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             Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
              Egmont Overture op.84 [08:50]* 
              Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
              Symphony no.5 in E minor op.64 [43:01]** 
              Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
              Minuet I from “Posthorn” Serenade K.320 [4:21]*** 
                
              Boston Symphony Orchestra/Erich Leinsdorf 
              rec. 15 April 1969*,**, 15 January 1963***, Symphony Hall, Boston*,**, 
              Sanders Theatre, Harvard University*** 
              Picture: 4:3, Colour/B&W; Sound: Enhanced mono; Region: 0 (worldwide) 
                
              ICA CLASSICS ICAD 5059   
              [57:00] 
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                The previous Leinsdorf offering in this series had a very good-to-fine 
                  Schubert 9, an even finer Schumann 4 and a wonderful Wagner 
                  “Good Friday Music”. However much you enjoyed it, I should think 
                  that only those present in the Boston Symphony Hall on 15 April 
                  1969 could be fully prepared for the impact of the present resuscitation. 
                    
                  The first pleasant surprise that the material is in colour, 
                  even if definition is not up to modern standards. The second 
                  is that Leinsdorf, who was usually seen – before and after 1969 
                  – without a baton and said in a late interview that he felt 
                  freer to mould the music expressively with just his hands – 
                  marches on with a longish baton and seems accustomed to wielding 
                  it. Richard Dyer, whose eye-witness notes continue to be such 
                  a valuable feature of this series, makes no mention of this. 
                  It would be interesting to know more about Leinsdorf’s use and 
                  non-use of the baton. 
                    
                  But all this pales before the fact that this sometimes austere 
                  and pedantic conductor is on truly inspired and inspiring form, 
                  conducting with total involvement. This doesn’t mean that it’s 
                  all fast and loud: the Beethoven goes at a good but not excessive 
                  pace and there is plenty of expressive weight to the introduction. 
                  The wind phrases in the allegro are beautifully turned and the 
                  coda truly blazes. 
                    
                  Leinsdorf’s Beethoven is a known factor. If it wasn’t always 
                  this good, I suppose it doesn’t need a lot of imagination to 
                  see that, on the right day, it could be. But his Tchaikovsky? 
                    
                  Leinsdorf only recorded one Tchaikovsky Symphony commercially, 
                  the Sixth with the Los Angeles Philharmonic some years before 
                  his Boston appointment. I’ve never heard this, nor have I ever 
                  seen it spoken of with bated breath. Whereas the internet grapevine 
                  has been shouting excitedly about this Fifth ever since somebody 
                  posted an incomplete sound-only version, as Richard Dyer relates. 
                  I can well understand those internet commentators who say they’ll 
                  never listen to their other discs of the work now this is available, 
                  or one who actually heard it at the time and has been unable 
                  to find a performance to match it – not even Mravinsky – ever 
                  since. 
                    
                  On the face of it, Leinsdorf doesn’t “do” anything particular 
                  with the music. The introduction is brooding but also purposeful 
                  – he notes that it is “andante” not “adagio” and one senses 
                  a great latent power behind waiting to be unleashed. His “Allegro 
                  con anima” does not sidle in slowly, gaining speed later, he 
                  sets an up-front tempo straight away. It will sound very fast 
                  to some listeners. But this is his tempo, so the first 
                  crescendo is not accompanied by an accelerando and the hammering 
                  passages go at about the “normal” speed. Nor does he deviate 
                  from this tempo, except where Tchaikovsky actually requests 
                  a slower pace for the second subject. Leinsdorf plays this with 
                  great tenderness and free rubato, even risking some less precise 
                  ensemble. On paper, this might sound like one of Leinsdorf’s 
                  dogmatic demonstrations, and if he had subsequently taken the 
                  performance into the studio I fear it might have turned into 
                  just that. I must emphasize that here everything is white-hot 
                  and convinces as a free expression of emotions. 
                    
                  So, too, does the slow movement. The tempo is pretty steady 
                  but there is a sense of free-soaring passion which completely 
                  effaces any sense of the four-square. The waltz has an elegance 
                  which does not prevent exploitation of its darker moments while 
                  the finale carries all before it. The coda has an air of crude 
                  triumph presaging Mahler. Audience reaction is rightly rapturous 
                  and even Leinsdorf manages some smiles. It looks as though the 
                  Bostonians learnt to love Leinsdorf just as he was on his way 
                  out. 
                    
                  I haven’t ventured to compare this with other favourites. Once 
                  the initial impact has worn off I cannot believe that performance 
                  by such as Mravinsky or Markevich, which have provided inspiration 
                  to generations (and to me) can be wholly and eternally eclipsed. 
                  The case still remains for a cooler, more brooding approach, 
                  notably provided – in very primitive sound – by Landon Ronald. 
                  At the opposite extreme, the capacity of late Celibidache to 
                  bend your internal clock and suspend disbelief at his time-dilations 
                  is not to be dismissed either. What I am quite sure of is that 
                  Leinsdorf has belatedly entered the select list of the greatest 
                  Tchaikovsky performances on record. 
                    
                  Back to batonless Leinsdorf in black and white for the Mozart 
                  bonus. He puts on an incredibly autocratic face with black looks 
                  all round. Those used to modern Mozart will gasp at the fullness 
                  of the first attack, yet there is lilt as well as majesty, and 
                  delicacy later on, Leinsdorf shaping the music with crisp finger-movements. 
                    
                  An interesting filler, perhaps. But don’t miss the Tchaikovsky 
                  on any account. 
                    
                  Christopher Howell 
                   
                   
                 
                                                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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