The image of Klemperer as an austerely intellectual guardian of the Austro-German 
      classics may get you wondering if EMI haven’t conveniently grouped together 
      all the Klemperer you don’t need.
       
      Think again … as I have. All these performances were on full-price LPs, 
      or still coming out, when I began collecting records. A mixture of youthful 
      prejudice and not always laudatory contemporary reviews meant that I missed 
      out on everything here except the Berlioz. It’s been, with very few exceptions, 
      a revelation and a privilege to catch up.
       
      I’ll start with the Austro-Germans.
       
      In the first movement of Schubert 5 we immediately note the forwardly-balanced 
      wind that are a constant feature of Klemperer’s work. Allied to sharp accents, 
      a sense of jaunty enjoyment is conveyed. The tempo is at the slower end 
      of the norm. This allows grandeur, but with clear textures and well-sprung 
      rhythms the music never becomes too weighty for what it is. No repeat.
       
      The Andante con moto is amply, even sublimely phrased, but by careful 
      rhythmic handling it nevertheless maintains a feeling of two-in-the-bar 
      not six. The more dramatic parts are not allowed to slog. The Menuetto 
      has a nice rustic lilt. One of the revelations of the set, for me, is Klemperer’s 
      handling of dance movements, which unfailingly have the spirit of the dance. 
      There are also some gorgeous wind solos in the trio. Let us not forget that 
      this orchestra contained some of the finest players of the day, putting 
      all their artistry at the service of a conductor they worshipped.
       
      The controversial movement is the finale – slow finales will be something 
      of a leitmotif throughout the set. This one’s steady but vital, and not 
      heavy. At times the phrasing is so detailed that you wonder how it could 
      ever go faster. But it usually does, and has more sheer spin as a result, 
      in the triplet sections for example. I’ll only add my personal experience 
      that for most of the following day this finale went revolving around in 
      my head, and always at Klemperer’s tempo, which increasingly came to seem 
      the right one.
       
      No controversial tempos in the Unfinished Symphony. The first movement 
      is urgent and dramatic, with a real sense of foreboding at the opening. 
      The second subject is serene, tenderly regretful, the development is powerful 
      without heaviness. The repeat is played. The Andante con moto is 
      expansively expressed but manages to give the idea of one-in-the bar. Deep 
      colours and proto-Wagnerian brass combine with the steady tread of a Bach 
      aria.
       
      Thus far, in spite of the slowish finale to Symphony 5, these have been 
      fine interpretations that do not unseat our preconceptions of the music. 
      Klemperer’s Great C major will probably do just that.
       
      The introduction is actually quite swiftly flowing for those days. There’s 
      no accelerando into the Allegro ma non troppo, only a slight tightening 
      of the tempo. That’s all Klemperer needs because he simply strides into 
      a tempo where the new half-bar equals the old quarter-bar. It’s a decidedly 
      slower-than-usual pace, but with chirpy, carolling wind and sometimes brazen 
      brass it’s all very alive. The second subject emerges completely naturally 
      at this tempo. With a faster tempo, even a “faithful” conductor like Boult 
      had to ease the pace a little here. Klemperer’s solution to the coda is 
      remarkable. With only the slightest broadening, he brings the final unison 
      statement of the theme of the introduction back at practically the same 
      tempo it had at the beginning. Here, in fact, is another constant we shall 
      find in this set: when a movement, or a whole symphony, has a motto theme, 
      Klemperer manages to work out a tempo scheme by which the motto always comes 
      back at about the same speed.
       
      The Andante con moto is a real Winterreise, sometimes 
      chunkily bleak, sometimes tenderly regretful, always moving inexorably forward. 
      The climax is frighteningly dramatic. The actual tempo will not surprise 
      anyone, but the landler-like Scherzo is pretty slow. It has a steady lilt 
      that means Klemperer does not need to relax for the trio. Perhaps this is 
      the point to say that the performance is distinctly short on repeats. No 
      issue over those in the outer movements, which no one included on disc for 
      almost another two decades, but even the Scherzo is considerably foreshortened.
       
