lørdag, februar 28, 2009

Inspiration - from Nielsen to Tippet

Inspiration for what to hear can comme from many different places. A couple of days ago our clock-radio woke us by playing the middle movement of Little Suite for Strings by Carl Nielsen. It is a wonderfully light swirling and airy waltz that could only be the start of a beautiful sunny day. 

I had to hear the complete suite the same evening. It was a fresh sounding but quite old Danish recording with Carl Garaguly leading the Tivoli Symphony Orchestra from Copenhagen. A very good recording and a fine piece of music. The old LP (TF 121) is from the somewhat unexpected label Fona (a Danish company, today a chain of Radio/TV shops). On the same LP is another recording of the 2.symphony by Carl Nielsen I totally forgot when listing my recordings of the symphonies some days ago.

The Little Suite is Carl Nielsens opus 1 and composed 1883 when he was 18 years old. It is a charming and deligthful piece with promisses for things to come.

Hearing the Little Suite got the inspirations flowing and I remembered the Little Music for String Orchestra by Michael Tippet. Back to the shelves to find the 1972 recording with Neville Marriner conducting Academy of St.Martin-in-the-Fields. It is on side two of an Argo LP (ZRG 680) together with Fantasia Concertante on a theme of Corelli. The Little Music is a more strict and strong piece of music than the Nielsen Suite, but it was very interesting to compare the two. The very young Nielsen had already found some of the style that would later come into full bloom for the mature artist. The experienced Tippet was in 1946 at the start of a new style - still a little stiff but leading to the high point later in The Midsummer Marriage (well, yes - I have also got that in the first complete recording with Colin Davis and Covent Garden. This was my introduction to Tippet, and the start of a fine little collection - and fascination). On side one of the recording is the Concerto for Double String Orchestra from 1938-39. This is a masterpiece from the first period of Tippets compositional styles. That recording must get som playing time one of the next days.

But I must admit - the Corelli Fantasia from 1953 is the wonderful jewel compared to Little Music. It is a complex, beautiful and very interesting piece of music. The grand fugue in the 5.part of the Fantasia is nothing but a breathtaking masterpiece. Many years has passed since I last heard this piece, but the magic struck with full power already during the build-up to the fugue - I knew precisely what was comming and it was even better than I remembered. Marvelous! And the Denon headphones made it shine in full glory. For me they are perfect for all the types of classical I have heard on them, and they still grow better with more hours of playing time.

torsdag, februar 26, 2009

My friend Gustav

This is a translation of a posting in Danish from February 4. 2009

My friend Gustav has written a lot of wonderful music. Well – he is not a personal friend I have met and his last name is Mahler. But I have been a great fan of his music since way back.

It has been a while since I last listened to any Mahler. It takes really good speakers and understanding surroundings to get the full benefit of the large orchestras in the Mahler symphonies.

Yesterday evening he got some playtime again and it was a great return.


It was the Symphony no 7 in a recent recording with Valery Gergiev leading the London Symphony Orchestra. I bought this recording at the iTunes shop sometime during the last fall and have it on my iPod. It sounds good here, but really good it became last evening when I connected the iPod to the stereo kit. When cranked up somewhat the TQWT's (my homebuild quarter-wave horns with Fostex FFE166e units) can shine in their handling of the deepest bass and the complex soundscape at the same time. And without loosing either the air or the details in the recording or compressing everything to one compact lump in the powerful passages. Pure delight.

And so is the music!

That wets the appetite for listening to more of the recordings I have. Most of them are older and on LP. For example no 1, 3, 4 and 9 with Jasha Horenstein. No 5, 6 and 7 with Bernard Haitink. The adagio from no 10 with Boulez or the dublicates: no 1 with Klaus Tennstedt, no 4 with Karajan and no 9 with Klemperer. For some reason I have never got hold of no 8 – even not on CD. I have only got a few of the symphonies on CD – no 1 with Petroschof, no 2 with Neumann and no 5 with Wit. Not any of these recordings can reach the knees of the old LP's. My favorites for Mahler is without any doubt Horenstein and Haitink.

