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            Ludwig van BEETHOVEN 
              (1770-1827)  
              CD 1 
              Symphony No. 1 in C Major, Op.21 (1800) [27.30]  
              Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op.36 (1801) [34.48]  
              CD 2  
              Symphony No. 3 in E Flat, Op. 55, Eroica (1803) [46.50]  
              Symphony No. 4 in B Flat, Op. 60 (1806) [32.10] 
              CD 3 
              Symphony No. 5 in C Minor, Op.67 (1807) [35.13]  
              Symphony No. 6 in F, Op.68, Pastoral (1808) [40.37] 
              CD 4  
              Symphony No. 7 in A, Op.92 (1812) [40.28]  
              Symphony No. 8 in F, Op.93 (1812) [25.00] 
              CD 5 
              Symphony No. 9 in D Minor, Op.125, Choral (1824) [65.46] 
               
                
              Eiddwen Harrhy (soprano); Jean Bailey (contralto); Andrew Murgatroyd 
              (tenor); Michael George (bass)  
              Oslo Cathedral Choir/Terje Kvam 
              The Hanover Band/Roy Goodman, Monica Huggett  
              rec. 1982-83, St. Giles, Cripplegate, London (Symphonies 1 & 
              2), and 1983-1988, All Saints, Tooting, London. 
                
              NIMBUS NI 5144/8 [5 CDs: 62.28 + 79.06 + 76.00 + 65.38 + 65.46] 
                 
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                  At what point does a recording become ‘historic’? Anyone remembering 
                  some of the very earliest and sometimes highly dodgy period 
                  instrument recordings with young Harnoncourt and others in the 
                  1960s and 1970s might approach this kind of early authentic 
                  instrument project with some trepidation. The 1980s was a boom 
                  period for period performance recordings, and the symphonies 
                  of Beethoven were and still are something of a pinnacle for 
                  any orchestra. The Hanover Band was one of if not the earliest 
                  to record a complete cycle on authentic instruments, alongside 
                  Roger Norrington’s Beethoven cycle with the London Classical 
                  Players originally on EMI Classics Reflexe from 1987-1989 and 
                  now available on Virgin Classics (see review). 
                  Also from the 1980s comes Christopher Hogwood with The Academy 
                  of Ancient Music on Decca’s L’Oiseau Lyre label. In fact, the 
                  experience with these and Roy Goodman’s Hanover Band is by no 
                  means the hair-shirt one you might expect. We’ve come a long 
                  way since 1983, but this pioneering bunch of musicians can still 
                  speak to us even from all those years back in the 20th 
                  century.  
                     
                  Criticism has been levelled at these recordings in the past 
                  for their excess of resonance, and indeed the church acoustic 
                  used is a major feature in each. The Nimbus label used ‘ambisonic’ 
                  recording techniques, and these CDs are labelled as being UHJ 
                  encoded. I’ve become something of a fan of SACD of late, but 
                  have seldom heard any of the Nimbus releases actually de-coded 
                  and presumably heard as they were originally intended. The stereo 
                  effect is always good enough, and I must admit to having a soft 
                  spot for the old Nimbus releases with their single ‘soundfield’ 
                  microphone technique. These Beethoven symphonies are quite a 
                  rich listening experience, but the first disc with Symphonies 
                  1 and 2 suffers most from acoustic ‘smoke’ around the sound, 
                  and the timpani are also rather boomy compared to the rest of 
                  the recordings, which were made in All Saints Tooting rather 
                  than St. Giles, Cripplegate. What you do notice almost immediately 
                  is the relative softness of the winds against the strings. True, 
                  period winds are softer than modern instruments where string 
                  instruments are still almost exactly the same, metal as opposed 
                  to gut strings aside. The beginning of the Symphony No. 1 
                  does immediately show up this contrast though, the needle sharp 
                  daring of Beethoven’s pizzicato opening in the strings accompanied 
                  by a mellow band of woodwinds and horns who are somewhere ‘way 
                  over there’.  
                     
                  The quirky qualities in the recording are something you can 
                  get used to, and one has to accept that you just won’t hear 
                  absolutely everything. Having tried to get used to John Eliot 
                  Gardiner’s Archiv recording from the 1990s with the Orchestre 
                  Révolutionaire et Romantique I can also report that being able 
                  to hear absolutely everything is not necessarily always the 
                  Holy Grail when it comes to Beethoven symphonies. Gardiner is 
                  pretty much the reference in these works when it comes 
                  to period instrument recordings, but these can also be something 
                  of a rough ride as well – rather uncompromising in some ways, 
                  to the extent that I’ve not played them much, and certainly 
                  haven’t trawled them out when referencing modern instrument 
                  recordings. Goodman’s Hanover Band is a little softer edged, 
                  not so much in the performances but certainly in recordings 
                  which you can listen to for longer periods without feeling you 
                  are constantly having to feel ‘impressed’. I’m afraid the first 
                  two symphonies are a bit too ‘far out’ as recordings to be regarded 
                  as truly successful, Listen to those upward scales in the winds 
                  in the final section of the last movement of the Symphony 
                  No. 1 and you have to strain sometimes to make out what’s 
                  going on. The opening of the Symphony No. 2 also reveals 
                  some strain in intonation in some wind sections, and the strings 
                  can be shown to be a bit scrappy when exposed. There is a great 
                  deal of verve and excitement in the performances and I can find 
                  much to enjoy in them, but in isolation they wouldn’t receive 
                  much of a recommendation.  
                     
