Dave's videos are an inspiration for me, even more so this year, when steep depression is striking me more than ever before. Maybe one day, when life will smile a bit more at me, I will open a channel in which I will share my love for and knowledge of classical music in my own mother tongue. Thank you for helping out in reconsidering older and new recordings, making me discover unexpected gems and contributing in helping me develop a better critical understanding of music itself.
A really great selection. I'm especially happy with the nods to Silvestri and Matačić, two great conductors who have faded from communal awareness these days. Thanks for putting this together in your usual entertaining and informative way.
I am so pleased you posted this much needed evaluation of the Tchaikovsky 5th best recordings and am glad to already own four of these recordings. I first became acquainted with the 5th by listening to Klemperer’s on vinyl packaged with numbers 4 & 6. I will shortly revisit these performances as a few days ago I ordered this set on CD. It has been almost fifty years since I have heard this performance and it will be like meeting an old friend. I am delighted you have included it!
Yes, Finally! I must say, I've been one of those people demanding a Tchaik 5 talk. But it's easily one of my favorite symphonies. I can't explain why, it just makes me feel totally at home. Everytime I hear the opening clarinets, it's like I'm being wrapped in a comfy musical blanket. And those tunes are just irresistible. I already know most of the discography but I never heard of that Matacic recording. I'm gonna give it a listen immediately, thanks Dave! And about Karajan, my favorite one is probably the 1971 one on EMI. The sound is a bit rough, but gee, Karajan milks it in this performance. The second statement of the second theme from the second movement (lots of seconds, right?) is just glorious. The way the violins project that amazing melody, it glows, it soars, it sweats, in short it's absolutely orgasmic. So thank you again for this great talk. Now I'm waiting for the Francesca da Rimini extravaganza!
Thank you for drawing attention to the refrain of that second melody in the second movement from Karajan’s 1971 with the BPO, which I have just played. It really propels the music to another level, I agree.
Hi Dave, i´m very happy that you do this video and I am especially glad that you mentioned the recording of the 5th symphony with Lovro von Matačić, who is one of my favorite conductors. I sometimes wondered why you didn't mention him at all in your repertoire videos, because he left behind quite excellent interpretations (Bruckner 7 with Czech Phil., Scheherezade with Philharmonia Orch. for exemple). Unfortunately, he was not a big fan of studio recordings and did not leave many of them behind. By the way, this was one of Matačić's favorite works and there are at least 2 live recordings (with Staatskapelle Berlin and NHK Symphony Orchestra) and one studio production with Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra (originally released on Yugoton). The recording with Czech Phil. is the best of all.
Thank you, Dave! As always: entertaining and eyes… EARS opening! However, my favorite recording comes from Gatti and the RPO. Glorious playing and sound. Take care, Harry
I had that on the list, but those recordings were deleted so quickly that I thought it wiser to leave them out. But they are indeed excellent. Check out my reviews on ClassicsToday.com.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Glad to see the Gatti is available on streaming, at least. The Matacic unfortunately doesn't seem to be (and you did warn about availability)
Thnk you for lauding Manfred Honeck and Lovro von Matecic! I met Tchaikovsky's ""Hamlet" and, above all, "The Storm" (op. 76, compossed in 1864, when Tchaikovsky was still studying at the St. Petersburg Conservatory) ONE OF MY ALL-TIME FAVORITE COMPOSITIONS!
This was wonderful, Dave, thank you! A suggestion for future series: "10 works you have to hear by......" With many famous composers, it's easy to think of 10 works everyone knows. But with composers that are less known and who are prolific, it's hard to know where to start. What are 10 or even 5 must-hear works if you don't know Martinu or Milhaud or Mompou or Medtner? Ok, I'll stop. I'm enjoying the alliteration. Another example is Liszt. Most would know some tone poems, the b min sonata, a hungarian rhapsody or 3, and the piano concertos but where to from there? He was so prolific. Which transcriptions are outstanding? With prolific composers, it's easy to try listening to lesser works at random and give up because it doesn't grab you. In the streaming age it's even harder, especially with a short attention span. Well, I'm sure you get the idea. Thanks for considering!
You didn't mention celibidache and the MPO as one of the sucky ones. I believe he took 61 minutes to get through it. But it seems like we're spoilt for choice for this work. Great video. Thanks David..
If it puts you to sleep, it serves a purpose I guess... :) Should be sold by chemists as a tranquilizer. And even then, Tchaikovsky's music is beautiful - every strand of it that Celi pulls out!
thank you very much for putting this together Dave. I have my own personal favourites but I’m grateful you have opened my eyes to the portamenti in the Ormandy recording. Gosh it made the hairs on my back stand like never before! Interesting to contrast it with Markevitch’s too because both recordings are on opposite ends of the tempi spectrum but one is no less expressive than the other somehow. cheers from singapore, dave.
I remember that you previously recommended Yuri Temirkanov and the RPO. Having listened to it as a result, it seems to me that he really gets inside the music. It's a fantastic performance!
Lovro von Matacic was my very first Tchaikovsky 5th. I bought it as a teen in, of all places, a supermarket. I still have the original vinyl. And, still one of the best.
