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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_277400716
    Format: 383 S. , Ill.
    ISBN: 2716502447
    Uniform Title: Correspondence
    Note: Discography: p. 373-376 , Includes bibliographical references (p. 376) and indexes
    Language: French
    Keywords: Münch, Charles 1891-1968 ; Briefsammlung
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1822218683
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 2 min., 16 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Water music Selections K. 425 arranged C major
    Content: "Watch out!" Munch obviously loved Haendel's Suite from Water music, which he invariably performed in the edition that the Irish composer and conductor Sir Hamilton Harty made in 1922 (an arrangement for modern orchestra and a version which proved immensely popular for decades until the historically informed performance movement came along in the 1960s and changed our minds about how the music ought to sound). Between 1949 and 1966, Munch led the BSO in the Suite 53 times. During their tour in 1960, they performed the two last movements along as encores, performing them in twelve cities. Munch was never especially noted for his Mozart, but it is still a surprise to discover that he made commercial recordings of only two works by Mozart with the BSO, even though he led the "Prague" and "Linz" symphonies a few times. His principal flautist, Doriot Anthony Dwyer (who was the first woman to hold a principal position, apart from harp, in an American orchestra), recently watched some of this programme and said: "He did everything well; he was a strong musician, so of course his Mozart was good." Asked what she would say about Munch to someone who had not encountered his conducting before, she had only two words: "Watch out!" Charles Munch, the BSO, and the television. Between 1955 and 1979, Boston's public television station WGBH televised more than one hundred and fifty live concerts by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. More than a hundred of these performances survive in the archives of the station and of the Boston Symphony. Because they exist in several generations of various media and have been surrounded by legal issues, access had been impossible, even for researchers, let alone for the interested musical public. This programme, as well as most of the ICA Classics collection programmes, is available for the first time. Music director Charles Munch launched the Boston Symphony Orchestra into television in 1955. "Le Beau Charles," as he was sometimes called, was appointed in Boston in 1949, while he was by 58 years old and in his seventeenth season as a conductor. This position brought him to the summit of his career. He spent thirteen years as music director in Boston, during which he explored a wide range of repertoire
    Note: Water music suite. No. 1-3 / , Symphony no. 36 in C major, K. 425 "Linz" ; , Symphony no. 38 in D major, K. 504, "Prague" /
    Language: Undetermined
    Keywords: Webcast
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1822220076
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 8 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Ma mère l'oye (Piano duet) orchestra arranged Ibéria
    Content: From 1958 to 1961, some of the earliest televised concerts with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and their Music Director, Charles Munch. Celebrated for his performances of French music, Munch was an authority on the works featured on this DVD, all of which were composed during his lifetime. More than fifty years later, his recordings of French music remain a permanent standard of reference. Musical Programme: Maurice Ravel, Ma Mère l'Oye -- Suite Recorded: Sanders Theatre, Harvard University, 4 February 1958 Claude Debussy, Ibéria Recorded: Sanders Theatre, Harvard University, 31 October 1961 Claude Debussy, La Mer Recorded: Sanders Theater, Harvard University, 28 October 1958
    Note: Ma mère l'oye suite / , Iberia, Images pour orchestre no. 2 ; , La mer, trois esquisses symphoniques pour orchestre /
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1822219841
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 1 min., 56 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Symphonies no. 3, op. 56 A minor
    Content: Mendelssohn was a skilled draughtsman and water colourist. He drew and painted all his life, and when he went to Scotlan and Italy in an era before the invetion of the camera, he fixed his memories by drawing his favourite sites. He also recorded his travels in music. He visited Scotland in 1829 when he was twenty years old and in Holyrood Castle, contemplating the chambers of Mary Queen of Scots, he found the beginning of his Scottish Symphony. Paradoxically, this most spontaneous and fluent of composers took thirteen years to finish the symphony. Charles Munch and the BSO recorded famous performances of Felix Mendelssohn's last three symphonies for RCA Victor that have remained available for more than fifty years, so it comes as a surprise that the composer's music did not figure as prominently as one might think in the repertoire that Munch conducted with the BSO during his tenure as music director. Munch left well-known recordings of the last three Mendelssohn symphonies with the BSO and of course conducted all three in concert, but not very often -- No. 3, the "Scottish," nine times in just one season (including tour performances); No. 4, the "Italian," sixteen times in two seasons. He conducted No 5, the "Reformation," more often than the others (twenty-two times in three seasons), and it is apparently the only work by Mendelssohn that he recorded with an orchestra other than the BSO