      The leisurely third movement helps to make the finale seem relatively swift. 
      It is indeed trenchantly active, building up an inexorable momentum not 
      always achieved by faster versions, and with all guns ablaze by the end.
       
      Of the three Schubert performances, this is certainly the most original 
      and revelatory. It nevertheless illustrates a “Klemperer problem” that caused 
      head-shaking among critics of the day. Can a critic unreservedly recommend 
      a performance so far away from the norm – unless, of course, he is quite 
      convinced that everyone else got it wrong? I found this “Great C major” 
      riveting, inspiring and thought-provoking. I shouldn’t think, though, that 
      the interpretative solutions tried here would work for anyone except Klemperer, 
      and no one has tried to imitate them as far as I know. And, to appreciate 
      it fully, you would surely have to measure it against a knowledge of how 
      the music “usually” goes.
       
      Of the two Mendelssohn symphonies, it is the “Scottish” that 
      impresses most, and indeed mightily. The introduction is amazingly wide-ranging 
      in its grave expressiveness and dynamic shading, while a slowish but not 
      inflexible main Allegro develops a rugged strength as the storm 
      brews through the movement. The Scherzo seems slow at first but it is delicate 
      and the detailed phrasing makes for a convincingly vivacious effect. The 
      piquant orchestration really tells. The Adagio is intense, with 
      lots of dynamic shading. Though on the slow side, it is beautifully poised 
      over the ongoing pizzicato lower strings. In the finale, sharp rhythmic 
      definition ensures vivacity while the steady tempo maintains an air of Nordic 
      severity. Klemperer greatly admired the symphony up to this point but was 
      always unhappy with the coda. He went off on tour half-way through an earlier 
      Vox recording, discovering to his horror when he came back that a local 
      professor had been brought in to conduct the rest and the whole symphony 
      issued under his name. That was the end of his Vox association. On this 
      occasion he shocked Walter Legge by announcing that he would either record 
      the symphony without the coda or write a new coda himself. Fortunately for 
      us Legge was a redoubtable character too and in the end Klemperer buckled 
      under and concluded a marvellous performance by faking a grand conviction 
      we know he did not feel. Some years after, with Legge safely out of the 
      way, Klemperer conducted the symphony at the Royal Festival Hall with his 
      own specially composed ending. A recording of this event has been issued.
       
      The Italian Symphony satisfied me slightly less. No complaints about 
      the inner movements. The second is gravely expressed but kept moving while 
      the third has a gracious flow and very clear phrasing. Both outer movements 
      get off to a rather ragged start, then settle into strong, energetic but 
      not very vivacious readings. It is not so much a question of tempo – Klemperer 
      is not especially slow and the well-considered Boston/Munch recording has 
      timings only a few seconds shorter in all four movements. It’s more a question 
      of colour. One appreciates the conductor’s avoidance of the merely picturesque, 
      but a certain dourness seems to want to turn this into “Scottish Symphony 
      no.2” rather than “Italian Symphony”.
       
      I rather expected Klemperer to turn The Hebrides into a preview of 
      Wagner’s Flying Dutchman, and I rather wish he had. Instead, he provides 
      a well-prepared, straight-down-the-line reading that perhaps stretches neither 
      himself nor his players to the utmost limit.
       
      A quite different level of orchestral attentiveness is to be heard in the 
      comprehensive selection from Mendelssohn’s music for A Midsummer Night’s 
      Dream. The overture may be spacious, but it has some fantastic colouring 
      and lacks nothing in tenderness or vivacity. The Scherzo is certainly not 
      presented as an exercise in orchestral virtuosity, or at least not overtly. 
      The mysterious nocturnal colouring provided by the Philharmonia testifies 
      in truth to an infinitely deeper virtuosity than that needed just to play 
      it as fast as possible. And so it goes on, encapsulating the entire range 
      of Mendelssohn the composer, from droll humour in the clown’s music to an 
      almost operetta-like sumptuousness in “Ye Spotted Snakes”. The Nocturne 
      gets Tannhäuser-treatment but works because it has such deep feeling and 
      intensity, while the Wedding March is jubilant and buoyant, the brass in 
      full cry at the end. There are also the voices of Heather Harper and the 
      young Janet Baker to be enjoyed. Despite the deep satisfaction to be obtained 
      from the Scottish Symphony, I would say that Klemperer’s revelatory Mendelssohn 
      performance is the Midsummer Night’s Dream music. It shows him at his greatest, 
      and in an unaccustomed role.
       