I have the Muti, Haitink and Mravinsky but when looking for a single performance after doing a lot of comparative listening I went for the Previn and Royal Phil on Telarc. It's a beautiful performance. Previn believes in this music and the sound is glorious. It's a fine and powerful performance, clear and sweet when it has to be and dramatic when it has to be.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Maestro, I Highly recommend to you Santiago Cañón-Valencia, Cellist from my country! I'd love to know your opinion, thanks for reading!
Great video, I miss these best and worst videos! Nice to see Silvestri and Von Matacic get a mention, two excellent recordings. Andrew Litton with Bournemouth was also a good one if I remember correctly as was his cycle in terms of more modern cycles. I didn't know Wand did a Tchai5 so I just listened to the finale, brilliant sound and intensity just wish the speeding up at the end was less obvious (Silvestri is one of the few that gets this right imho as he takes the whole coda at lightning speed so doesn't need to speed up). I also remember enjoying Previn's with the RPO on telarc.
I generally like Litton a lot, and his Tchaikovsky cycle is really good. I think Dave doesn't mention it because it's pretty hard to find and it seems like you can't stream it either. That being said, there's something Litton does in the 5th symphony that I really don't like. In the coda of the first movement, right before the very last fortissimo outburst, Litton introduces a huuuuge ritardando that I find quite tasteless. My favorite performance from this cycle is probably the Manfred Symphony.
Agree on both counts. The Manfred is excellent and I'm sure Dave has mentioned this once or twice in the past. The bass drum thwacks at the climaxes in the first movement are shattering and the strings so beautiful in the Astarte theme. A great performance indeed
I bought the Antal Dorati mono box recently and was surprised at how good his performance of the symphony is in that box. I really enjoyed it and the sound is remarkably good too.
Monteux/BSO did some lovely Tchaik. Joseph Silverstein once asked then concertmaster Richard Burgin how it was that the Boston Symphony played such tight, no-BS Tchaikovsky symphonies. They'd just recorded them under Monteux and Burgin replied, "Well, you must understand. For Pierre, this IS contemporary music."
I heard Eugene Ormandy perform this Symphony live three times in the Academy of Music. The first time after the long introduction with clarinet, well, when the brass entered in that first movement, it blew me away ! I was 18 or 19 years old at the time and had been schooled by my flautist uncle as to the glories of this conductor with Russian music . Thanks Dave would that some of your viewers could have heard Ormandy live !!
Thanks, Dave. Oslo/Janssons sounds the best to me from tempos to intonation to lack of affectations. I never would have found it without you. Weirdly, in most recordings the opening clarinet sounds flat to me, but big orchestra clarinetists would not do that so something else must be going on. Anyhoo, thanks again!
The Ashkenazi/Philharmonia Tchaikovsky 5 was the cassette that stayed in my car all the time. It was the soundtrack to my long drives between South Carolina & Miami. A great companion 👍
3:20 Donald Tovey - while loving it as music, as I do - was as a musicologist quite realistic about that finale: "I have already expressed my doubts as to whether Tchaikovsky intends his finale to give an impression of struggling vainly to achieve flight, but perhaps the listener will enjoy it best if he assumes that to be the composer's intention". But, as you say, it works.
The Ormandy Columbia & RCA performances are very good but I think he outdid those for his last recording of the piece for Delos, very well recorded and a magnificent performance.
I hadn't listened to this symphony in a while (I have to be in the mood for it), but Dave's review of the Honeck recording got me interested in it again. I bought that recording, and it is full of the passion and histrionics that work well for this symphony. I'll have to compare it to some of the others I have accumulated over the years. I have a couple old ones (Mengelberg/Concertgebouw 1928 and Stokowski/Philadelphia 1934 and the second movement from 1923) that are primarily historical curiosities due to obsolete sound quality, but Stokowski always has something interesting up his sleeve. An old, very obscure one that I have is Oslo Philharmonic/Odd Grüner-Hegge from the 1950s. It's been a while, but I remember that one being fun - I'll have to give it a listen and see how it stacks up to Honeck. Another fun one is Abravanel and the Utah Symphony. They are always rough around the edges, but they always seem to be having a good time. Rough around the edges works for this symphony.
@@OuterGalaxyLounge I don't have that one, but maybe I should check it out. It's possible that I had it at one time, but I moved to a smaller place and had to get rid of my 78s and LPs. I had a few Koussevitsky/Boston recordings before the move, and this could have been one of them.
I personally also love Temirkanov's RCA St. Petersburg recording and Sinopoli's DG recording with the Philarmonia. Temirkanov for the extra degree of soulfulness he seem to imbue in the work, while Sinopoli, as always when inspired, for finding new layers to the work without ever sounding academic or sacrificing the excitement. One can only dream of him conducting Iolanta or Pique Dame!
Two of my favorites are from Boston: Monteaux and Ozawa. The Monteaux was the first recording I heard of it, and I love it still, as it is swift , transparent, and beautifully played and recorded. I like the Ozawa for the reason you like Haitink and Karajan. The BSO’s playing is absolutely gorgeous, and I love to wallow in it.