    Language: Undetermined
    Keywords: Webcast
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1822219914
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 17 min., 23 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Symphonies H. I, 98 B♭ major
    Content: Haydn is a composer well matched to Munch's genial and rambunctious temperament, and this performance televised from the BSO's 'Cambridge series' in the Sanders Theatre at Harvard University is delightful. Munch uses a reduced orchestra that does not play with reduced energy; that wasn't his way. The gentle, tender rubato he brings to the slow movement, Haydn's memorial to Mozart, is ravishing, and the momentum and brio in the faster music feel jurst right. Most important of all, both conductor and orchestra know how to turn on a dime -- and that is essential to the element of the unexpected that makes all of Haydn's symphonies, and not just No. 94. At points it looks as if Munch is letting the music bubble and course through him; he never struggles to keep it within its banks. Bruckner's Symphony No. 7 is as unexpected as a performance as it is as a repertoire choice. Sometimes this results from Munch's adherence to Bruckner's directives, sometimes it comes from ignoring them. For example, the score indicates the great Adagio should be 'Sehr feierlich', very solmen, but Munch makes it positively fiery. Bruckner adds that it should be 'sehr langsam' (very slow) but Munch chooses to move it along, clocking in at about eighteen minutes, knocking from three to five minutes off more traditional timings. Munch also belongs to the company of those conductors who don't believe the handwritten instruction in the score to cancel the mighty cymbal crash at the climax; the handscript is not Bruckner's. As the climax approaches Munch grins with excited anticipation; he's worked up quite a head of steam, and the camera makes sure we don't miss the moment when the lid comes flying right off the pot. The camera is naturally fascinated by the unusual Wagner tubas, but Munch does not seem interested in the traditional heavy-brown-gravy Bruckner-sonority; instead everything is bright and clear and forward-mmoving, and the climaxes are paroxysms. The Scherzo is particularly exhilarating at Munch's tempo, and the patrician conductor has no problem getting down into the rough rural mode. Munch's results are, according to taste, garish, rushed and unconvincing, or illuminating in the way that contrarian views often are. He does observe, or invent, the 'frequent changes of tempo not noted [in the score]' that Bruckner wrote of in a letter to the conductor Arthur Nikisch (one of Munch's predecessors as BSO music director). And, if you invoke another criterion, Munch's performance is authentic because this is how he learned it in his gallery years as an orchestral player, how he feels and hears the music, how he believes it should go. And the audience that night in Sanders Theatre didn't seem to mind at all
    Note: Symphony no. 98 in B flat major, Hob. I: 98 / , Symphony no. 7 in E major, WAB 107 /
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1822219957
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 10 min., 37 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Meistersinger von Nürnberg Selections Suite D minor
    Content: Between 1955 and 1979, Boston's public television station WGBH televised more than one hundred and fifty live concerts by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Four music directors were featured in the series -- Charles Munch, Erich Leinsdorf, William Steinberg and Seiji Ozawa --, as well as a dozen prominent guest conductors. More than a hundred of these performances survive in the archives of the station and on the Boston Symphony. Because they exist in several generations of various media and have been surrounded by legal issues, access has been impossible even for researchers, let alone for the interested musical public. Appointed to the Boston position in 1949, Charles Munch explored during his thirteen years as music director of the orchestra a wide range of repertoire from the Baroque (Bach was a particular passion) to the contemporary. He led sixty-eight world premieres or American premieres there, the last of them being Leonard Bernstein's Symphony No. 3 "Kaddish", while the composer looked on from the balcony. His greatest renown, however, came for his performances of French music by Berlioz, Debussy, Saint-Saëns and Ravel, as