We must not forget the songs with orchestra. On the LP shelves we find Das Klagende Lied in the first complete recording with Boulez as conductor and Evelyn Lear, Elisabeth Söderström, Grace Hoffman, Stuart Burrows, Ernst Häfliger and Gert Nienstedt as singers from 1970 (on CBS). It is a marvelous recording giving wonderful shivers and deep oppression. Das Lied von der Erde is with Haitink at the front and Janet Baker and James King as singers. On CD I have got 2 Rückert Lieders with Robert Wagner conducting the Symphonieorchester Innsbruck and Maura Moreira singing the alto voice. Well yes – quite a suspect recording – the label also hints in that direction “The Rose Collection”.

One thing that fascinate me by Mahler is his way to have multiple things going on in the orchestra at the same time and in a way that every instrument is totally audible almost without regard to what else is going on. For example can a solo oboe have its own private comments contrary to the rest of the orchestra – and be totally audible. In this Mahler in fact reminds me of one of my other favorites in the large scale symphonic repertoire – Carl Nielsen. He has got a little of the same (some times a lot) quirky way of letting a single instrument stand up against the rest of the orchestra. By Nielsen the clarinet and the side drum are typical examples, but they are not the only ones.

Another parallel to the Mahler way of using the orchestra I find in the Gurre Lieder by Arnold Schönberg. There is in fact quite a lot here reminding of Das Klagende Lied. Gurre Lieder is on my shelves in the classic LP version with János Ferencsik leading the Danish Radio (DR) Symphony Orchestra and with Martina Arroyo, Alexander Young, Janet Baker, Odd Wolstad, Niels Møller and Julius Patzak as soloists. The recording was made March 18., 1968 in the DR concert hall – and it was not released until 1974. We waited a long time for that! It is almost symbolic for the time that Schönberg used to finish the composition (and very typical for the unbelievable problems DR always had to get their recordings release during those years – that almost could be the basis of a major historical posting). I am not quite sure if I attended that concert myself. But I am sure that I attended a couple of the great DR concerts in 1972 that first was release on LP in 1976 – more of this another time.

Well isn't it quite a while since I last heard some Carl Nielsen? - I have got a nice handful of the good classic recordings on CD also, they might be put on the music server so the Squeezebox can have a chance? There is the very classic recordings of Symphony no 3 and 5 with Bernstein – those that made Carl Nielsen known outside tight circles abroad and a fine lineup of other older and newer recordings of mainly the symphonies. The classical recordings are naturally also found on the shelves in LP version bought (very) early in the 1970's. In fact there is 11 single LP's with music by Carl Nielsen plus two box sets and 12 CD's. That could be the ground for a new posting ;-)

And that in fact came the 18. and 22. of february and was translated on the 23. of February.
This will be the last of the old postings I translate. Stay tuned for new postings in both Danish and English.

Dette var det sidste gamle indlæg jeg oversætter – hæng på for nye indlæg på både dansk og engelsk.



mandag, februar 23, 2009

Nielsens nr 1 (english)

This is a translation of a posting in Danish from February 22. 2009.

- from Nørresnede, as my late dad would have added. But it is long since I could share my musical experiences and discoveries with him. Now I must share with you!

In the recent days I have heard two other recordings of the Carl Nielsen Symphony no 1. Both with Danish conductors, but very different. And both very right and not as I had remembered or expected them.


First Thomas Jensen and the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra (LP, Decca Eclipse ECS 570, copy from 1970). It is both factually and audible the oldest one. Technically the quality is good, but the soundstage is a little compressed and not as broad and expansive as later recordings – and that is quite natural. I have not been able to date this recording precisely. It must be not earlier than 1957 when Jensen moved from Aarhus to Copenhagen, and not later than 1963 when he dies. This is well in line with the recording being in stereo. The first recordings Thomas Jensen made of the Nielsen symphonies are dated from 1944 and into the early 1950's and all in mono. The major difference to more modern recordings is the tempo. The tempo is faster and more insisting than I have ever heard on any other recording. It is absolutely worth hearing as a fresh wind thru well known music, and not just as a historical document. When you have in mind that Thomas Jensen studied under Carl Nielsen at the academy of music and that he played all of the symphonies as a cellist with Nielsen himself conducting the orchestra it is not strange that the daughters of Carl Nielsen said that Thomas Jensen was the conductor that came closest to their farther in his performances of the symphonies.


