0028948417285

Sir Colin Davis: Beethoven Odyssey

Sir Colin Davis; Various Orchestras

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Format: 12CD

Cat No: ELQ4841728

Release Date:  15 January 2021

Label:  Australian Eloquence

Packaging Type:  Box Set

No of Units:  12

Barcode:  0028948417285

Genres:  Classical  Orchestral  

  • Description

    A master Beethoven conductor in his prime – a 12-CD set presenting the ‘London’ Beethoven recordings of Sir Colin Davis, including the Symphonies, a selection of Overtures, the five Piano Concertos (Stephen Kovacevich), Violin Concerto (Arthur Grumiaux) and the two Masses. These broadly-sung and spacious performances, unexaggerated yet alive, are collected together for the first time. When Colin Davis became its Chief Conductor in 1967, the BBC Symphony Orchestra was known as the house band for the BBC Proms, specialising in new music, and a radio orchestra first and foremost. With this series of Beethoven recordings the orchestra entered the mainstream commercial market and showed itself the equal of many more glamorous ensembles, not least thanks to the rich and rounded sonority cultivated by Davis. A 1961 recording of the Seventh Symphony with Beecham’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra had gathered much critical praise, but Davis’s 1976 remake with the LSO proved that the elemental fire of the early recording was no fluke. These are broadly sung and spacious performances, unexaggerated and yet alive with the strong accents and inner detail that marked out Davis’s readings of music from Mozart to Tippett. The five piano concertos with Stephen Kovacevich quickly became a staple of the Philips catalogue, but the symphony recordings fell out of print: they have been compiled here for the first time, receiving new remasterings and first publications on CD, as are several of the overtures. There is an opportunity to compare the young firebrand Davis and his calmer self in middle age with two accounts of the Pastoral Symphony: with the LSO in 1962 (from the same sessions as a previously unpublished Second Leonore Overture – unpublished until now!) and with the BBCSO in July 1974. The First Symphony also receives its first appearance on a Universal Music label. The BBCSO cycle was left incomplete, and Davis recorded both the Mass in C and Missa solemnis with the LSO – again, full-bodied readings that have maintained their place in the catalogue and drawn praise for their unaffected, straightforward eloquence – but his first recorded Ninth had to wait until 1985, once he had become Music Director of the Bavarian Radio SO in Munich. The playing here is superbly refined and animated by a springy articulation that was a Davis specialty and set him apart from the German Romantic tradition in this repertoire, as did the observance of repeats. The most complete compilation of Davis’s ‘London’ Beethoven ever issued, the set is published with a new essay by Peter Quantrill, and a tribute by Costa Pilavachi, who worked with Davis during his time at Philips. “This is an impressive account of the Eroica, notable for many good things. First Davis’s acute perception of every detail of the score … Another outstanding quality is Davis’s insistence on the right balance everywhere.� Gramophone, September 1971 “Quite outstanding. I know of no other currently available version [of the Second] that I would choose in preference to it. Davis’s balance between 18th- and 19th-century influences is remarkably well judged.� Gramophone, September 1977 “Punctuated with mordant, colourful instrumental detail, a Missa that abounds in tortured mystical passages typical of the late Beethoven, and – most important perhaps – a Missa having appropriate symphonic stature … Davis’s stands with Toscanini’s and Klemperer’s as one of the best.� Fanfare, July 1979 ‘Another fine reading. Davis has a rather relaxed, Viennese attitude that brings out all the atmosphere in the work. Never has there been such a feeling of pure joy in the aftermath of the storm. The recording of the BBC Symphony Orchestra is richly detailed.’ Fanfare, May 1982 (Symphony No.6) ‘Davis’s relaxation consistently conveys the joy of Beethoven’s inspiration in a way not easy to achieve in the studio… The slow movement has Elysian sweetness.’ Gramophone, May 1986 (Symphony No.9) *FIRST INTERNATIONAL CD RELEASE ON DECCA °FIRST INTERNATIONAL CD RELEASE ON DECCA

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. Symphony No. 1 In C Major, Op. 21*°
      • 5. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 36*
      • 9. Overture – Leonore No. 3, Op. 72b*

      Disc 2

      • 1. Symphony No. 3 In E Flat Major, Op. 55 ‘Eroica’*
      • 5. Overture – Coriolan, Op. 62°
      • 6. Overture – Leonore No. 1, Op. 138

      Disc 3

      • 1. Overture – Egmont, Op. 84*
      • 2. Symphony No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 60°
      • 6. Symphony No. 8 In F Major, Op. 93°

      Disc 4

      • 1. Symphony No. 5 In C Minor, Op. 67
      • 5. Symphony No. 6 In F Major, Op. 68 ‘Pastoral’

      Disc 5

      • 1. Symphony No. 6 In F Major, Op. 68 ‘Pastoral’*
      • 4. Overture – Die Geschopfe Des Prometheus*
      • 5. Overture – Leonore No. 2, Op. 72a°

      Disc 6

      • 1. Symphony No. 7 In A Major, Op. 92

      Disc 7

      • 1. Symphony No. 9 In D Minor, Op. 125 ‘Choral’

      Disc 8

      • 1. Violin Concerto In D Major, Op. 61
      • 4. Piano Concerto No. 1 In C Major, Op. 15

      Disc 9

      • 1. Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, Op. 19
      • 5. Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, Op. 58

      Disc 10

      • 1. Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37
      • 5. Piano Concerto No. 5 In E Flat Major, Op. 73 ‘Emperor’

      Disc 11

      • 1. Mass In C Major, Op. 86

      Disc 12

      • 1. Mass In D Major, Op. 123 ‘Missa Solemnis’