Back when I was getting interested in classical, the go-to historical recording everyone gushed about was the Guido Cantelli. It's not long since I last listened to it and I still love it now. Matačić and Silvestri are always fun, too. Who do I listen to so little modern Tchaikovsky? Must find that Honeck - sounds exciting.
Sure, there are some omissions on your list I like to mention. Monteux with the LSO (on Vanguard IIRC). His RCA recording has been mentioned by others, but the LSO recording not so I believe. Then: Paavo Järvi on alpha. In your review on ClassicsToday you wrote "Paavo Järvi Thrills in Tchaik 5" (title of the review) and "the performance of the Fifth Symphony is spectacular". So I expected this in this video. BTW the other Tchaikovsky symphonies recorded by Paavo Järvi have never been reviewed on the website. That is strange. Is there a review to expect? (sorry if this appears twice - the first try seemed to be refused of canceled)
Trombonists owe a great deal to Gunter Wand. As with his Beethoven 5th, he brings great balance to the Tchaikovsky which lets the trombones have their moment. I really enjoyed this video Dave and have spent a very happy late afternoon, here in Aberdeenshire 🏴🇬🇧, listening to the Wand which I'd never heard before and thoroughly enjoyed.
Thank you for your selection, Dave! (BTW I'm a huge fan of Stokowski recording). I think that a very underrated Fifth is Ozawa/Boston (DGG)... What do you think about it?
I would be very interested in your opinion about a recording that the Penguin guide absolutely raved about. It was an EMI Eminence recording with the LPO/ Sian Edwards. It was coupled with Tatiana's Letters scene from Eugene Onegin which I absolutely adored.
I liked it very much--her disc of tone poems and overtures was even better, I thought. I reviewed them when they first came out...I see the latter disc is still available, but the there's no sign of the symphony.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Many thanks for your reply. I had to listen to Francesca on Amazon Music and OMG what a performance. I didn't realise that this existed. The tension is immense. Loads of tam-tam. The RLPO strings/woodwind are definitely on top form. The sonics have certainly held up well. Many thanks for recommending this recording. One to compete with Sletlanov.
As a newcomer to the world of classical music, hungry to discover and learn as much as possible, I love that I can use the following search template in YT and your videos will be first in the results: ‘%composer-name %symphony-number “best”’ :)
Thanks for this🙏 your first was Stokowski; mine was George’s Prêtre on Angel. Fairly recent at the time. I was a kid, and the music blew me away. I have no idea after so many years how good the performance may have been, but I notice you have no French conductors on your list🙌🙌
I really think Stokowski's elision of that pause in the finale is a great improvement. Maybe if Pyotr Ilyich had heard it he would have exclaimed, Of course! and rewritten it. I am very fond of Monteux's sensible, lucid clarity yet not at all impassive interpretation with the Boston Symphony on RCA. For me, the bete noire in this symphony isn't the finale but the sheer banality of that oscillating woodwind figure in the first mvt. One of the things I loved about the Klemperer version is he magically all but banishes the triviality of it (which Szell does not do.)
I have owned a LP recording of Sawallisch conducting this symphony that used to be my favourite of them all, however, somehow it has gotten lost in the depths of my huge stock of LPs. I remember that I liked it for its lack of excess and the shapeliness of the performance. It's hard to track down this relatively early LP from Sawallisch, so I cannot recall what label it's on, but I do recall that it seemed surprising that he recorded the music for that particular company. Anyway, as Munch's and Markewitch's recording sank into my consciousness with the years passing, they overtook Sawallisch in my esteem, but Sawallisch's recording always seemed like something pretty special to me.
Oh yes! I enjoyed that one a lot. The intro/motto theme is the most sombre version I have heard in any version And as I remember it the rest is equally expressive.
Thank you for this nice selection. I would like to add a beautiful version (I didn't find it in the various comments) Ferenc Fricsay with the Berlin PO in 1949 (excellent mono) DG. What do you think about it ?
I wish Szell had left out that cymbal crash in the finale. I've collected an awful lot of Tchaikovsky 5ths and the one I keep going back to is Andre Previn and the RPO on Telarc. Thrillingly played and recorded.
Rodzinski's 1954 mono recording for Westminster I think is pretty spectacular. He does cut a huge part in the fourth movement so this may really upset some listeners, but i find his conducting inspired. If you don't mind the mono sound, i think a lot of listeners will enjoy it.