The contrast of the day is the Ole Schmidt recording of no 1 with the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) (LP, Unicorn RHS 324-330 box-set with all 6 symphonies from 1973-74). Here the technical quality is at the top, the orchestral play is marvelous and the tempo somewhat slower. I thought I remembered Ole Schmidt as very temperamental and almost violent? It must be time and memory playing around here ;-)

In short – this is Nielsen to my taste!


It is much fun to compare the performances from different times and different countries of the same piece of music. If I myself must conclude anything it will be that Schmidt and Ormandy has got the solid mainstream offerings of this symphony. Jensen has the very interesting alternative – and maybe more original – performance. While Bostock not quite gets it. But it is the differences that enrich.

I wonder if not the next project in comparative record listening must be the Symphony no 5 by Carl Nielsen? Not just because it for many years has been my top favourite symphony but also because I have a whole lot of (very different) recordings – and it is years since I last heard any of them.

Head-Fi - Denon AH-D2000 (english)

This is a translation of a posting in Danish from February 21. 2009.

It had been simmering for a while. Since I got the Argon HA-1 headphone amplifier - or soon after. Maybe the old Sennheiser HD-570's was growing to old? They had a lot of loose - boomy? - bass and missed something in the high end. That inspired a lot of searching and reading on the net.

I quite soon found two decent candidates for a major improvement. One is a true classic – Sennheiser HD-650. They get rave reviews everywhere. But several mention that they first really sing with a good tube amplifier. For example the Little Dot MK III or IV. Well, I have just bought an amplifier? The other candidate that came more and more into focus was the Denon AH-D2000 (the greater siblings are also very tempting but with prices 2 and 3 times higher they are way out of reach).

The Sennheiser can be found at reasonable prices around the net, although is not that easy to get to listen to in this corner of the world. But they have got the Denon at the HiFi-Klubben stores – also in Holbæk, so I dropped in to listen today.



The sound is terrific – and as you can se in the picture they had to come home with me. They didn't have a boxed sample in Holbæk and the demo kit had a scratch, so I had to go to Roskilde to fetch it. It was definitely worth the ride. The good people told me to let them play for a couple of hours before I even listened to them. I could not wait! Right from the beginning they sound really good. If they will get much better in a few hours and perfect after 100 or more then great things are coming.

Even now the bass is more tight and the mids and treble are silky and precise at the same time. As the Denon's are closed they also isolate much better for the sound – both inward and outward – than the totally open Sennheisers. At the same time they are perfectly comfortable to wear. The thick cable is very convincing. It's also nice that it won't tangle and twist every time you get them on or off.

But I am still waiting (not at all patiently) for my DacMagic...

Nielsen then and now - a small composers theme

Translation of a posting in Danish from February 18. 2009.

Carl Nielsen can be played in many ways. Some days ago I listened to the first two movements of Symphony no 1 in g-minor (Opus 7) in a near recent (2001) recording with Douglas Bostock leading the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra (Classico Classcd 299). Something was wrong. Especially the first movement was not at all right to my ears. It was disordered and uneasy. Not tense, on the edge, brooding even ominously uneasy as Nielsen not just can, but almost must be in some places. It was just messy and uneasy, as there was no overall thought and understanding behind the performance. The second movement was better, but still not quite right.

I have to admit that the Bostock recordings of the 6 symphonies with accessories never quite has hit the high marks for me.

Some days later I heard an older (1967) recording with Eugene Ormandy conducting the Philadelphia Orchestra (Sony Classical SM4K 45 989). Thats Nielsen! Here everything finds the right place and sound right and logical. I have this recording on CD in a box set with all 6 symphonies conducted by Ormandy and Bernstein – including the really classic Bernstein recordings of no 5 with the New York Philharmonic from 1962 and no 3 with the Danish Royal Chapel from 1965. This is the necessary set for anyone interested in hearing how the Carl Nielsen symphonies became known outside our local Danish circles.

