Mahler - Symphony N°9 - Herbert von Karajan (2LP, Digital Recording)
Mahler - Symphony N°9 - Herbert von Karajan (2LP, Digital Recording)
Out of stock
Mahler - Symphony N°9 - Herbert von Karajan (2LP, Digital Recording)
Mahler - Symphony N°9 - Herbert von Karajan (2LP, Digital Recording)

Mahler - Symphony N°9 - Herbert von Karajan (2LP, Digital Recording)

€95,00
worldwide-delivery
VAT included in price for European Union countries, may be adjusted based on delivery country at check out.
Average shipping time : 2 to 4 working days. Shipping is free within European Union (except for specific territories) above 99€ purchase up to 50kg. Shipping costs on quote above 50kg – quote request to be send to : contact@audiosoundmusic.com. No return policy for countries outside of European Union

Gustav Mahler - Symphony N°9       

Berliner Philharmoniker

Herbert von Karajan, conductor

 

2LPs, standard sleeve

Original analog Master tape : NO (Digital Recording Original Master Tape)

Heavy Press : 180g Virgin vinyl

Record color : Black

Speed : 33RPM

Size : 12'’

Stereo

Live

Record Press : Pallas (Germany)

Label : Analogphonic

Original label : Deutsche Grammophon

Recorded live at the Berlin Philharmonie in September 1982

Recorded by Michel Glotz

Engineered by Günter Hermanns

Mastered by Maarten de Boer

Produced by Günther Breest

Originally released in 1984 (as a CD)

Reissued in 2015 (first time as an LP)

 

Tracks :

Side A : Andante Comodo

Side B : Im Tempo Eines Gemaechlichen Laendlers. Etwas Taeppisch Und Sehr Derb

Side C : Rondo-Burleske. Allegro Assai. Sehr Trotzig.

Side D : Adagio. Sehr Langsam Und Noch Zurueckhaltend

 

Reviews:

“In 1982, the BPO's centenary year, Mahler's Ninth was played in an unforgettable series of concerts in Salzburg, Berlin and New York. Two things were evident in the momentous first performance in Salzburg in April 1982. First, Karajan was bringing an added toughness and truculence to the opening measures of the second movement, strengthening still further an already masterly unfolding of Mahler's powerfulessay in the metamorphosis of the dance. Secondly, the LP recording was no studio fabrication. Schwalbe and his men really did play the work from first note to last with a degree of technical address which, by normal standards of human perfectibility, was well-nigh incredible. As the 1980 LP recording was not in digital sound and as the reading had itself evolved, Karajan seems to have needed little persuasion to allow the taping of the final, Berlin performance in 1982, I say performance advisedly, for what we have here is a single performance, though the dress rehearsal was taped as a precaution and used (I would suspect in the concluding Adagissimo) where audience of platform noise was likely to be damagingly intrusive. The result is again exceptional. Certainly this is the finest live performance of a Mahler symphony to have appeared on any kind of record since Mengelberg's 1939 account of the Fourth Symphony.” The Gramophone Magazine

Ratings:

Discogs : 4.28 / 5

Recently viewed