well as such living composers as Honegger, Roussel, Poulenc and Dutilleux. His activities as a recording conductor spanned more than three decades (1935-68), and some of the recordings of French repertoire that he made with the Boston Symphony Orchestra have sold steadily for fifty years and more and remain a permanent standard of reference. This programme features a quintessentially French piece, the suite from Fauré's incidental music for Maeterlinck's play Pelléas et Mélisande, and excerpts from a definitive German work, Wagner's Meistersinger, as well as the most German of "French" symphonies, Franck's in D Minor. (Franck, of course, was Belgian, like Maeterlinck.) Charles Munch was Alsatian and fluent both in German and French languages and music. All of these pieces were in his active repertoire as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra
    Note: The mastersingers of Nuremberg (excerpts) / , Symphony in D minor / , Pelléas et Mélisande, suite for orchestra op. 80 /
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_182221968X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 15 min., 41 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Genoveva D. 485 Ouvertüre B♭ major
    Content: During his thirtheen years as music director in Boston, Charles Munch explored a wide range of repertoire from de Baroque (Bach was a particular passion) to the contemporary. Robert Schumann's Symphony no. 2 entered the repertoire of the Boston Symphony Orchestra in its first season in 1881, and the orchestra has since played it frequently under twenty-five different conductors, including most of the music directors from Sir George Henschel to James Levine. Charles Munch greatly admired the work and programmed it in four different Boston Symphony Orchestra seasons. Like all conductors who love Schumann, Munch was partial to the overture to the composer's only opera Genoveva. Schumann composed the overture before he had even finished working on the libretto, so it is not a summary of the themes of the opera; instead it is a kind of poem that summons up Genoveva's dark and emotional landscape and atmosphere. Munch's reading of the overture is higly dramatic and theatrical, and it is visibly clear that he enjoys working up a head in this music. Schubert's Fifth Symphony is a breezy and cheerful work that Munch led to Boston, at Tanglewood, and on tour in the 1961-1962 season. Munch's approach to this work is genial: at one moment he doesn't even conduct, but he lets the players take over, and he obviously delights in the music as much as the musicians and the audience do
    Note: Genoveva, op. 81. Overture / , Symphony no. 5 in B flat major, D. 485 / , Symphony no. 2 in C major, op. 61 /
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 8
    UID:
    gbv_1822220017
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 22 min., 54 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Geschöpfe des Prometheus Selections no. 4, op. 60 B♭ major
    Content: This film features some of the earliest televised concerts with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and their Music Director, Charles Munch. While the material has been restored using the greatest care and state-of-the-art techniques, certain visual artefacts and distortions remain in some instances due to the age of the film. Despite this, it remains of exceptional musical interest and historic value. This performance of extracts from The Creatures of Prometheus is a rare one, Munch having only conducted the ballet at the BSO in one season. He breathes life into his performances of Symphonies Nos. 4 and 5, which are executed with excitement, exuberance and panache
    Note: Die Geschöpfe des Prometheus, op. 43 (excerpts) , Symphony no. 4 in B-flat major, op. 60 , Symphony no. 5 in C minor, op. 67.
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 9
    UID:
    gbv_1822229251
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 25 min., 23 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Symphonies no. 1, op. 68 C minor
    Content: The music of Johannes Brahms is central repertoire for every symphonic ensemble, and it was certainly central repertoire for Charles Munch. During his years as violinist and orchestral player in Germany, he must have played the entire Brahms canon, and the First Symphony was on the programme of his first Paris concert as a conductor in 1932 -- the event that launched his glorious new career on the podium. The statistics for Munch's performances of the Brahms Symphonies are impressive. The performances on this programme come from late in Munch's Boston tenure; he had just turned seventy when the First Symphony was telecast. His health had long been a problem, but once on the podium his focus, energy and stamina were remarkable. In every shot of the conductor, we can see what pleasure he took in the music itself. In steeplechase moments, like the trio of Second Symphony's scherzo, his delight in the music and the joy he felt in conducting it are fully visible
    Language: Undetermined
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