      The Schumann Symphonies bring another “Klemperer problem”. So far 
      all performances have been with the Philharmonia Orchestra, which Walter 
      Legge disbanded in 1964, at least partly in order to pull the rug from under 
      the feet of a conductor whom he felt was failing in his powers, including 
      his hearing. The orchestra re-formed itself immediately as the New Philharmonia 
      and made Klemperer its President. Nevertheless, his performances over the 
      following nine years grew increasingly ponderous, even embarrassing to some 
      ears. The “Rhenish” Symphony, the latest performance in this entire box, 
      led the E.M.G. Monthly Letter, not an automatic admirer of Klemperer at 
      the best of times, to “wonder if the great name of Otto Klemperer is being 
      exploited regardless of the results”. For the uninitiated, the presence 
      of the New Philharmonia, rather than the Philharmonia, can sound a warning 
      bell but it isn’t that simple. The trend was downward but Klemperer’s powers 
      didn’t suddenly desert him one day in the middle of 1964. Schumann’s 
      First Symphony, set down about a year into the new regime, is actually 
      the Schumann performance I found most rewarding.
       
      There’s a certain air of defiance to it, a sense of “I’ll-show-them-I’m-not-played-out-yet”. 
      After a grand, imposing – if not always ideally precise – introduction the 
      Allegro molto vivace leaps into life with terrific, stomping rhythm. 
      The tempo is certainly not fast, which means Klemperer has space for much 
      tender phrasing in second subject territory. Yet the abiding impression 
      is of coursing vitality, with a coda that really blazes. The Larghetto 
      is intense, amply phrased with full yet luminous sound. The Scherzo emerges 
      as a lolloping landler with a surging rhythm, the first trio is a bucolic 
      contredanse, the second a run for cover. The end is poetically 
      handled. The woodland revels of the finale are certainly given their time 
      – Furtwängler took a similar view – but the episodes are firmly charted 
      and the end is thrilling with baying trombones. A great performance.
       
      From three years later, the Second Symphony is to be approached with 
      more caution. Yet all is not lost. The introduction is very broad but it 
      does get under way. The Allegro ma non troppo has a majestic vitality 
      and strong conviction. It has to be said that this tempo doesn’t help to 
      disguise Schumann’s repetitive development but in the end sheer guts mostly 
      save the day. The Scherzo is very far from a virtuoso spin à la 
      Szell, but it is quite light and dancing even so. The rallentandos and tempo 
      changes in the first trio come off rather shakily – more guidance was needed 
      than the conductor was able to give. When the scherzo returns it risks running 
      ahead at a faster tempo, but Klemperer regains control in a few bars. The 
      return of the motto theme does make more sense than usual at this slowish 
      tempo, I must say. The Adagio espressivo is gravely beautiful, 
      the syncopated accompaniment setting up a troubled groundswell. The tempo 
      is not especially slow. Only a patch of bad ensemble between staccato strings 
      and the wind band prevents this movement from being a complete success. 
      The finale is grand, almost like a patriotic hymn. A certain rhythmic swing 
      prevents it from getting too heavy. The Beethoven “An die ferne Geliebte” 
      theme is broadly sung. The return of the third movement theme and of the 
      motto theme at the end sound natural in this tempo. So, while the impression 
      remains that it would have all come off better a few years earlier there 
      is still a lot to be gleaned here.
       
