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             Karajan in New York - Vol.1  
               
              Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770 – 
              1827)  
              Symphony No.9 in D minor, op.125 (1824) [22:08]  
                
              Leontyne Price (soprano), Maureen Forrester (alto), Leopold Simoneau 
              (tenor), Norman Scott (bass), Westminster Choir (director: Warren 
              Martin), New York Philharmonic Orchestra/Herbert von Karajan  
              rec. 22 November 1958, Carnegie Hall, New York, NY, ADD  
                
              PRISTINE AUDIO PASC 222 [66:35]  	
               
               
              
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          Karajan in New York - Vol.2   Anton 
            von WEBERN (1883 – 1945) 
             Fünf Sätze, op.5 (1909) [10:02]   Wolfgang 
            Amadeus MOZART (1757 – 1781)  
            Symphony No.41 in C, Jupiter, K551 (1788) [27:50]   Ludwig 
            van BEETHOVEN (1770 – 1827)  
            Symphony No.1 in C, op.21 (1800) [22:08]     
            New York Philharmonic Orchestra/Herbert von Karajan  
            rec. 15 November 1958 (Mozart and Webern) and 22 November 1958 (Beethoven), 
            Carnegie Hall, New York, NY, ADD     
            PRISTINE AUDIO PASC 224 [63:05]  	
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                 Karajan meets Murder Incorporated! What a meeting of minds 
                  and sensibilities! Hardly had Leonard Bernstein taken the helm 
                  in New York than along comes this European fellow to conduct 
                  it in Viennese classics – to be honest, the Webern hadn’t yet 
                  become a classic, this was only 13 years after his death and 
                  he was still a seen as a “difficult” composer. Karajan is totally 
                  at home in this repertoire, but he fails to bring to his performances 
                  an old world charm.  
                   
                  As can be expected these are, what we now see as, old fashioned. 
                  Mozart suffers the most with an orchestra which is far too big, 
                  compared to what we are now used to – although it must be said 
                  that the Webern Movements - Pristine calls the work Five 
                  Pieces, which would be Fünf Stücke, but the correct 
                  title is Fünf Sätze, Five Movements - gain in 
                  strength and weight for the use of a large string body. Throughout 
                  there is the heavy hand of “authority”. The tempi are well chosen, 
                  even if the finale is brisk, and there’s never a dull moment, 
                  but Mozart deserves more than this kind of treatment. One wonders 
                  if the inclusion of Ein Heldenleben, in the second half 
                  of this concert, prompted the use of such forces?  
                   
                  The Beethoven performances were given a week later, and what 
                  a change there is in the size of the orchestra and the interpretations 
                  for this concert! The 1st Symphony 
                  has well chosen tempi, and there’s more of a classical feel 
                  to the performance, but it’s still heavy-handed at times and 
                  too strict, with little give and take.  
                   
                  The Ninth is a very fine affair. Karajan has the New Yorkers 
                  breathless, as he launches a first movement of great power, 
                  with a fine Allegro which is a little maestoso; 
                  just what Beethoven ordered. There’s little time for rest here 
                  and whilst Karajan ensures that he has a firm hand on the proceedings, 
                  there’s still an element of real fantasy to the interpretation. 
                  He had me wondering what was going to happen next! The scherzo 
                  is another matter. Although the tempo is well chosen, Karajan 
                  ignores both repeats in the first half, which is odd considering 
                  the composer so obviously wanted the sections to be heard twice; 
                  he wrote twelve first time bars at the end of the second section, 
                  but you cannot play these without playing the first repeat. 
                  It’s all to do with symmetry. In this performance the first 
                  movement plays for 15:07 and the scherzo for 10:40, whereas 
                  if Karajan observed the repeats it would have played for 13:46, 
                  balancing the allegro perfectly, which is what Beethoven 
                  intended. There is another, slight, problem. Once Karajan has 
                  chosen his tempo he’s away but he keeps having to, almost imperceptibly, 
                  slow down to allow for clear woodwind articulation. You will 
                  feel this, and, because he does it often, you will begin to 
                  wonder where the momentum has gone. That said, this is a thrilling 
                  exposition of the scherzo and so good that it makes one 
                  weep at the two miscalculations listed here. The slow movement 
                  is a trifle hard-driven, Karajan refusing to let go and simply 
                  allow the music to play. He builds the climax well, but it is 
                  just a part of the whole, rather than the achievement of musical 
                  discussion. Then we come to the finale, which, for me, is a 
                  real problem. I have two niggles. First of all, Beethoven was 
                  not a vocal composer so his “big tune” works marvellously when 
                  played by the orchestra, but sounds cumbersome when sung. Second, 
                  the tune itself; it isn’t strong enough to carry the kind of 
                  symphonic argument Beethoven is desperate to achieve. As a symphonic 
                  finale it is a failure, for it contains no musical apotheosis, 
                  and after three magnificent movements if any Symphony needed 
                  a really satisfactory musical conclusion, this is the work. 
                  Here, the singers are good – the women are much better than 
                  the men – but never do I feel the sense of exaltation which 
                  is supposed to infuse the music.  
                   
                  Having said all that, these are exciting performances and see 
                  Karajan weaving a little of his magic with an orchestra which 
                  is known for not taking any prisoners; hence its nickname. The 
                  sound is very good, but there is little bloom on the upper string 
                  sound, and quite clear. These two disks are not for general 
                  listening but there is much to enjoy and admire and I am glad 
                  to have them in my collection, even if they couldn’t be my first 
                  choice in any of the works, except, perhaps, the Webern. Well 
                  done, Pristine Audio for giving us the chance to hear a couple 
                  of Karajan’s very rare American appearances.  
                   
                  Bob Briggs 
                 
               
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