                  A few years later, a different location, and everything snaps 
                  into crisper focus with the Symphony No. 3. The drums 
                  are played with harder sticks and are much better in proportion, 
                  the winds and brass are still backed up a bit, but cut through 
                  the strings more effectively and have a better definition. This 
                  is the kind of recording which brought the value of period instruments 
                  to the fore, with lither textures, a more chamber-music footprint 
                  on the score when compared to the likes of the Berlin Philharmonic, 
                  and a set of timbres which revealed the music in unexpected 
                  and refreshing ways. Not everything is perfect, but the sense 
                  of expectancy and discovery outweigh occasional weaknesses and 
                  the mild foibles of the recording. There are delights everywhere, 
                  from the weight of the Marcia funebre to the squirty 
                  natural horns in the Scherzo and massive tumult mixed 
                  with big holes of Haydnesque strangeness of the Finale, 
                  you can imagine something of what the crowds must made of it 
                  all the first time it was played. An attack of newness had indeed 
                  broken out, and the Symphony No. 3 is magnificent and 
                  extraordinary in this recording. The Symphony No. 4 is 
                  more neo-classical and optimistic in its outlook, but this performances 
                  scholarly examination of dynamics, tempo and articulation makes 
                  it another bracing listen. The Adagio in particular is 
                  something of a trot with a long-legged steed than a real slow 
                  movement, but I like it, and the musical narrative of all of 
                  these movements is a path to savour. Some slightly sour violin 
                  moments on occasion take a little away from good wind solos, 
                  but again the sum is greater than the parts, and this is a performance 
                  which would hopefully still grab wild applause even today.  
                     
                  The Symphony No. 5 is always going to be a crucial work, 
                  and I’m not entirely convinced by the opening here in this, 
                  another one of the earliest recorded in the set. Sustained notes 
                  in the strings are undecided whether to vibrato or not, and 
                  the lead violin is distractingly up-front. If you can stand 
                  back from this a bit, there are good horn moments and the pace 
                  and drama are all there, but that string mix is troubling throughout. 
                  The extreme contrast between really quite close and fairly distant 
                  instruments also makes ensemble coherence that much more difficult. 
                  There is still plenty of good playing here and some remarkable 
                  moments, such as the hushed and surreal opening to the final 
                  Allegro, but real enjoyment is something of an 
                  uphill struggle in this case. The Symphony No. 6 is a 
                  good deal more entertaining though the generalised sound and 
                  large acoustic fights against the detail and chamber-music aspect 
                  of the playing in the tuttis. This is a strange set of contradictions, 
                  but what I mean is that it sounds more symphonic and grander 
                  than it needs to or perhaps even should be. This is however 
                  not a small-scale performance, and the dynamic shading is as 
                  well observed and constructed as one could hope for, with the 
                  antiphonally placed violins a nice touch which adds to the sense 
                  of openness in the music, if making headphone listening a tad 
                  disorientating at times. The muted strings in the Szene am 
                  Bach are lovely, and those exquisite harmonic changes later 
                  on are very nicely turned. Lyrical expressiveness turns out 
                  to be a strong feature of the Hanover Band as well as their 
                  punchy rhythmic drive as the peasant’s merrymaking moves into 
                  a fearsomely potent Sturm. The joyful song is gorgeous, 
                  though the accompanying figures in the strings are sometimes 
                  a bit over-present. In all, this is a Pastoral which 
                  can be relished.  
                     
                  The last three symphonies are all from 1988, the last phase 
                  of recording, and less prone to the troublesome sense of danger 
                  which inhabits some of the earliest. The lyrical against dramatic 
                  qualities in this symphony work very well in this case, with 
                  the wind sonorities having sufficient impact to steer the harmonic 
                  pace. That funeral-march Allegretto moves forward with 
                  a satisfying momentum, and builds towards some tremendous 
                  sonorities. The swiftly urgent Presto crackles with energy, 
                  and has to be topped by the Allegro con brio and is, 
                  though the greater extremes of volume result in some less usual 
                  acoustic effects, some of the wind notes being heard more through 
                  their reflection than from the original attack. The Symphony 
                  No. 8 is also very good, with plenty of theatricality through 
                  its lighter textures. Roy Goodman manages some nice moments 
                  of ritardando as well, heightening certain expressive 
                  corners to great effect. This is sunny but also seriously weighty 
                  music making, creating an eighth which is imposing as well as 
                  generously warm hearted and boisterous.  
                     