I am interested to give some of these a go, as my ears are so accustomed to Rostropovich and the LPO from the 70s for 5 and 6, which I have on vinyl from some time ago. The recordings may not have the dynamic range of some of the more modern outings but I just love the dynamic intensity that he pulls from the orchestra and the apparent warmth I feel ensues. I have already listened to ten minutes or so of the Haitink and while it sounds amazing, I strangely felt no emotion whatsoever and the tempo appeared a tad fast for my liking. Thanks for the recommends, anyway. We will see if my ears can become accustomed to anything else or if I am just entrenched in the majesterial Mstislav
Ten minutes is nothing. You have to live with alternate versions if your view of a work has become entrenched over years of hearing the same thing over and over.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Ha! Thanks for the reply Mr H. I should have specified, I only listened to 10 minutes of Haitink's Tchai 5 as it was very early doors and I couldn't sleep. I will no doubt listen to the whole recording at some point. I am not one to just brush people aside and I do appreciate his work, which I think I have specified elsewhere. He and the Concertgebouw had an amazing rapport and produced a wondrous sound together. I do have some recordings of their pairing. I will be listening to your other recommends with interest of course as I said, when I have the time. Thanks to your help I have now accustomed my ears to the Sergestam 'Sibelius' recordings which I really appreciate. I am sure I will pick up some other sound nuggets/ different interpretations of familiar works along the way. Have a good day from the UK 🇬🇧
David, you talk approvingly of Karajan's 76-79 Tchaikovsky cycle for DG. I am curious to know your opinion of his 1971 EMI recordings of 4, 5 and 6, which I don't recall you discussing in any of your Tchaik videos.
Do not forget Karajan's Dvd recordings of Tchaikovsky's symphonies no:s 4,5 and 6 made in 1973. They are in my opinion his best recordings. And I have heard them all many times.
The Emi recordings were originally recorded within a new technical ( and marketing) concept: "Quadrofonie". I owned the LP's and was overblown by this sound, which was quite different and spectacular, but later on I became irritated of the loss of clearity. On cd the sound was still more a disaster in clearity, but nowadays I listen only to this Karajan versions of no 4-6, because of their whitehot intensity of the playing , all in "Chord Guy"-style. So moving. And that with the Mravinsky and the Jansons in the collection.
I got a bit confused when you talked about the Svetlanov recordings from the 1990s. I thought I owned one of them, but I don’t. I do have though the complete set of the Tchaikovsky symphonies with Svetlanov from 1967 (w/ USSR SO). In case you know them: are they similar to his later recordings from the 1990s or did he do them quite differently?
Thanks. Then I don’t need to get the later Svetlanov recordings. After all, the ones from 1967 are remastered and sound not too bad. And for a good sounding Tchaikovsky symphony cycle I still have the Jurowski on LPO.
Thanks for not recommending Pletnev. I was at his live concert of Tchaikovsky and found it not good. But everybody was commenting that it was great. I am just an amateur without enough self-confidence, so you have helped me now. What do you think about Gergiev?
The PAUSE - I can't imagine the finale without it! Mengelberg added aa "a" to the B Major chord just before it to dissuade the audience from applauding before the symphony was actually over!
I'm surprised that Dorat/LSO on Mercury doesn't get a mention. Part of a great cycle of the symphonies conducted by him and a fiery but classical account of the work that always has me cheering to the rafters. Terrific Mercury engineering too.
A live performance led by Giuseppe Sinopoli just popped into my feed and it’s amazing. Anyone out there who can enlighten me about him? Sorry to come off as totally ignorant but I was blown away, especially the finale, and all I know about him is what I found on Wikipedia. Thanks in advance.
Thanks, Dave for this informative repertoire review. My first exposure to Tchaikovsky 5 was via the old Koussevitzky/BSO recording on RCA 78's. A warm bath, if ever there was one. You rightly criticized Bernstein/DG, but what about Bernstein/Sony? I recently purchased the Sony Bernstein Tchaikovsky cycle, in one of that label's bargain boxes, and was swept away by that conductor's passionate way with the composer. I had never previously heard those performances. Otherwise Ormandy/Sony has been my reference recording for many years.
While I find much of his work to be inconsistent, Gergiev’s recording with Vienna is one of my favorites of this piece - and certainly my favorite Gergiev performance.
Okay, I hate to be the guy that says "But what about THIS recording?" but for sheer edge of your seat excitement, I really, really like Serge Koussevitzky's recording with the Boston Symphony. It came as part of a 2CD set which I bought for his famous BBC Symphony recording of the Sibelius 7 which turned out to be a baffling disappointment (I don't understand why the critics drool over that recording.) but a few years later, I pulled it out and decided to give the Tchaik 5 a try, and WOW! I was spellbound. The 1944 mono sound isn't bad at all, but the sheer energy and excitement of the performance blew me away. Definitely worth a listen!
I heard Bernstein conduct Tchaikovsky's Fifth at Tanglewood one year - rather, I heard the broadcast. It felt like he succumbed to the "slow" = "profound" disease. It was horrible. He made it sound like Bruckner. Got great reviews in the press for some reason I'll never understand. The year before he did a Sibelius Fifth that was incandescent - one of the best performances of that work I've ever heard in my life. What can I say? That's Lenny in a nutshell. I've always had a soft spot for Ozawa's Boston Symphony recording - that was the first recording of the piece I ever owned so I think some of it is nostalgia - but it's a fine performance.
Bernstein did a tchaik 6th at Ravinia with a slow movement alone taking 45 minutes. He was able to hold attention, but just barely. Last time I saw him. He had a terminal case of the SLOW=PROFOUND disease toward the end. Then there is his Enigma variations.....which still isnt over years after his death.