      Rather less from the Rhenish Symphony. The very slow first movement 
      opens with a certain majestic splendour but tension is not held and I found 
      myself simply noting which parts just about worked at this tempo and which 
      didn’t. It was a weary slog to the end. The middle movements are more plausible. 
      Though the Scherzo is slow it is well-phrased with a serene flow and the 
      different episodes certainly fit together beautifully at this pace. As for 
      the third movement, most performances of this are too fast for me, and Klemperer 
      is not much slower than René Leibowitz, whose leisurely reading – in the 
      context of an otherwise bracing, exhilarating performance – I adore. Klemperer 
      is more introverted in his expression than Leibowitz, but not less effective. 
      The solemn fourth movement comes off well. But the finale is a real problem. 
      Klemperer’s interpretation of Lebhaft is to offer a perky little 
      march, quite light and charming but it seems to go on for ever. It has to 
      be said that the return of themes from earlier movements is made into an 
      entirely natural conclusion, whereas other conductors either breeze through 
      or slow down pompously. So no doubt the Klemperer formula would have worked 
      in his halcyon days. As it is, if the idea of an expansive Rhenish Symphony 
      appeals to you, late Celibidache in Munich is almost as slow – slower in 
      the third and fourth movements – and brought off with more sense of continuity.
       
      I feel a little guilty in finding the First Symphony my favourite, since 
      the Fourth Symphony is a vintage Klemperer/Philharmonia performance and 
      most critics have rated it the big success of the cycle. As with other cyclical 
      works, Klemperer has worked out a ground-plan where the thematic signposts 
      all come out at about the same speed whenever they occur. So the theme of 
      the introduction, in itself not especially slow, fits perfectly into the 
      faster-than-usual Romanze. And the solo violin figuration from 
      the Romanze re-emerges in the trio to the Scherzo, pretty briskly 
      both times. The motto themes shared between the first and last movements 
      seem part of a unified conception, not a scissors-and-paste job by the composer. 
      If this sounds academic, the result in performance is not at all pedantic 
      because it is done with total conviction. If there isn’t the uniquely re-creative 
      zeal of Furtwängler’s extraordinary realization, there is scarcely less 
      incandescence. One reservation I have is that when Schumann bangs away at 
      sequences in the place of real development – as he is inclined to do in 
      even his finest large-scale works – Klemperer is simply too honest to disguise 
      it. I noticed this at times in the finale. Here the Furtwängler technique 
      of starting such passages below tempo and accelerating through them yields 
      greater dividends. A magnificent, fiery performance all the same.
       
      I hope I am not just hearing what I had programmed myself to hear if I say 
      that the overtures follow the pattern of the symphonies they were originally 
      coupled with. It was cruel to follow the Fourth Symphony by the Faust 
      Overture, set down with the Rhenish Symphony. The less tight ensemble 
      is immediately noticeable, yet one still senses a strong personality at 
      the helm. Klemperer is thoroughly attuned to the grave unease of late Schumann, 
      but as the music gets under way, well, it doesn’t so much get under way 
      as get bogged down. The gaunt but imposing Genoveva Overture came 
      with the Second Symphony. The introduction raises the highest expectations 
      but the main part hangs fire. The coda shows Klemperer could still summon 
      blazing conviction from the orchestra, at least in short stretches. Best 
      is the Manfred Overture, originally the companion of the First Symphony. 
      No lack of fire or energy here, nor of poetry. The music’s restless, uneasy 
      path is plotted unerringly.
       
      The Weber overtures are from the palmiest days of the Klemperer/Philharmonia/Legge 
      team. The horns at the opening of Der Freischütz are the stuff of 
      legends. Here there is poetry, vitality and a subtle differentiation between 
      the three pieces, Der Freischütz romantic and sometimes mysterious, Euryanthe 
      the most heroic and, finest of all, a delicate magic in Oberon to 
      remind us of Klemperer’s success in the Midsummer Night’s Dream music.
       
      If you think Klemperer in Johann Strauss sounds like a recipe for 
      a wooden leg, make sure you hear these three performances. After a gruff 
      opening, Die Fledermaus overture gets off to a delightful lilt, passing 
      easily from point to point. There’s even the odd delayed upbeat in the waltz 
      and an accelerando into the polka. He lets rip at the end. This is splendid 
      enough, but the two waltzes really are wonderful … and authentic. 
      The accredited Strauss conductor Klemperer most nearly resembles is Robert 
      Stolz, and you can’t get much closer to the real thing than that. For Klemperer, 
      as for Stolz, waltzes are there to be danced. You may have a delayed upbeat 
      into them, there may be an occasional rallentando into a new section, but 
      apart from that everything dances, elegantly but steadily. With the difference 
      that, truth to tell, Klemperer has a lighter touch than Stolz, at least 
      the Stolz of the last recordings, and he is a master of phrasing and balance 
      in a way Stolz never was. So in spite of the strict dance tempo he uncovers 
      a wealth of subtle details. An imperishable lesson in how to play Strauss.
       
