The 5th movement had been used for Phillips' house hold products musical ads. that so much fascinated and since then it has brought me to fall in love the classical music for over 60 years .
I think the story of this legendary performance goes something like this. At the end there was a smattering, halting, almost reluctant applause. They sat there mesmerized, as if sad, as if they did not want the music to end. But end, it had to. And, when the dam burst, the applause lasted over four minutes.
There is a story behind. I remember hearing about it ~20 years ago in bavarian radio, but I can't remember exactly what was so special about it. Something like the recording of this legendary Concert was lost, but they found a tape?
Found it: "Any disc from Carlos Kleiber is to be treasured, and this is his only recording of the Pastoral Symphony. That ought to make it self-recommending, particularly as the performance has a wonderful natural ease and coherence, with fast tempos that must have seemed radical in 1983 when it was recorded (live, in the Nationaltheater, Munich) but now, more than 20 years and much period-instrument Beethoven later, don't seem so scandalous. But the sound is execrable - congested and hissy. Though Bavarian Radio apparently recorded the concert, their tape was damaged and this disc has been reconstructed from a cassette made at the concert by Kleiber's son. It won't do as anything more than a historical document; however significant a performance, it still needs to be heard in decent sound." (Andrew Clement, The Guardian)
The 5th movement had been used for Phillips' house hold products musical ads. that so much fascinated and since then it has brought me to fall in love the classical music for over 60 years .
Ludwig Van Beethoven, fue un angel en forma humana . 6th. Sinfonia , inspirada por DIOS DIVINO. ❤❤❤
I believe it was a cassette recording version by Kleiber’s family and friends. Some story was behind this recording. Very precious!
I think the story of this legendary performance goes something like this.
At the end there was a smattering, halting, almost reluctant applause. They sat there mesmerized, as if sad, as if they did not want the music to end. But end, it had to. And, when the dam burst, the applause lasted over four minutes.
There is a story behind. I remember hearing about it ~20 years ago in bavarian radio, but I can't remember exactly what was so special about it. Something like the recording of this legendary Concert was lost, but they found a tape?
Found it:
"Any disc from Carlos Kleiber is to be treasured, and this is his only recording of the Pastoral Symphony. That ought to make it self-recommending, particularly as the performance has a wonderful natural ease and coherence, with fast tempos that must have seemed radical in 1983 when it was recorded (live, in the Nationaltheater, Munich) but now, more than 20 years and much period-instrument Beethoven later, don't seem so scandalous.
But the sound is execrable - congested and hissy. Though Bavarian Radio apparently recorded the concert, their tape was damaged and this disc has been reconstructed from a cassette made at the concert by Kleiber's son. It won't do as anything more than a historical document; however significant a performance, it still needs to be heard in decent sound."
(Andrew Clement, The Guardian)
But who is interested in sound quality when it's about vitality and "freshness"? Oder auf deutsch: Lebendigkeit...
Movements
1) Start
2)8:38
3)20:43
4)23:57
5)26:43
So full of life and light!Thank you!
너무 빠르네 마을 길을 산책하는 느낌이 아니고 그냥 연주하기에 바쁜네 누가 쫒아오나?