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Wiener Philharmoniker, John Eliot Gardiner - Mendelssohn - Symphonies Nos.4 "Italian" & 5 "Reformation" (1999)

Wiener Philharmoniker, John Eliot Gardiner - Mendelssohn - Symphonies Nos.4 "Italian" & 5 "Reformation" (1999)
  • Title: Mendelssohn - Symphonies Nos.4 "Italian" & 5 "Reformation"
  • Year Of Release: 1999
  • Label: Deutsche Grammophon
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
  • Total Time: 76:49
  • Total Size: 339 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Symphony No.4 In A, Op. 90, "Italian"
1. I. Allegro Vivace
2. II. Andante Con Moto
3. III. Con Moto Moderato
4. IV. Saltarello: Presto
Symphony No.5 In D Minor, Op. 107, "Reformation"
5. I. Andante, Allegro Con Fuoco
6. II. Allegro Vivace
7. III. Andante
8. IV. Chorale: Ein' Feste Burg Ist Unser Gott
Symphony No.4 In A, Op. 90, "Italian" (1883-84 Version)
9. II. Andante Con Moto
10. III. Menuetto: Con moto grazioso
11. IV. Saltarello: Allegro di molto

Performers:
Wiener Philharmoniker
Conductor: John Eliot Gardiner

Mendelssohn was not like Beethoven or Verdi--his second thoughts were not always better than his first. In fact, not one of the changes he made in his 1834 revision to the Italian Symphony--recorded here for the first time, alongside the original version of 1833--strikes me as an improvement; indeed, the later effort sounds more like a first draft, thinner, more repetitive, melodically less engaging. Nonetheless, it's good to have the composer's refashioning of the score on disc, especially when it's performed as confidently as here, if only to give us a renewed appreciation of what he achieved the first time around. For the familiar version of the Italian Symphony is certainly a masterpiece. And the performance it receives here from the Vienna Philharmonic and John Eliot Gardiner is one of the best currently available: polished and energetic, with plenty of the elegance one expects in Mendelssohn, even when he's at his most animated. The account of the Reformation Symphony, recorded live, is marginally less successful as an interpretation, though the orchestra's playing leaves little to be desired. -- Ted Libbey





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  • Fronk
  •  wrote in 11:10
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This is the only recording of the Italian Symphony 1833-34 version, a very interesting reelaboration of the original version, with which Mendelssohn feel dissatisfied. Really recommended!
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  • olga1001
  •  wrote in 12:03
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I download this again for scans but no scans :(
From my knowledge, Mendelssohn completed No. 4 in 1833 (1st version, generally performed version) but he tried to revise it recalling score and completed 2-4 movements in 1835 (2nd version) but 1st movement was incomplete because he didn't have 1st version's score.
Even after he got 1st version's score again about 1840, he didn't try again.
I don't know what "1883-1884 Version" above means, typo of 1833-1834 ?
Gardiner recorded No. 4 again with LSO in 2014 that is 1st movement 1st version and 2-4 movements 2nd version.
Thanks
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  • Fronk
  •  wrote in 17:35
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The 2014 recording with LSO is actually the original version. Gardiner has never recorded the 2nd version again.
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  • olga1001
  •  wrote in 19:05
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@Fronk
You are right !

I checked now, sorry members :((
Gardiner & LSO (2014) is 1st version