My listening tastes at
the moment have taken me away from most of the symphonic repertoire
(with exceptions, of course). Today, however, I took down two old
favourites dating back to my teenage years: Beethoven's Pastoral
symphony, and Brahms' fourth symphony. The Pastoral for me was always
Furtwängler's 1952 recording (not approved of by the critics of that
era). I enjoyed it again today in its fine Pristine Audio
reincarnation. Furtwängler, for me, fully brings out the spirit
of Beethoven's music. Beethoven, we feel, loved the countryside.
The Brahms fourth with
which I grew up was that conducted by Toscanini with the NBC Symphony
Orchestra, a performance that was fast and hard-driven, with chords
like whiplashes. That recording (on an LP) is long gone from my
shelves. For my current listening to the work, it was back to
Furtwängler and the Berlin Philharmonic in 1948 (amazingly brought
back to life by Pristine, once again). It is astonishing the quality
of orchestral sound that German audio engineers could manage back in
the 1940s – especially compared with the Americans in the 1950s.
Furtwängler in Brahms with his Berliners is far more Germanic than
Toscanini with his Americans some five years later. First loves in
music usually last a long time, but Toscanini never lasted long with
me. Music needs love, as well as fire and fury. Brahms fourth
symphony is one of my favourites (and also one of those rare
symphonies whose finales to which I really look forward).
Lovers of great
performances of the past are greatly indebted to Pristine
Audio and to Andrew Rose, and I wish the company a speedy and
triumphant recovery from its recent IT catastrophe.