Do you remember what a fuss was made over the Gergiev/Vienna Phil when it first came out? Well I rushed out and got it and didnt get a stirring of any part of my anatomy! Also glad you mentioned von Matacic. (I've always loved his Sheherezade). Barbirolli's 5th is also very heartfelt and exciting, with an intense, swift 1st movement.
There’s a crazy one w Rostropovich and LPO from mid ‘70 where Alan Cumberland is shredding the timpani part w scales and extra notes and what have you. One to bring out for a laugh!
Thanks for the talk, David. I like all these choices, but, for me, the greatest recording of all remains Solti/Chicago/Decca. It shocked me, because I didn't much care for his 4th or 6th. They were OK but not great. But his 5th, is just stunning, IMO.
It's mine, too. The last movement can raise you out of your seat. He let the brass do what they do best. The entire performance moves forward as it should. I like the Boston/Monteux as well.
So glad to see Szell at the top of this list, it was probably the first recording of the Fifth that I bought almost 50 years ago and that I still thoroughly enjoy today. Every time I hear it one word comes to mind--perfection!
Love your show. Your love and knowledge for music are amazing, and because of that knowledge, I have a curious question. On the Old Time Radio Show "The Shadow" Episode: Night Without End air date 10/16/1938, who wrote the music for that specific episode? Not the theme that begins the show, but you can Google the episode and listen. I think you will love it, as well. Many thanks 😊
Just heard Wands performance (ahem on you tube!!) what a great performance. You wouldn't think that he'd get Tchaikovsky's music, but he did. I thought it was going to be slow and ponderous. To me it's a good example of viewing Russian music through a Germanic lense. And all the better for it. This Wand , the Bruckner guy ?!?😯. Excellent...
The version I grew up with was Abbado/LSO, which I still rate as excellent. Janssons/Oslo is my current favourite. About 20 years ago I bought a CD of Gergiev/ Vienna Phil which I found truly appalling, I was so hoping it would be included in your naughty corner!
This symphony was forever ruined for us here in Australia. Back in the 70s the big sweeping melody from the andante was used in an ad for Winfield cigarette’s featuring the actor Paul Hogan set to the words Aaanyyy hoooowsw haaave a Wiiiiinfiielld! Those responsible should still be in jail.
I don't remember the ad, but the tune was also used as the theme for his TV comedy series (in a disco version!). I bear no ill will in this matter. A little culture for the masses does no harm. (My guess is the tune was used because it has some resemblance to the Magnificent Seven theme, but is copyright-free.)
I know the feeling! The pretzel bike at the park under my childhood apartment would play an 8bit version of fur elise. It's a beautiful composition... Also Beethoven's 5th is brilliant and I like all movements except the first because of how over-memed it is online
Adding my favorites: Dmitriev/St. Petersburg SO, 1993, SONY; Mravinsky/Leningrad PO, 1973, Olympia; Monteux/Boston SO, 1958, BMG; Gergiev/Bavarian RSO, 1989 (unofficial live recording). Now about that Gergiev - maybe impossible to find, but one of the very best I have heard. Maybe one day it will be released officially.
About younger conductors somehow not "getting" Tchaikovsky, I entirely agree with you, Dave. I find many younger conductors to have a tendency of paying attention to superfluous details and trying to tick the box the quantifiable theoretical stuffs, giving their performance an imo superficial "sophistication". But the raw quality of passion is just not there, it's like going to a movie that promises you a climax but you just wait and wait and it never comes.
Well at 69, I hardly think Simon Rattle qualifies as "younger", but I was horrified when I heard his recording of my favourite part of The Nutcracker: "No 8 A Pine Forest in Winter". I thought it sounded absolutely DREADFUL and completely missed the point. As for the 5th - I love Mravinsky and the Leningrad Philharmonic!
Have you heard the Paul Kletzki 1946 recording w the Philharmonia probably done at Abbey Road studios? Issued in the USA on Columbis Entre LP. It is the one I grew up on and still consider it a great one. Never on cd, but you can find a good transfer on U Tube! Kletzki did a stereo recording with some German orchestra. Good sound, but not as good performance IMO. Guild Records never released the 1946 recording but did release K's Schubert 8th done in the same time period. Give it a listen!
Oh dear, what are those “chapters”? “Quinter Vond”? 😂 For a moment I wondered whether it was a joke, now I think it's auto-generated and recognises names fairly well?
I like to hear you SINGING Tchaikovsky - it is so quintessentially human! The comparison between Tchaikovsky and Brahms is a subject for endless discussion - taken together, they exemplify the creativity of the late 19th century. I once read that at the outset of his career, Tchaikovsky wanted to be not only the greatest Russian composer, but the greatest composer of his time. After the death of Wagner, his only real rival was Brahms. Of course, Brahms never wrote a ballet or an opera. The Fifth was indeed THE symphony in which Tchaikovsky tried to measure up to Brahms - especially as Brahms' Fourth is in the same key. With the „Pathétique,“ Tchaikovsky composed a symphony which Brahms never could have written - he is in effect the missing link between Brahms and Mahler. The one genre in which Brahms was doubtlessly superior to Tchaikovsky was the lied - although I love Tchaikovsky's lieder with a passion. It was impossible for Tchaikovsky to be the direct successor to Schubert as was Brahms. We are indescribably lucky to have inherited both Tchaikovsky and Brahms!
