TOSCANINI

    • @WilliamSilva-ml5nw
      @WilliamSilva-ml5nw Год назад +2

      I humbly give Toscanini a pass... no one is perfect!!!

  • @hisa0hisa006
    @hisa0hisa006 Год назад +3

    No.1 Rome

  • @loiclaronche5675
    @loiclaronche5675 Год назад +1

    Magnifico !

  • @jeffcutter7536
    @jeffcutter7536 2 месяца назад

    Great performance

  • @Charbanog95
    @Charbanog95 Год назад +6

    Niente da fare: Respighi si deve suonare così!

  • @spencersmith2798
    @spencersmith2798 3 года назад +7

    Wow...

    • @joshdrums37
      @joshdrums37 3 года назад +5

      Right? I’ve been checking out different versions of this the last few days and just came across this one. This is the one.... damn

    • @lorenzosimpson8039
      @lorenzosimpson8039 3 года назад +1

      @@joshdrums37 NOT BAD BUT CHECK OUT VON KARAJAN

  • @massimolioy4955
    @massimolioy4955 Год назад +1

    Bravissimo

  • @Twentythousandlps
    @Twentythousandlps 9 месяцев назад

    The Toscanini telecasts began in 1948. This was the final piece on the last telecast.

  • @TheLastOfTheFinest80
    @TheLastOfTheFinest80 3 года назад +7

    Excuse me if I sound too blunt, but those were some studly ass trumpets in the final minutes.

  • @SPDOCS
    @SPDOCS Год назад

    RUclips ''Heritage'' Video!... Many Thank's for it!...
    Note: Toscanini & Respighi knew themselves well enough.
    ( So - They didn't have to gossip to be successful either... )
    Symphonic Poem - Composed in 1924...
    (Included in the performance: the recording of a Nighthingale)
    Poem in 4 parts... The Pines of Rome:
    1) The Pines at the Villa Borghese ( Where the children play )
    2) The Pines near a Catacomb ( Where the dead lay )
    3) The Pines on The Janiculum Hill ( Where the bird sings )
    4) The Pines along The Appian Way ( Where the drums beat )
    Translation?!... - [ '' C'est CELA! " - '' Grosso Modo! " ] 💡
    Note: Ce commentaire ne s'adresse pas aux
    '' Longueuil/Chicoutimi - Lesson - Losers "... (!)

  • @ronrogers5220
    @ronrogers5220 9 месяцев назад +3

    In high school I nearly defected to our district rival because they were playing the Pines. My father would have none of it tho, he knew as a low brass player it would be a glorious gift I would get later in life, what fun it is to play...

    • @jppitman1
      @jppitman1 8 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed. One of my all time favorite memories to play this in a community orchestra. Our conductor told the trombones several times to just let it out. We did. Especially the climax. What a blast.

  • @williamrubinstein3442
    @williamrubinstein3442 2 года назад +2

    The Catacombs is one of the all time great pieces. Ir should be played fast, as Toscanini is playing it.

  • @arimahhhhhhhh
    @arimahhhhhhhh Год назад

    凄い演奏技術

  • @ikmarchini
    @ikmarchini Год назад +1

    Mannaggia! The sound is incredible, not like on the old Victrola reissues. An acquired taste? Like passion?

  • @NoName-qr5jg
    @NoName-qr5jg 8 месяцев назад

    Ze mirari ikusgarria ! Respighi filmen doinueri dena eman zizkion.

  • @seokjinyoon1424
    @seokjinyoon1424 2 года назад +5

    Great sound quality and great performance! Can you upload the Beethoven fifth video of the same concert?

    • @glagolitic
      @glagolitic  2 года назад +2

      This will be going live in about half an hour. :)

    • @seokjinyoon1424
      @seokjinyoon1424 2 года назад +1

      @@glagolitic Oh, thank you! 😁

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings 3 года назад +4

    So crazy 80 years ago these fast incredibly fast tempi. Feels like mechanized computers yet these composers and conductors were born before our ghastly clockwork perfection became common .Listen to this performance. I'm going to search for a 1930's performance . Toscanini's precision and ruthless time beating . One wouldn't think people born in the romantic era would be so driven and perfunctoy .Rach and Hofmann,Rubinstein's directness were new unlike Paderewsky and DePachmann and the old sentimental school but listen to the mechanical precision in the beginning . Even the pastoral 5th minute is not what one expects . Must find some earlier performances. Is his Beeth 6th Symphony this metronomic even though the phrasing is as clear and unfussy .

    • @Dan6erous
      @Dan6erous 2 года назад +3

      Toscanini and Respighi were friends and frequent collaborators. I'm going to accept Toscanini's tempi without question :)

    • @Levanah10
      @Levanah10 2 года назад +2

      If you want a mid-1930s Toscanini performance: Find the 1936 recording of Beethoven's 7th, with the NY Philharmonic. Recorded over 2 days, all wonderful, but especially: the first 2 movements (1st day) are incredibly jaw-droppingly magical. --On RUclips here: ruclips.net/video/8AuFNGCVsgg/видео.html The fellow who uploaded this version is a sound engineer who knows what he's doing...sounds even cleaner than my 1970s vinyl, or the original 78s for that matter.