      The remarkable thing about Klemperer’s rare forays into French repertoire 
      is that he emerges as a colourist and an orchestral stylist. He doesn’t 
      try to make Berlioz sound like Beethoven, or Franck like Wagner. 
      His reading of the Symphonie Fantastique starts from the realization 
      that Berlioz was a classicist and an admirer of Gluck. At the outset we 
      get a more string-based texture than Klemperer usually gives us, with a 
      beautiful sheen on the sound. The classical vision becomes drug-crazed and 
      psychedelic as the first movement proceeds, but retains a sense of latent 
      power. The Ball offers a gentle waltz, only momentarily unfazed by the return 
      of the idée fixe, the Scene in the Country is a long-drawn, mournful 
      meditation. The March to the Scaffold is shockingly effective with “dirty” 
      brass blazing. The Witches’ Sabbath may be slowish yet the transformation 
      of the idée fixe sounds truly lurid, as does the Dies Irae 
      theme, while the bell has your scalp tingling. This recording, made at a 
      time when Berlioz was usually seen as a reckless, formless romantic firebrand, 
      has not always been given its full due.
       
      The first thing to strike about Klemperer’s Franck Symphony is again 
      his powers as colourist. Nasal wind and fruity brass, with even a touch 
      of vibrato, combine with steep crescendos and diminuendos, urgent phrasing 
      and kaleidoscopic examination of the inner parts create a suitably restless 
      introduction. The main allegro of the first movement is broad – though one 
      has heard broader – enabling troubled contemplation and energetic fervour 
      to coexist without halting the stride. The second movement is fairly swift 
      with much play of countermelodies and the nocturnal rustlings of the incorporated 
      scherzo accommodated within the tempo. The initial impact of the finale 
      is that it’s slow, but it actually has a glorious swing. Thereafter Klemperer 
      surges through without the need to slow down for the second theme. The reminiscences 
      of the earlier movements all fit perfectly into the scheme without the need 
      either to halt the proceedings or frog-march through them in the name of 
      structure. Criticism of Franck’s symphonic architecture is meaningless before 
      this demonstration that Klemperer, in his first post-Philharmonia years, 
      could still deliver thrilling performances. I thought nothing would touch 
      my allegiance to Boult’s very swift performance of this symphony. I shall 
      certainly never throw my Boult away – nor Janowski, who offers a similarly 
      urgent reading with the French timbres of the Suisse Romande and in modern 
      SACD sound. I’m not so sure now which I will put in the CD player next time 
      I want to revel in a really fine performance of the piece.
       
      One last thing. If it’s that easy to hold the structure of the symphony 
      together, why doesn’t everybody do it? After all, the model’s there. Well, 
      if you could reproduce Klemperer’s colours and balance, if you could reproduce 
      his phrasing and dynamics, and if you could inspire an orchestra to the 
      level of fervour and conviction heard here, then I should think you could 
      indeed reproduce his tempi too and produce a performance on this level. 
      If you could do all those things, then paradoxically the actual tempi might 
      prove to be the least important part of the equation.
       