                  If I appear to skim a little over these last symphonies it is 
                  only because they are less problematic in terms of performance 
                  and recording quality than some of the others. Not without their 
                  usual minor momentary problems, I’m still happy to endorse them 
                  without going into minute detail. The monster Symphony No. 
                  9 does however demand greater attention. Ambitious music 
                  demands scale and stature, and the recording here does rise 
                  to the challenge, providing decent enough balance and filling 
                  the acoustic better than in some cases. There does appear to 
                  be some spot miking now, so for instance the horns pop up in 
                  your left ear more closely than previous experience would lead 
                  you to expect. The bass section is less powerful in the balance 
                  which is a shame, as a firm bottom is something you really need 
                  to carry this work properly. The first movement is good enough, 
                  though its vast canvas sometimes lacks clear direction – perhaps 
                  as much an artefact of Beethoven’s deafness as Goodman’s leadership. 
                  The Molto vivace second movement extends a vaguely unsettling 
                  feeling that we’re hearing a product of encroaching madness 
                  as well as genius. The music is driven on with a consistency 
                  of pace and within fairly narrow expressive parameters, giving 
                  the mind little chance to hook itself onto moments which are 
                  normally pointed out with greater expressive contrast. I remember 
                  one of my lecturers at the RAM pointing out what a ‘bad’ piece 
                  of music the 9th Symphony was, and I think hearing 
                  this version makes me realise what he meant for the first time. 
                  It’s truly eccentric and not less than crazy, but all done so 
                  gloriously and with such daring panache that we’re all left 
                  agape with a kind of awe of disbelief – we can’t really ‘get’ 
                  it, so it must be wonderful.  
                     
                  Well, there are wonderful things about Beethoven’s Symphony 
                  No. 9, but this is one of those recordings which challenges 
                  preconceptions and forces a re-evaluation. The final Presto-Allegro 
                  assai throws down the gauntlet one last time, making the 
                  low strings ‘sing’ that recitatief before the vocal entry, and 
                  this is done with great declamatory style here. With a relatively 
                  hectic pace established, the first quiet entry of that famous 
                  tune takes us more by surprise. It pops out like a sketchy doodle. 
                  We all know what it’s going to grow into, but in this case it 
                  has a good deal of work needed before achieving adulthood – 
                  an effect I admire. As for the singers, Michael George is a 
                  bit jowly in tone colour in the solo but is a fine bass, and 
                  the members of the quartet blend well enough together. The choir 
                  is very fine, but perhaps a little recessed in the sound. More 
                  recent research has the Allegro assai vivace a good deal 
                  swifter than we get it here, and it sounds bizarre now to go 
                  back to that now discredited tempo of one beat per half bar 
                  rather than one beat per bar – twice as fast in effect. Being 
                  used to John Eliot Gardiner’s generally faster tempi makes the 
                  first choral Freude, schöner, Götterfunken sound a bit 
                  clunky by comparison, and the rhythmic emphases enhance the 
                  vertical rather than the horizontal, although there are some 
                  remarkable moments. The brass in general tends to sound a bit 
                  isolated, and doesn’t mould too well into the general orchestral 
                  picture, but this is still a performance which leaves an exhaustingly 
                  intense and powerful impression.  
                     
                  This is indeed a ‘historical’ recording, in the sense of its 
                  being a milestone – or at the very least part of a significant 
                  moment in recording history, when the period instrument movement 
                  came of age and proved itself capable of challenging the old 
                  order of symphonic orchestras. There is much to be enjoyed in 
                  this cycle, and much which frustrates. I don’t think by any 
                  standard it can make a claim to be anyone’s first choice for 
                  a set of Beethoven’s symphonies, but that’s no longer the point 
                  with this recording and probably never was. This is a version 
                  which can live next to your box sets by Karajan or anyone else, 
                  and be brought out when you feel the need for a change of sonority 
                  and a different angle on familiar music. To be frank, I hadn’t 
                  expected it to have stood the test of time as well as it has. 
                  We have indeed moved on, and performance techniques, instruments 
                  and aspects of interpretation have all been refined and adjusted 
                  as the years have progressed. Just as with modern instrument 
                  recordings, there is no one option with period instrument versions 
                  of these symphonies. Roy Goodman/Monica Huggett and The Hanover 
                  Band can however still make a splash.  
                     
                  Dominy Clements  
                     
                 
                
                
                  
                  
                
                 
             
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