@edgewear
I just streamed the Klemperer 7&8 via Qobuz. They are very good, but I find many of the same issues that bedevil many of Klemperer’s Beethoven and Mozart recordings from the same era have, namely some rhythmic inflexibility
and sort of pulling of punches. For example, try the Doom Music from 8/I.Some how Klemperer just doesn’t quite hit it with the elemental force that Karajan, Giulini, or Wand can summon. He is an old bear, still capable of great things, but not quite what he used to be (it’s a revelation to hear Klemperer recordings from the forties and early fifties and compare them to the familiar stereo work with the Philharmonia).
Before I paint late Klemperer with a broad brush, however, his Brahms cycle with the Philharmonia is superb.
I just streamed the Klemperer 7&8 via Qobuz. They are very good, but I find many of the same issues that bedevil many of Klemperer’s Beethoven and Mozart recordings from the same era have, namely some rhythmic inflexibility
and sort of pulling of punches. For example, try the Doom Music from 8/I.Some how Klemperer just doesn’t quite hit it with the elemental force that Karajan, Giulini, or Wand can summon. He is an old bear, still capable of great things, but not quite what he used to be (it’s a revelation to hear Klemperer recordings from the forties and early fifties and compare them to the familiar stereo work with the Philharmonia).
Before I paint late Klemperer with a broad brush, however, his Brahms cycle with the Philharmonia is superb.