Brahms was also incomparably superior in chamber music, but I think you miss the boat here in leaving out Dvorak, who was arguably the greatest of them all in terms of versatility in multiple media.
I've also seen it critically ripped for being 'wayward'. To get it as sweeping and romantic as it is, one must be somewhat wayward. There will never e a definitive performance of Tchaikovsky's Fifth.
Tchaikovsky is the favorite of indulgent type of conductor. Whatever they want to do, they can do it in Tchaikovsky. Very sad, very rousing, sweep, in your face volume. Audiences want the big emotions and thrill. Its the musical shiny object. I like it when I hear it, but rarely get a craving for it. Im going to listen to your recommendations. Maybe it will turn me around.
we are session players all with top music school J or B attendance and degree.. and now in our 40s only do jingles and music for adverts radio and tv.. we are unknows but make good $$. Our question for you, in your opinion is a conductor necessary. If you look on Quora there are answers all over the spectrum. If a band /orchestra with the highest skilled players stays true to the written music with its dynamics is a conductor necessary.. In younger years playing in some great orchestras my opinion is a conductor is not necessary or always necessary. what do you say sir.?
For me, Karajan's 1966 recording with the Berlin Philharmonic is the best. The slow movement is heartbreakingly, achingly beautiful when handled by Karajan. The 1971 might be better recorded but in my view the tempo was better with the former recording.
I wouldn't say that. There have been very sympathetic critics to Tchaikovsky. But I would agree that for a long time they didn't really understand what he was about and unfairly compared him to the German "classical" tradition.
This is rapidly changing, and the change was led by the late, great Richard Taruskin, my doctoral advisor, whose writings on Tchaikovsky are brilliant examples of how to evaluate that great artist.
@@steveschwartz8944 The chapter "Tchaikovsky and the Human" in Defining Russia Musically is a master class in honoring Tchaikovsky in his context. And in his more general essays and talks on Tchaikovsky, he brings up the comparison to the standards of the Germans. I remember in an older edition of Grout (before Peter got hold of it and fixed a lot) that there was a savaging of Tchaikovsky symphonies by comparing them to Brahms. We should remember that in 1876 Tchaikovsky toured Europe taking in premieres and writing about them for a St. Petersburg newspaper. He heard the premieres of Brahms 1, the Ring, and Carmen, and the only one he really liked was Carmen (something that he shows in Pique Dame). As for Brahms, he panned it as boring and not nearly as dramatic as a symphony should be.
I love Tchaikovsky. The ending of the 1812 makes me stand up, wave my arms as if I was directing, and cry. Then I heard Wagner's ring without words and oh the glory, so much glorious music. They're both overwhelming.
A personal recommendation to go along with Jansons, Szell, and Monteux. Siegfried Kurz and the Dresden Staatskapelle on Eterna/Berlin Classics. Swift and elegantly played.
I'm always disappointed at the end if the trumpets and horns don"t pump it higher with the ffff dynamic. I have no doubt that what Tchaikovsky is asking for is for them to blast...not keep it polite.
possible best ever recording project? Vivaldi Concertos cond by Claudio Scimone on 16 CDs from Erato b/c it is consistently warm and idiomatic and affirms that Vivaldi did indeed compose a slew of concertos but, pace Stravinsky, they are not all the same.
@@DavesClassicalGuide I'm not saying that's true...just how it plays out in my own listening...I actually wish I were better able to appreciate other approaches. (Which, to some degree, I do with the 6th.)
Dave's videos are an inspiration for me, even more so this year, when steep depression is striking me more than ever before.
Maybe one day, when life will smile a bit more at me, I will open a channel in which I will share my love for and knowledge of classical music in my own mother tongue.
Thank you for helping out in reconsidering older and new recordings, making me discover unexpected gems and contributing in helping me develop a better critical understanding of music itself.
A really great selection. I'm especially happy with the nods to Silvestri and Matačić, two great conductors who have faded from communal awareness these days. Thanks for putting this together in your usual entertaining and informative way.
Yeah, I am a big fan of Metacic, a wonderful conductor in all kinds of repertory, not least of all in some of the Mahler symphonies.
Silvestri, not with "y"
I am so pleased you posted this much needed evaluation of the Tchaikovsky 5th best recordings and am glad to already own four of these recordings. I first became acquainted with the 5th by listening to Klemperer’s on vinyl packaged with numbers 4 & 6. I will shortly revisit these performances as a few days ago I ordered this set on CD. It has been almost fifty years since I have heard this performance and it will be like meeting an old friend. I am delighted you have included it!
Yes, Finally! I must say, I've been one of those people demanding a Tchaik 5 talk. But it's easily one of my favorite symphonies. I can't explain why, it just makes me feel totally at home. Everytime I hear the opening clarinets, it's like I'm being wrapped in a comfy musical blanket. And those tunes are just irresistible.