  • @joestrike8537
    @joestrike8537 9 месяцев назад +2

    Interesting how the cameras never leave Toscanini - no shots of the individual orchestra members (all of whom seem to be men, by the way - I guess classical music was still a man's world back in the 50s)

    • @gregorykayne6054
      @gregorykayne6054 2 месяца назад

      Very much. But, there were some women already . And, they were great.

  • @adriancook7078
    @adriancook7078 2 года назад +13

    He is 85. He is on his feet the whole concert. There is no score and yet he controls the exact sound and texture of every single note. And thank goodness none of today's mezzoforte. Toscanini's sounds are real sounds that have life. something happens with his sound. A world of feeling and thought open up. It is alive. Today everything is the death of boring mezzoforte. Did you see how the cellists are working. You won't see that today.

  • @ibrokemyfingerbowlin
    @ibrokemyfingerbowlin 2 года назад +2

    Who’s the clarinetist?

    • @bevaconme
      @bevaconme 2 года назад +4

      alexander williams.

  • @AlexSzell
    @AlexSzell 7 месяцев назад

    17:54 don’t forget to cue trumpets

  • @NishA-fv1eu
    @NishA-fv1eu Год назад

    2:25 excerpt 2

  • @catdog-uz6gh
    @catdog-uz6gh 5 месяцев назад

    mi pare che questa versione sia di gran lunga superiore alle altre. qui i pini di roma sono proprio una bella musica, in altre interpretazione sembrano solo un'arietta

  • @user-rn1lb8sx2c
    @user-rn1lb8sx2c Год назад

    0:54 interesting how the trumpets flutter tongue it. And how times have changed where we multiple tongue it

  • @ronaldwergin6719
    @ronaldwergin6719 3 года назад

    That sounds like stereo. Is this reprocessed mono?

    • @francesco65esposito
      @francesco65esposito 2 года назад +6

      No ... it's a pseudo-stereo reprocessed monophonic recording; The only stereo recording (experimental) was that of his last concert in April 1954 with an entirely Wagnerian program; this recording, however, was later refused by Toscanini for its publication (although he is a great fan of electronic technologies) ... in this regard it seems that he said a joke to the RCA technicians such as: "it took me almost twenty years to get my musicians to go together and you want to share them? " (alluding to the stereo separation of the left and right channels) ...

    • @glagolitic
      @glagolitic  Год назад +1

      @@francesco65esposito No, it's not a "pseudo-stereo reprocessed monophonic recording" - it's a monophonic recording with a very mild level of mono-compatible "ambience" added to ease listening for headphones users.

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar Год назад

      @@glagolitic headphones viewers?
      This is 1952 might I remind you, they are using a stereophonic registry, two panels that gave you both hearing one part of it on the left, and another part of it on the right.

  • @pnocella
    @pnocella 3 года назад +3

    A great performance! While Toscanini's face is undoubtedly quite expressive, more views of the orchestra "in action" might have been good, as well?

  • @tinalettieri
    @tinalettieri Месяц назад

    This makes me want to go to Rome and I dislike Rome.

  • @lorenzosimpson8039
    @lorenzosimpson8039 3 года назад +2

    '' bloody timebeater' Wilhelm Furtwängle

    • @jeffreymiller4814
      @jeffreymiller4814 2 года назад +1

      lorenzo simpson I think Furtwängler actually may have said “f…king timebeater” as he walked out of the theater in disgust. I’ll take Furtwängler over AT in a heartbeat.

    • @XMarkxyz
      @XMarkxyz 2 года назад +5

      @@jeffreymiller4814 you mean the one who played for the nazi regime while Toscanini exhiled himself rather than playing for Mussolini?

    • @bevaconme
      @bevaconme 2 года назад +2

      @@XMarkxyz does toscanini's impeccable political integrity make him the superior conductor?

    • @vjekop932
      @vjekop932 2 года назад +9

      @@jeffreymiller4814 Toscanini was objectively a far better conductor than Furtwangler, who is the most overrated of all time. Don't get me wrong, he was a great conductor with a genius vision for most works, but he could rarely get the orchestra to play for him correctly (unlike Toscanini), which is crucial in music. He is worthy of respect but his fanboys praise him like he is the 2nd coming of Jesus Christ.

    • @vjekop932
      @vjekop932 2 года назад +1

      @@bevaconme no, but his conducting does.

  • @jenkinsfamily2229
    @jenkinsfamily2229 6 месяцев назад

    Finale is way too fast, doesn't allow for the overwhelming majesty. Sounds almost panicked.

  • @alexeyizmirliev64
    @alexeyizmirliev64 Год назад

    Fantastico!