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Klemperer – Live Broadcasts (8 CD box set, FLAC)

Klemperer - Live Broadcasts (8 CD box set, FLAC)
Klemperer - Live Broadcasts (8 CD box set, FLAC)

Audio CD
SPARS Code: A-D
Number of Discs: 8 CD box set
Format: FLAC (image+cue)
Label: Testament
Size: 2.37 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

# Ambiance

# Serenade No. 12 for winds in C minor (“Nacht Musique”), K. 388 (K. 384a)
Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
with Roland Berger, Dietmar Zeman, Hans Hanak, Volker Altmann, Alfred Prinz, Christian Cubasch, Karl Mayerhofer, Camillo Ohlberger
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Symphony No. 41 in C major (“Jupiter”), K. 551
Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Coriolan Overture, Op. 62
Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Symphony No. 4 in B flat major, Op. 60
Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Symphony No. 8 in B minor (“Unfinished”), D. 759
Composed by Franz Schubert
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Symphony No. 5 in C minor (“Fate”), Op. 67
Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Gavotte and Doubles, for harpsichord in A minor (Nouvelles suites)
Composed by Jean-Philippe Rameau
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Symphony No. 5 in B flat (“Tragic”; “Church of Faith”; “Pizzicato”), WAB 105 (various versions)
Composed by Anton Bruckner
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Symphony No. 9 in D major
Composed by Gustav Mahler
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 in F major, BWV 1046
Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
with Gunter Hogner, Franz Holetschek, Karl Mayerhofer, Ferdinand Raab, Walter Weller, Hans Hanak, Wolfgang Jr. Tombock, Ernst Pamperl
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Don Juan, tone poem for orchestra, Op. 20 (TrV 156)
Composed by Richard Strauss
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Siegfried Idyll, for small orchestra in E major, WWV 103
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Prelude to Tristan und Isolde, for orchestra
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Prelude to Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, for orchestra
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

# Applause

# Ein deutsches Requiem (German Requiem), for soprano, baritone, chorus & orchestra, Op. 45
Composed by Johannes Brahms
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
with Eberhard Wachter, Wilma Lipp
Conducted by Otto Klemperer

Live Klemperer Treasure from 1968

This extraordinary set of live Klemperer performances should be in the collection of everyone who cares about Klemperer and his marvelous style of music making. Massive and often slow but always vital and alive, they will not appeal to everyone. But it is astonishing how these CDs bring into sharp focus Klemperer’s real magnetism on the podium. As good as his EMI recordings are, they are so very much the product of the recording studio one can be forgiven for wondering whether they represent what Klemperer was in fact capable of achieving in live performance, particularly near the end of his career when his various physical disabilities became almost overwhelming impediments to performance.

Somehow, almost miraculously, Klemperer put it all together for a few weeks in the late Spring of 1968 in Vienna to produce truly incandescent performances. Not note perfect by any means, this is music making nevertheless for the ages. I suppose the Mahler 9th comes closest to failure as it offers some of the most ragged playing in the set. (According to the excellent liner notes, some of that can be attributed to Klemperer but more to the orchestra’s unfamiliarity with Mahler’s last great symphony and even downright hostility to Mahler’s music.) But in the end that raggedness doesn’t matter at all. Klemperer’s trademark qualities as conductor are very much present in the Mahler as in all these performances: clarity of polyphonic texture; structural integrity; overall rhythmic coherence (even if ensembles are a bit ‘shaky’ at times). I was particularly moved by the performances of Bach and Mozart — the ‘Jupiter” symphony is positively incandescent — as well as by the Bruckner Fifth which is, hands down, the greatest performance of that symphony I have ever heard, live or on record. But all these performances are well worth hearing again and again in spite of their foibles.

All performances from the 1968 series are in good quality stereo sound; the single mono recording, a very decent-sounding performance of the Brahms German Requiem, is taken from a Klemperer concert in Vienna about ten years earlier. I don’t recommend this set to the ‘note perfect’ crowd or to anyone who has a fixed idea about what is the “best” recording of the Beethoven Fifth or Mahler Ninth. But if you are prepared to hear the ‘thoughts’ of an old man who has struggled with this music all his life, for whom this music meant more than anything else on earth and for which he was willing to push himself past pain and infirmity, then I think you will be moved and enriched by this priceless set.

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