      Klemperer’s one foray into Dvorák, the New World Symphony, 
      begins with big dramatic contrasts. The main allegro is a little slower 
      than usual, but not all that much. With chirruping woodwind and a folk-like 
      simplicity to the phrasing, every detail of the score comes across with 
      almost pointillist transparency. No need to slow down for the flute melody 
      at this tempo. The repeat is played, a mixed blessing considering that Dvorák 
      scratched out the repeat in his 6th symphony, declaring “Away 
      with these repeats for ever!”. The Largo is amply phrased but by 
      no means the slowest one has heard. Again, Dvorák’s essential simplicity 
      comes across. At the return of the famous cor anglais theme the sobbing 
      halts as Dvorák pares down the orchestration to solo strings have never 
      sounded so convincing. The scherzo is definitely slow, but with a delightful 
      rustic lilt. There’s more of the Czech countryside than the Wild West to 
      it. It’s actually close to Dvorák’s metronome mark, if that matters to you. 
      More doubtful is the finale. It has grandeur, poetry and passion and Dvorák’s 
      quotations from the earlier movements fall perfectly into place. It is possible, 
      though, to admire everything Klemperer does while wishing he did it a little 
      faster – a view supported in this case by the composer’s metronome mark.
       
      It can be said that Klemperer’s rustic colours and openhearted warmth do 
      not cushion the listener from Dvorák’s pastoral spirit they way Karajan’s 
      super-plush version does. The composer’s voice is always present. My own 
      reaction was that I had not enjoyed a performance of this symphony so much 
      for a long time, and perhaps had not expected ever to do so again. It was 
      a teenage infatuation of mine, yet, while I find that Dvorák’s other four 
      mature symphonies have self-renewing properties at every new hearing, there 
      had seemed to come a time when the New World had yielded up all its secrets. 
      When I last heard it, in Vaclav Neumann’s very fine analogue recording, 
      I found myself approving everything he did yet feeling I could no longer 
      become involved in the music. Klemperer has rekindled my early enthusiasm. 
      So if, as I did, you think this is a work with nothing more to give you, 
      do try Klemperer. If it’s noisy excitement you crave, go elsewhere.
       
      Richard Osborne’s invaluable notes tell us that Klemperer was indelibly 
      impressed by a performance of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony which he heard 
      Furtwängler conduct in 1933. While Klemperer and Furtwängler usually seem 
      poles apart, in Tchaikovsky they do share a passionate but not hysterical 
      intensity combined with steady tempi.
       
      After a portentous opening the Fourth Symphony sets up an Allegro 
      that, while unhurried, never lets up, each climax bringing added power. 
      The numerous contrapuntal details of Tchaikovsky’s writing are clear as 
      under few others except Mravinsky. Elegance and smouldering passion are 
      not neglected but neither are they wallowed in. The overwhelming impression 
      is of an intensity that is screwed up and up till near-breaking point. The 
      theme of the second movement is very clearly phrased, not only on the oboe 
      but throughout, while the colourful wind interjections seem to have part 
      in the symphonic scheme. While Klemperer’s strings rarely soar, in a few 
      precious moments he really gives them their head. The pizzicato strummings 
      of the third movement are not so very piano, but this means that we hear 
      the harmonies properly for once. As so often, it is the finale runs most 
      counter to perceived expectations. It’s slow, but immensely powerful and 
      with such brilliance that you sometimes wonder how it could ever go faster. 
      The “leafy birch tree” folk melody is increasingly doleful every time it 
      reappears, while the return of the motto theme and its appalled aftermath 
      are truly devastating. An unusual, but I think a great performance.
       
      The Fifth Symphony begins with an introduction that is not slow, 
      almost two-in-a-bar. There is practically no rubato, yet the wind solos 
      manage to be freely expressive within the metre. The Allegro emerges in 
      a related tempo, the new bar equalling the old half-bar. This makes it much 
      faster than usual, but then so many conductors begin below tempo and accelerate 
      over the first pages. This is Klemperer’s tempo and he’s sticking to it. 
      Even the second theme is given little indulgence, yet there is an enormous 
      range of colour. Tension builds inexorably through the development and the 
      recapitulation slinks in naturally, without need for any manipulation. The 
      slow movement is launched with a glorious horn solo – could this have been 
      Alan Civil? The movement is amply built up, compassionate rather than passionate. 
      No acceleration in the middle, the broad noble song continues till interrupted 
      by the devastating return of the motto theme. Forward wind and concentration 
      on inner detail mean that the most prominent melodic lines are not always 
      the ones we are used to.
       