I have to get some LP's spinning soon – it could be interesting to compare both the oldest recording I have got of no 1 (Thomas Jensen and the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra. I don't know exactly when it was recorded. My sample is on Decca Eclipse from 1970, and this is Decca's rerun label as far as I know) and the somewhat newer with Ole Schmidt and the London Symphony Orchestra on Unicorn from 1973-74.

Another interesting project is the different versions of no 5 – Thomas Jensen and the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic (on both LP and CD), Paavo Berglund and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Jasha Horenstein and the New Philharmonia Orchestra, Ole Schmidt and the LSO and as the last one Douglas Bostock and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic (on CD).

Well – 6 different, that sure looks like collecto'mania? The 3.symphony I only have got in 3 different versions (I think – Bernstein, Schmidt and Bostock). The symphonic music of Carl Nielsen has always been very dear to me, but I have never got the hang of his songs.

I just got to mention another of my favorites – Jasha Horenstein. That man can bring orchestras that are not super top notch to play much better than they (or anyone else) think. It is nothing short of magic at the right occasion. I guess we have to return to that another time.

søndag, februar 22, 2009

To-sproget blog

Da jeg kan se at denne blog har læsere mange forskellige steder, har jeg besluttet at skrive den to-sproget i en periode. Hvis det ser ud til at være af interesse vil jeg fortsætte med det. For at få gang i den to-sprogede del, vil jeg oversætte et par af de seneste indlæg til engelsk.

Jeg vil naturligvis være meget glad for at høre reaktioner på dette!

Bilingual blog

As I can see that this blog has got readers in many different places I have decided to try to write this blog bilingual for a period. If the response - or the distribution of readers - tend to show that this is of interest, I will continue. To make a kick-start I will translate a couple of the last postings.

I will of course be glad to receive any feed-back on this initiative!

Nielsens nr 1

- fra Nørresnede, som min far ville have tilføjet - men det er længe siden jeg har kunnet dele musikalske oplevelser med ham. Så nu er det jer jeg må dele med.

I de senere dag har jeg hørt to andre udgaver af Carl Nielsens Symfoni nr 1. Begge med danske dirigenter, men meget forskellige. Og begge meget rigtige, og ikke som jeg umiddelbart havde husket/tænkt dem.


Først Thomas Jensen og Radiosymfoniorkesteret (LP, Decca Eclipse ECS 570, produceret 1970). Det er både faktisk og hørbart den ældste. Teknisk set er kvaliteten god, men lydbilledet er lidt komprimeret og ikke så bredt og ekspansivt som senere indspilninger - men det er jo naturligt nok. Jeg har ikke kunnet tidsfæste denne optagelse præcist, men den må ligge mellem 1957 hvor Thomas Jensen skifter fra Århus til København, og 1963 hvor han dør. Det stemmer også med at den er i stereo. Thomas Jensens tidligere indspilninger af Nielsen symfonier fra '44 og ind i 50'erne er i mono. Den store forskel til nyere indspilninger er tempoet, det er en del højere og mere insisterende end jeg har hørt på nogen anden udgave. Den er absolut værd at høre som et frisk pust, og ikke kun som et historisk dokument. Når man tænker på at Thomas Jensen har haft Carl Nielsen som lærer og at han har spillet alle symfonierne som cellist med Carl Nielsen selv som dirigent, er der ikke noget at sige til at Carl Nielsens døtre har udtalt at Thomas Jensen er den der kommer deres far nærmest i opførelserne af symfonierne.


Dagens modsætning er Ole Schmidts indspilning af nr 1 med London Symphony Orchestra (LP, Unicorn RHS 324-330 boks sættet med alle 6 symfonier fra 1973-74). Her er den tekniske kvalitet i top, orkesterspillet er storslået og tempoet en del langsommere. Jeg havde ellers husket Ole Schmidt som meget ilter og næsten voldsom? Det må være både tiden og hukommelsen der spiller ind her ;-) Kort sagt - det er Nielsen lige efter min smag!


