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             Wilhelm Furtwängler: The Legend  
            CD 1 [71:06]  
              Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
               
              Symphony no.40 in G minor, K550 (1778) [24:11]  
              Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)  
              Symphony no.94 in G Surprise (1791) [22:28]  
              Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)  
              Symphony no.8 in B minor, D759 Unfinished (1822) [23:55] 
               
              CD 2 [76:25]  
              Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856) 
               
              Manfred, op.115 – overture (1849) [12:37]  
              Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847) 
               
              The Hebrides – overture op.26 Fingal’s cave (1830) 
              [10:03]  
              Bedrich 
              SMETANA (1824-1884)  
              Má vlast – Vltava (1875) [12:38]  
              Carl Maria von WEBER (1786-1826) 
               
              Oberon overture (1826) [9:59]  
              Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)  
              Rosamunde D644 – overture (1820) [10:42]  
              Rosamunde D797 – incidental music (1823) [9:59]  
              Luigi CHERUBINI (1760-1842) 
               
              Anacréon – overture (1803) [9:41]  
              CD 3 [71:35]  
              Christoph Willibald von GLUCK (1714-1787) 
               
              Alceste – overture (1767) [8:45]  
              Iphigénie en Aulide – overture (1774) [10:05]  
              Carl Maria von WEBER (1786-1826) 
               
              Der Freischütz – overture (1821) [10:44]  
              Euryanthe – overture (1823) [9:29]  
              Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949) 
               
              Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche (1895) [16:17]  
              Franz LISZT (1811-1886)  
              Les Préludes (1848) [15:40]  
                
              Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra/Wilhelm Furtwängler  
              rec. Musikvereinssaal, Vienna (all except Schubert D797) and Brahmssaal, 
              Vienna (Schubert D797); 7-8 Dec 1948 and 17 Feb 1949 (Mozart); 15 
              Feb 1949 (Mendelssohn); 19-21 Jan 1950 (Schubert D759); 1 Feb 1950 
              (Weber Oberon); 2 Feb. 1950 (Schubert D797); 3 and 17 Jan 
              1951 (Schubert D644); 11 Jan 1951 (Cherubini); 11, 12 and 17 Jan 
              1951 (Haydn and Gluck Iphigénie en Aulide); 24 Jan 1951 (Schumann 
              and Smetana); 3 March 1954 (Strauss and Liszt); March 1954 (Weber 
              Der Freischütz); 6 March 1954 (Weber Euryanthe); and 
              8 March 1954 (Gluck Alceste). ADD  
                
              EMI CLASSICS 50999 9 08119 2 0 [3 CDs: 71:06 + 76:25 + 71:35] 
                
                
              
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                  This three-disc box set is issued in parallel with – and is, 
                  no doubt, intended to act as a taster for – a far larger EMI 
                  box set Wilhelm Furtwängler: the great recordings (14 
                  CDs, EMI 9 08161-2). In this briefer survey, the first disc 
                  focuses on core symphonic repertoire while the other two feature 
                  a miscellany of overtures and orchestral favourites. The orchestra 
                  throughout is the Vienna Philharmonic and the recordings are 
                  all post-war – mostly set down on chilly winter days between 
                  December 1948 and January 1951, but with a final burst of creative 
                  activity in the first week or so of March 1954.  
                   
                  Almost all the recordings are well known. What is equally well 
                  known, though, is that Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886-1954) 
                  was a conductor who rarely felt comfortable in the studio. He 
                  seems, on the contrary, to have been inspired to his greatest 
                  levels of spontaneity and artistic imagination by the presence 
                  – and reactions - of a live audience and the absence of the 
                  technological restraints imposed by the recording process. As 
                  a result, many of his most compelling and individually characterised 
                  performances were given in concert halls and have, as a result, 
                  either been lost forever or else preserved in less than ideal 
                  sound.  
                   
                  The symphonies on CD 1 are very enjoyably done, though anyone 
                  used only to modern historically-informed performance practice 
                  will no doubt find them over-weighty and distinctly old-school. 
                  Lacking the “subjective” indiosyncracies that characterise many 
                  of Furtwängler’s live recordings – but that can become 
                  somewhat irritating on repeated listening – these are relatively 
                  straightforward accounts, though none is lacking in real distinction. 
                  A notably driven Mozart G minor is most enjoyable; the affectionate 
                  account of Haydn’s Surprise is especially warm and silky; 
                  while Schubert’s Unfinished, in contrast, is serious 
                  of purpose and darkly hued.  
                   
                  Of the overtures and miscellaneous orchestral works on CDs 2 
                  and 3, none is less than expertly conceived and executed, though 
                  whether they amount to essential examples of Furtwängler’s 
                  artistry is at least open to question.  
                   
                  Furtwängler’s many admirers will, I imagine, be buying 
                  the big 14-disc set referred to above and, apart from them, 
                  I wonder whether there really is an audience for this smaller 
                  box’s pick’n’mix approach. After all, as concert programmes 
                  clearly demonstrate, from the 1950s onwards public taste has 
                  veered away from overtures and orchestral showpieces towards 
                  more substantial works, a development largely caused by the 
                  change from 78s – well suited to shorter pieces but not to longer 
                  ones – to LPs and then CDs. Thus, even as Furtwängler was 
                  recording the pieces on these discs, they were on the verge 
                  of falling out of favour.  
                   
                  By sheer coincidence, on the very day I completed this review 
                  (17 May 2011), The Times reprinted its 1935 report of 
                  the death of French composer Paul Dukas, in the course of which 
                  the writer had observed that “... M. Dukas is known chiefly 
                  by his popular orchestral scherzo L’Apprenti Sorcier without 
                  which a Promenade season would be incomplete” [my 
                  emphasis]. Could there be a more graphic illustration of how 
                  times – and concert programming practices – have changed in 
                  the past 76 years?  
                   
                  It is also worth noting that, although the sound on these studio 
                  recordings, further enhanced by digital remastering in 1998, 
                  is far better than we are used to on many discs of Furtwängler 
                  recorded live, it still remains rather opaque (though there 
                  is a marked improvement in the Rosamunde incidental music, 
                  recorded in Vienna’s Brahmssaal). Unfortunately, EMI’s technology 
                  at the time was just not up to the cutting edge standards being 
                  forged by the likes of Decca.  
                   
                  Such musical miscellanies can be of interest – and I 
                  have in the past given very warm welcomes on this site to similar 
                  Furtwängler potpourris released on the Naxos Historical 
                  label. But their primary value was in offering genuine and rare 
                  insights into the performance practice and orchestral styles 
                  and standards of the 1920s and 1930s. The 1950s Vienna Philharmonic, 
                  by contrast, is already well documented on disc and, as already 
                  mentioned, most studio accounts fail, in any case, to convey 
                  the genuine essence of this particular conductor.  
                   
                  Wilhelm Furtwängler was without doubt, as the title of 
                  this box set asserts, a musical legend, but I’m not sure that 
                  you’d necessarily deduce as much by listening to these newly-reissued 
                  recordings.  
                   
                  Rob Maynard  
                     
                   
                   
                   
                
              
   
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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