The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: samsmash
Date: 2014-10-05 17:36
Hi all,
Does anyone have an opinion on the correct speed for the rondo of Spohr's first clarinet concerto as I've heard massive differences in Meyer and Leister's recordings - Leister's slower rendition being my preferred version.
Thanks
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Author: Caroline Smale
Date: 2014-10-06 00:09
Does each player make a convincing musical argument, if it sounds right then that is what counts.
If played so fast that clarity and harmonic detail becomes blurred then it's too fast.
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Author: John Peacock
Date: 2014-10-06 01:26
I agree that Paul Meyer is too fast. Not so much for the reason than Norman Smale gives: it's all very clear even at that speed. But it just sounds superficial, as if he doesn't care about the piece as music.
But I don't find Leister's approach that great either, as it's not varied enough. The issue is not whether the speed is right, but he's just a bit steady about it: too predictable (and not enough dynamic contrast). You can overdo the tempo variations: Ottensamer approaches Meyer's speeds at times, but is much slower overall (5:59 vs 5:36). The most satisfying performances balance exciting but not trivialised semiquavers with a tasteful amount of rubato. Michael Collins has rightly been praised in this piece, but my favourite is Gervase de Peyer. His 1961 version caught him at his peak, and I think it's one of the best things he ever committed to disc (having a clarinettist conductor in Colin Davis probably helped).
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