Det er rigtigt spændende at sammenlige forskellige tiders og landsmænds opfattelser af det samme stykke musik. Hvis jeg selv skal konkludere noget må det være at Schmidt og Ormandy har de gode solide mainstream bud på symfonien, Jensen har det meget interessante alternative - og måske mere originale? - bud, mens Bostock ikke helt rammer. Men det er netop spredningen der beriger.

Mon ikke næste projekt i sammenlignende pladelytning skal være være Carl Nielsens symfoni nr 5? - både fordi det i rigtigt mange år har været min suveræne yndlingssymfoni, fordi jeg har så dejligt mange forskellige (meget forskellige!) indspilninger og fordi det er meget længe siden jeg har hørt den sidst.   

lørdag, februar 21, 2009

Head-Fi - Denon AH-D2000

Det har rumlet et stykke tid. Siden jeg anskaffede Argon HA-1 hovedtelefonforstærkeren - eller i hvert fald kort efter. Måske var de gamle Sennheiser HD-570 efterhånden for gamle? De havde masser af rigelig løs bas og manglede noget i toppen. Det gav inspiration til en masse læsen på nettet.

Jeg fandt hurtigt frem til at der var to rimelige kandidater til en kraftig forbedring. Den ene er en klassiker - Sennheiser HD-650. De får fremragende omtale over alt. Men flere skriver også at de først for alvor viser hvad de kan med en god rør-forstærker - f.eks en Little Dot MK III eller IV. Nå, nu har jeg jo netop købt forstærker? Den anden kandidat der tegnede sig mere og mere tydeligt er Denon AH-D2000 (dens større brødre lyder også meget fristende, men priser på 4500,- og noget over 6000,- var en hel del udenfor det realistiske).

Sennheiseren kan fås til en rimelig pris mange steder på nettet, men er ikke lige til at komme til at høre. Denon'en derimod har de hos HiFi-Klubben - også i Holbæk, så der var jeg forbi i dag for at lytte.

De lyder fremragende - og som det kan ses af billedet måtte de også med hjem. Nu havde de ikke et sæt tilbage i Holbæk og demo eksemplaret havde en ridse, så jeg måtte forbi Roskilde for at hente dem. Det var afgjort turen værd. Selvom de gode mennesker anbefalede at lade dem ligge og spille et par timer før jeg overhovedet tog dem på, kunne jeg naturligvis ikke vente. Lige fra starten lyder de rigtigt godt, og hvis det bliver meget bedre på nogle få timer, og først helt perfekt efter omkring 100 så er der store ting i vente.

Allerede nu er bassen strammere og mellemtone og diskant er silkeblød og samtidigt præcis. Da Denon'en er lukket isolerer de også langt bedre for lyden - både udefra og indefra - end de fuldtstændigt åbne Sennheiser. Samtidigt er de fantastisk behagelige at have på og det tykke kabel virker meget overbevisende, og det er rart at det ikke snor sig hver gang man tager dem af og på.

Men jeg går stadig og venter (meget lidt tålmodigt) på min DacMagic...

onsdag, februar 18, 2009

Nielsen før og nu - et lille komponist tema

Der er mange måder at spille Carl Nielsen på. For nogle dage siden hørte jeg de 2 første satser af Symfoni nr 1 i g-mol (Opus 7) i en nyere (2001) indspilning med Douglas Bostock i spidsen for Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. Der var et eller andet galt, især 1.sats var slet ikke rigtig i mine ører. Den virkede rodet og urolig. Ikke spændt, på kanten, anelsesfuld, truende, ja uheldsvanger urolig som Nielsen ikke bare gerne må, men nærmest skal, være en del steder. Mere bare rodet urolig, som om der ikke ligger en samlet holdning og forståelse bag opførslen. 2.satsen var noget bedre, men stadig ikke helt rigtig.

Faktisk må jeg indrømme at Bostocks indspilninger af de 6 symfonier med tilbehør aldrig helt har ramt plet hos mig.