      The third movement waltz is elegant yet expressive. The string semiquavers 
      are not played for dazzling virtuosity – not that the Philharmonia aren’t 
      pretty fantastic just the same – and Klemperer uncovers a lot of music that 
      doesn’t always seem to exist here. The introduction to the finale has the 
      motto theme at about the same tempo as was heard at the beginning of the 
      symphony – rather broad. The main allegro follows at a related tempo, which 
      makes it a lot slower than we usually hear, though little or no slower than 
      Furtwängler and Mengelberg, and little or no less enthralling either. There’s 
      a fierce, stomping dance-spirit to it. The coda seems to align the symphony 
      to the “revisionist” interpretation of Shostakovich 5, whichKlemperer could 
      hardly have known about back then. It is not a triumph, or rather it is 
      not a triumph of the person “narrating” the symphony, it is a brazen triumph 
      of mindless vacuity, of brutal armies trampling everything underfoot. The 
      symphony’s programme thus appears in a new light. The motto theme, initially 
      something ominously feared, invades the mind more and more as the symphony 
      progresses, finally taking over as a victory of everything most feared. 
      Klemperer has changed my perception of this symphony for ever.
       
      The Pathétique is no less fine, but maybe closer to the norm. The 
      first movement goes at a broad tempo and is deceptively light and balletic 
      as the allegro begins. The second subject is wonderfully tender. The movement 
      thereafter grows in power and stature. Yet, in spite of the colossal strength 
      of its largest climax, Klemperer somehow manages to make you feel that this 
      is nevertheless a first movement. With many conductors it overshadows the 
      rest of the work.. The lopsided 5/4 waltz of the second movement is slow 
      but elegant with a wistful middle interlude. The third movement covers in 
      miniature the programme of the entire fifth symphony, beginning light and 
      balletic – though I sometimes had the impression the orchestra were still 
      getting used to playing it so slowly – with the march gradually becoming 
      all-pervasive, concluding with a triumph of brutal ugliness. It comes as 
      no surprise to find Klemperer emphasising the last movement as a prototype 
      for that of Mahler 9. It is passionately built up, with the gong-stroke 
      truly chilling, followed by a stunned, appalled requiem. It concludes a 
      trio of great Tchaikovsky performances, though it was the one the brought 
      the least revelation to me, leaving me the impression that Furtwängler and 
      maybe Mengelberg had passed this way before but not in such good sound. 
      This is perhaps the moment to say that these stereo recordings were all 
      state-of-the-art in their day and can still be enjoyed without reservations.
       
      Klemperer’s art remains perplexing. Of the performances here, I would describe 
      as great and revelatory Schubert 9, Mendelssohn’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” 
      music, Schumann 1, the Weber and Johann Strauss pieces, The Berlioz, the 
      Franck and Tchaikovsky 4 and 5, with the other Schubert, Mendelssohn 3, 
      Schumann 4 and Manfred, the Dvorák and Tchaikovsky 6 close behind them. 
      Indeed, only the late Schumann performances need to be approached with caution 
      as not really indicative of the conductor’s true powers.
       
      Yet, while these performances provide me with greater satisfaction than 
      most others, can they be recommended without a string of provisos? How will 
      they strike a person who has never heard these works before? Or what will 
      such a person think if, weaned on Klemperer, he or she then starts going 
      to concerts and finds the works played totally differently? It seems to 
      me that a certain level of previous musical experience is needed in order 
      to appreciate Klemperer’s greatness. The odd thing about this is that I 
      don’t think Klemperer actually set out to be different, or even to imply 
      criticism of other conductors’ different interpretations. He simply sought 
      to give the truth as he saw it.
       
      In a way Richard Osborne’s excellent booklet essay recognizes this “special 
      case” status. He provides a knowledgeable, often fascinating exposition 
      of the performances, with nothing about the actual music. He rightly assumes, 
      I take it, that this set will be bought by listeners already well-informed 
      about the works themselves.
       