I already know most of the discography but I never heard of that Matacic recording. I'm gonna give it a listen immediately, thanks Dave!
And about Karajan, my favorite one is probably the 1971 one on EMI. The sound is a bit rough, but gee, Karajan milks it in this performance. The second statement of the second theme from the second movement (lots of seconds, right?) is just glorious. The way the violins project that amazing melody, it glows, it soars, it sweats, in short it's absolutely orgasmic.
So thank you again for this great talk. Now I'm waiting for the Francesca da Rimini extravaganza!
You should do an entire video about Metacic. He deserves such attention!
Thank you for drawing attention to the refrain of that second melody in the second movement from Karajan’s 1971 with the BPO, which I have just played. It really propels the music to another level, I agree.
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Hi Dave, i´m very happy that you do this video and I am especially glad that you mentioned the recording of the 5th symphony with Lovro von Matačić, who is one of my favorite conductors. I sometimes wondered why you didn't mention him at all in your repertoire videos, because he left behind quite excellent interpretations (Bruckner 7 with Czech Phil., Scheherezade with Philharmonia Orch. for exemple). Unfortunately, he was not a big fan of studio recordings and did not leave many of them behind.
By the way, this was one of Matačić's favorite works and there are at least 2 live recordings (with Staatskapelle Berlin and NHK Symphony Orchestra) and one studio production with Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra (originally released on Yugoton). The recording with Czech Phil. is the best of all.
Love these best/worst series videos!❤
me too!
The lone "bravo!!!" in the WRONG place! Lol! Just love it! We really need a compilation recording of you singing Dave! It would be hilarious!
Thank you, Dave! As always: entertaining and eyes… EARS opening! However, my favorite recording comes from Gatti and the RPO. Glorious playing and sound. Take care, Harry
I had that on the list, but those recordings were deleted so quickly that I thought it wiser to leave them out. But they are indeed excellent. Check out my reviews on ClassicsToday.com.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Glad to see the Gatti is available on streaming, at least. The Matacic unfortunately doesn't seem to be (and you did warn about availability)
Thnk you for lauding Manfred Honeck and Lovro von Matecic! I met Tchaikovsky's ""Hamlet" and, above all, "The Storm" (op. 76, compossed in 1864, when Tchaikovsky was still studying at the St. Petersburg Conservatory) ONE OF MY ALL-TIME FAVORITE COMPOSITIONS!
This was wonderful, Dave, thank you!
A suggestion for future series: "10 works you have to hear by......"
With many famous composers, it's easy to think of 10 works everyone knows. But with composers that are less known and who are prolific, it's hard to know where to start. What are 10 or even 5 must-hear works if you don't know Martinu or Milhaud or Mompou or Medtner? Ok, I'll stop. I'm enjoying the alliteration. Another example is Liszt. Most would know some tone poems, the b min sonata, a hungarian rhapsody or 3, and the piano concertos but where to from there? He was so prolific. Which transcriptions are outstanding?
With prolific composers, it's easy to try listening to lesser works at random and give up because it doesn't grab you. In the streaming age it's even harder, especially with a short attention span.
Well, I'm sure you get the idea. Thanks for considering!
You didn't mention celibidache and the MPO as one of the sucky ones. I believe he took 61 minutes to get through it. But it seems like we're spoilt for choice for this work. Great video. Thanks David..
If it puts you to sleep, it serves a purpose I guess... :) Should be sold by chemists as a tranquilizer. And even then, Tchaikovsky's music is beautiful - every strand of it that Celi pulls out!
Bernstein DG is even better.
thank you very much for putting this together Dave. I have my own personal favourites but I’m grateful you have opened my eyes to the portamenti in the Ormandy recording. Gosh it made the hairs on my back stand like never before! Interesting to contrast it with Markevitch’s too because both recordings are on opposite ends of the tempi spectrum but one is no less expressive than the other somehow. cheers from singapore, dave.
SO glad you mentioned the Silvestri, my personal favorite.
I remember that you previously recommended Yuri Temirkanov and the RPO. Having listened to it as a result, it seems to me that he really gets inside the music. It's a fantastic performance!
Lovro von Matacic was my very first Tchaikovsky 5th. I bought it as a teen in, of all places, a supermarket. I still have the original vinyl. And, still one of the best.
I have the Muti, Haitink and Mravinsky but when looking for a single performance after doing a lot of comparative listening I went for the Previn and Royal Phil on Telarc. It's a beautiful performance. Previn believes in this music and the sound is glorious. It's a fine and powerful performance, clear and sweet when it has to be and dramatic when it has to be.
Finally I’ve been waiting for this video. Love Haitink and Markevitch recordings of this work.
I'm subscribing! This is awesome!!
Yay! Thank you!
@@DavesClassicalGuide Maestro, I Highly recommend to you Santiago Cañón-Valencia, Cellist from my country! I'd love to know your opinion, thanks for reading!