Her til aften har jeg så hørt den ældre (1967) indspilning med Eugene Ormandy i spidsen for Philadelphia Orkesteret. Det er Nielsen! Her falder det hele meget mere på plads og lyder rigtigt og logisk. Denne indspilning har jeg stående på CD i et sæt med alle 6 symfonier, med Ormandy og Bernstein - her er også de helt klassiske Bernstein indspilniger af nr 5 med New York Philharmonic fra 1962 og nr 3 med det Kongelige Kapel fra 1965. Vel nærmest det uomgængelige sæt hvis man vil høre hvordan Carl Nielsens symfonier blev kendt udenfor vores lokale geografi.

Jeg må snart have sat nogle LP'er i spin - her kunne det være interessant at sammenligne både den ældste indspilning jeg har af nr 1 (Thomas Jensen og Radiosymfoni Orkesteret - jeg er ikke lige klar over hvornår den er indspillet, men mit eksemplar på Decca Eclipse er fra 1970, og jeg mener at det er Decca's genudgivelses label) og den nyere med Ole Schmidt og London Symphony Orchestra på Unicorn fra 1973-74.

Et andet spændende projekt er de forskellige udgaver af nr 5 - Thomas Jensen og Radiosymfoni Orkesteret, Bernstein og New York Philharmonic (på både LP og CD), Paavo Berglund og Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Jascha Horenstein og New Philharmonia Orchestra, Ole Schmidt og London Symphony Orchestra og endeligt Douglas Bostock og Royal Liverpool Philharmonic (CD). 

Hm - 6 forskellige, det ligner da vist en slags samlermani? Symfoni nr 3 har jeg trods alt kun i 3 udgaver (tror jeg nok - Bernstein, Schmidt og Bostock). Carl Nielsens orkestermusik har altid stået mit hjerte meget nær, mens jeg derimod aldrig har fået fat i hans sange.

Nu fik jeg også lige nævnt en snert af en af mine andre favoritter - Jascha Horenstein. Den mand kan få selv ikke super top orkestre til at spille langt bedre end de selv tror de kan. Det er ikke mindre end magisk til tider! Det må vi vist vende tilbage til igen senere.

onsdag, februar 04, 2009

Min ven Gustav

Min ven Gustav har skrevet en masse dejlig musik. Nåh, ja - han er jo ikke en personlig ven som jeg har kendt og han hedder Mahler til efternavn, men jeg har holdt meget af hans musik i rigtigt mange år.

Der har været en længere pause hvor jeg ikke har lyttet til noget Mahler - det kræver både rigtigt gode højttalere og forstående omgivelser at få det fulde udbytte af de store orkestre i Mahlers symfonier. 

I går aftes kom han dog frem igen, og det var et skønt genhør.

Det blev den 7.symfoni i en relativ ny indspilning med Valery Gergiev og London Symphony Orchestra. Jeg købte denne indspilning i iTunes shoppen engang i efteråret og har den på min iPod. Her lyder den rigtigt godt, men helt fremragende blev det i går aftes da jeg satte iPod'en til stereo anlægget. Når der bliver skruet tilpas op kan TQWT'erne (mine hjemmebyggede kvartbølge-horn med Fostex FE166e enheder) rigtigt vise hvordan de behersker både den helt dybe bas og det komplekse orkesterbillede samtidigt. Og det uden at tabe hverken luften eller detaljerne i optagelsen eller mudre sammen til en kompakt klump i de kraftige passager. Det er rent fryd.

Og det er musikken afgjort også!

Det giver blod på tanden med hensyn til at høre nogle af de andre gode indspilninger jeg har. De fleste er ældre og på LP. F.eks nr 1, 3, 4 og 9 med Jasha Horenstein, nr 5, 6 og 7 med Bernard Haitink, adagioen fra nr 10 med Boulez eller dubletterne nr 1 med Klaus Tennstedt, nr 4 med Karajan og nr 9 med Klemperer. Af en eller anden grund har jeg aldrig fået fat i nr 8 - heller ikke på CD. På CD har jeg kun nogle få af symfonierne; nr 1 med Petroschof, nr 2 med Neumann og nr 5 med Wit. Ingen af de indspilninger har nået de gamle LP'er til knæene. Mine favoritter til Mahler er afgjort Horenstein og Haitink.