      I am also perplexed over another matter. If you search this website you 
      will find that I am often more of a doubter than an admirer of Klemperer 
      in his core repertoire. I thought his Brahms 3 a great performance - I was 
      not so sure about the other three symphonies. His Beethoven inspires me 
      to mixed reactions. Yet these are the works by which his reputation stands, 
      in the common view. Strange. On this showing he was a greater conductor 
      of Berlioz, Franck and Tchaikovsky, and indeed of Johann Strauss, than he 
      was of Beethoven or Brahms.
       
      Enough. If you are not a starter in classical music, and especially if you 
      think that some of the popular works here have already yielded up all their 
      secrets to you, grab this box while it’s still going. As I write, the news 
      is arriving that EMI Classics is passing to Warner. No doubt Klemperer will 
      always remain in the catalogue in some form or other but these massive boxes, 
      the death throes of the EMI ancien régime, probably provide a unique 
      opportunity for anyone who missed out on performances like these to snap 
      them up wholesale.
        Christopher Howell
       
      On this showing Klemperer was a greater conductor of Berlioz, Franck and 
      Tchaikovsky, and indeed of Johann Strauss, than he was of Beethoven or Brahms.
       
      Full track-listing
       
      CD 1 [77.35]
      Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
      Symphony No. 8 in B minor, D759 Unfinished [25.13]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 4 and 6 February 1963
      Symphony No. 9 in C, D944 Great [52.11]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 16-19 November 1960
       
      CD 2 [78.51]
      Symphony No. 5 in B flat, D485 [26.29]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 13, 15 and 16 May 1963
      Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
      The Hebrides Overture, Op.26 [10.16]
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 15 February 1960
      Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Op.56 Scottish [41.50]
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 22, 25 and 27 January 1960
       
      CD 3 [76.28]
      A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Overture op.21 and Incidental Music (selection) 
      op.61 [48.55]
      with Heather Harper (soprano), Janet Baker (mezzo), Philharmonia Chorus
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 28-29 January and 16 February 1960
      Symphony No. 4 in A, Op.90 Italian [27.22]
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 15, 17 and 19 February 1960
       
      CD 4 [76.48]
      Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
      Symphony No. 1 in B flat, Op.38 Spring [35.36]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 21-23, 25 and 27 October 1965
      Symphony No. 2 in C, Op.61 [41.08]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 3, 5 and 6 October 1968
       
      CD 5 [77.11]
      Symphony No. 3 in E flat, Op.97 Rhenish [38.55]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 5-8 February 1969
      Symphony No. 4 in D minor, Op.120 [28.25]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 4-5 May 1960
      Scenes from Goethe’s Faust , WoO 3: Overture 
      [9.38]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 8 February 1969
       
      CD 6 [79.02]
      Genoveva, Op.81: Overture [9.52]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 7 October 1968
      Manfred, Op.115: Overture [12.30]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 21-23, 25 and 27 October 1965
      Carl Maria von WEBER (1786-1826)
      Der Freischütz, J277: Overture [9.37]
      Euryanthe, J291: Overture [8.53]
      Oberon, J306: Overture [9.34]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 5-6 May and 28 September 1960
      Johann STRAUSS I (1825-1899)
      Die Fledermaus (1894): Overture [8.36]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 30 October and 2 November 1961
      Wiener Blut, Op.354 [8.32]
      Kaiserwalzer, Op.437 [10.54]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 20 October 1961
       
      CDs 7-8 [75.07 + 67.17]
      Hector BERLIOZ (1803-1869)
      Symphonie Fantastique, Op.14 [57.06]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 23-26 April and 17-18 September 1963
      César FRANCK (1822-1890)
      Symphony in D minor (1888) [39.26]*
      rec. Abbey Road Studio No 1, London, 10-12 and 14-15 February 1966
      Antonín DVORÁK (1841-1904)
      Symphony No. 9 in E minor, Op.95 From the New World [45.38]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 30-31 October and 1-2 November 1963
       
      CDs 9-10 [62.38 + 75.10]
      Piotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
      Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op.36 [44.01]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 23-25 January and 2 February 1963
      Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op.64 [45.52]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 16-19 and 21 January 1963
      Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op.74 Pathétique [47.33]
      rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 18-20 October 1961
       
      Philharmonia Orchestra, New Philharmonia Orchestra*
    
       
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