Beethoven: Symphonies 1-9/Blomstedt

David Hurwitz

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

Herbert Blomstedt’s Beethoven cycle with the Staatskapelle Dresden is one of the great ones, as much for the magnificent playing of this finest of all German orchestras as for Blomstedt’s effortlessly musical interpretations. The only possible weak link here might be the first movement of the Fifth, which lacks the sheer intensity that, say, Carlos Kleiber brings to it. On the other hand, Blomstedt’s more emotionally balanced conception is so well realized that I’m inclined to give him credit for bringing off an unconventional interpretation, particularly as the remainder of the symphony lacks for nothing in excitement or sheer power.

Highlights of this cycle are many: a grand and glorious Eroica, a lithe and lyrical Second and Fourth, a pellucid Sixth with luminous wind playing, an exciting Ninth sporting fantastically buoyant strings in the Scherzo and a marvelously well sung finale, and a transcendentally great performance of the Seventh, with rip-roaring horns and perfect pacing throughout. The recordings, made in Dresden’s Lucaskirche in the late 1970s and early ’80s, put a silvery sheen around the players (winds especially) and strike an excellent balance between clarity and warmth. At the Brilliant Classics price, you can’t afford not to own this set. [6/23/2002]


Recording Details:

Reference Recording: This One, Wand (RCA), Böhm (DG), Szell (Sony), Barenboim (Teldec)

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN - Symphonies Nos. 1-9

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