Nu skal vi heller ikke glemme orkestersangene - på LP står der Das Klagende Lied i den første samlede optagelse med Boulez på podiet og Evelyn Lear, Elisabeth Söderström, Grace Hoffman, Stuart Burrows, Ernst Häfliger og Gerd Nienstedt fra 1970 (på CBS) - det er en fremragende indspilninger der giver frydefulde gys og dyb knugen. Das Lied von der Erde er med Haitink ved pinden og Janet Baker og James King som sangere. På CD har jeg 2 Rückert-Lieder med Robert Wagner i spidsen for Symphonieorchester Innsbruck og Maura Moreira synger alt-partiet - ja, en ret suspekt indspilning! - plademærket giver også et hint "The Rose Collection".

En af de ting der fascinerer mig så meget ved Mahler er hans måde at lade flere ting ske samtidigt i orkesteret og på en måde så de enkelte instrumenter kommer fuldt til orde næsten uanset hvad der ellers sker. For eksempel kan en solo obo have sine helt egne kommentarer på tværs af resten af orkesteret - og være helt hørbar. Her minder han for øvrigt ret meget om en af mine andre store favoritter i det store symfoniske repertoire - Carl Nielsen. Han har meget af den samme lidt (nogen gange meget) skæve måde at lade et enkelt instrument stå op mod resten af orkesteret. Hos Nielsen er klarinetten og lille-trommen de typiske eksempler, men det er slet ikke begrænset til dem.

En anden parallel til Mahlers måde at bruge orkesteret finder jeg hos Arnold Schönberg i hans Gurrelieder. Der er faktisk en del her der minder om Das Klagende Lied. Gurrelieder står på reolen i den klassiske LP udgave med János Ferencsik i spidsen for DR Symfoniorkesteret og med Martina Arroyo, Alexander Young, Janet Baker, Odd Wolstad, Niels Møller og Julius Patzak som solister. Optagelsen er fra 18 marts 1968 i Radiohusets Koncertsal - og den udkom først i 1974. Den ventede vi længe på dengang! Det er næsten symbolsk for den tid det tog Schönberg selv at komponere værket færdig (og meget typisk for de utrolige problemer DR altid havde med at få udgivet fremragende optagelser på plade i de år - det er også lige ved at være stof til et større historisk indlæg). Jeg er ikke helt sikker på om jeg selv var til denne koncert, men til gengæld var jeg til et par af DR's andre store koncerter i 1972 der først kom ud på plade i 1976 - mere om det en anden gang. 

Hm, det er da også længe siden jeg har hørt Carl Nielsen? - jeg har da en række af de gode klassiske indspilninger på CD også, så de burde lægges på musikserveren så Squeezebox'en kan få en chance? Der er både de helt klassiske indspilninger af 3. og 5. symfoni med Bernstein - dem der gjorde Carl Nielsen kendt udenlands, uden for de helt specialiserede cirkler, og en række andre ældre og nyere indspilninger af specielt symfonierne. De klassiske indspilninger står naturligvis også i reolen i LP udgaver købt (meget) tidligt i halvfjerdserne. Faktisk står der 11 enkelte LP'er med musik af Carl Nielsen udover to boks set i reolen og 12 CD'er. Det ligner oplægget til endnu et indlæg ;-) 

tirsdag, februar 03, 2009

DacMagic mysteriet

Det første - og måske største? - mysterie ved DacMagic ser ud til at være hvornår den bliver leveret. Da jeg bestilte den for mere end en måned siden hed leveringstiden februar.

Nu - hvor vi netop er kommet ind i februar - skriver de gode mennesker juli!

Forhåbentligt er det ved bestilling nu, det må da hjælpe lidt at jeg har ventet i mere end en måned allerede?

Problemet ser ud til at være at Cambridge overhovedet ikke kan følge med til at producere lige så hurtigt som bestillingerne ruller ind. Spændingen stiger unægteligt.