Great video, I miss these best and worst videos! Nice to see Silvestri and Von Matacic get a mention, two excellent recordings. Andrew Litton with Bournemouth was also a good one if I remember correctly as was his cycle in terms of more modern cycles. I didn't know Wand did a Tchai5 so I just listened to the finale, brilliant sound and intensity just wish the speeding up at the end was less obvious (Silvestri is one of the few that gets this right imho as he takes the whole coda at lightning speed so doesn't need to speed up). I also remember enjoying Previn's with the RPO on telarc.
I generally like Litton a lot, and his Tchaikovsky cycle is really good. I think Dave doesn't mention it because it's pretty hard to find and it seems like you can't stream it either.
That being said, there's something Litton does in the 5th symphony that I really don't like. In the coda of the first movement, right before the very last fortissimo outburst, Litton introduces a huuuuge ritardando that I find quite tasteless.
My favorite performance from this cycle is probably the Manfred Symphony.
Agree on both counts. The Manfred is excellent and I'm sure Dave has mentioned this once or twice in the past. The bass drum thwacks at the climaxes in the first movement are shattering and the strings so beautiful in the Astarte theme. A great performance indeed
I bought the Antal Dorati mono box recently and was surprised at how good his performance of the symphony is in that box. I really enjoyed it and the sound is remarkably good too.
Monteux/BSO did some lovely Tchaik. Joseph Silverstein once asked then concertmaster Richard Burgin how it was that the Boston Symphony played such tight, no-BS Tchaikovsky symphonies. They'd just recorded them under Monteux and Burgin replied, "Well, you must understand. For Pierre, this IS contemporary music."
I second that. He did another fine recording of the 5th Symphony.
@@francispanny5068 I agree. Both Monteux and the BSO (together and apart) have always played Tchaikovsky well.
I heard Eugene Ormandy perform this Symphony live three times in the Academy of Music.
The first time after the long introduction with clarinet, well, when the brass entered in that first movement, it blew me away ! I was 18 or 19 years old at the time and had been schooled by my flautist uncle as to the glories of this conductor with Russian music .
Thanks Dave would that some of your viewers could have heard Ormandy live !!
Thanks, Dave. Oslo/Janssons sounds the best to me from tempos to intonation to lack of affectations. I never would have found it without you. Weirdly, in most recordings the opening clarinet sounds flat to me, but big orchestra clarinetists would not do that so something else must be going on. Anyhoo, thanks again!
It was the first classical CD I had as a birthday gift when I was 17 in the 80s. And this symphony is still one in my favourites.
The Ashkenazi/Philharmonia Tchaikovsky 5 was the cassette that stayed in my car all the time.
It was the soundtrack to my long drives between South Carolina & Miami.
A great companion 👍
3:20 Donald Tovey - while loving it as music, as I do - was as a musicologist quite realistic about that finale: "I have already expressed my doubts as to whether Tchaikovsky intends his finale to give an impression of struggling vainly to achieve flight, but perhaps the listener will enjoy it best if he assumes that to be the composer's intention". But, as you say, it works.
The Ormandy Columbia & RCA performances are very good but I think he outdid those for his last recording of the piece for Delos, very well recorded and a magnificent performance.
I hadn't listened to this symphony in a while (I have to be in the mood for it), but Dave's review of the Honeck recording got me interested in it again. I bought that recording, and it is full of the passion and histrionics that work well for this symphony. I'll have to compare it to some of the others I have accumulated over the years. I have a couple old ones (Mengelberg/Concertgebouw 1928 and Stokowski/Philadelphia 1934 and the second movement from 1923) that are primarily historical curiosities due to obsolete sound quality, but Stokowski always has something interesting up his sleeve. An old, very obscure one that I have is Oslo Philharmonic/Odd Grüner-Hegge from the 1950s. It's been a while, but I remember that one being fun - I'll have to give it a listen and see how it stacks up to Honeck. Another fun one is Abravanel and the Utah Symphony. They are always rough around the edges, but they always seem to be having a good time. Rough around the edges works for this symphony.
Among historicals I'm a fan of the Koussevitsky/Boston of the 1940s. You have that one?
@@OuterGalaxyLounge I don't have that one, but maybe I should check it out. It's possible that I had it at one time, but I moved to a smaller place and had to get rid of my 78s and LPs. I had a few Koussevitsky/Boston recordings before the move, and this could have been one of them.
I personally also love Temirkanov's RCA St. Petersburg recording and Sinopoli's DG recording with the Philarmonia. Temirkanov for the extra degree of soulfulness he seem to imbue in the work, while Sinopoli, as always when inspired, for finding new layers to the work without ever sounding academic or sacrificing the excitement. One can only dream of him conducting Iolanta or Pique Dame!
Two of my favorites are from Boston: Monteaux and Ozawa. The Monteaux was the first recording I heard of it, and I love it still, as it is swift , transparent, and beautifully played and recorded.
I like the Ozawa for the reason you like Haitink and Karajan. The BSO’s playing is absolutely gorgeous, and I love to wallow in it.
Love your series, what do you think about the new recording off Petrenko and the Berlin Phil with Tchaikovsky 5?
Back when I was getting interested in classical, the go-to historical recording everyone gushed about was the Guido Cantelli. It's not long since I last listened to it and I still love it now. Matačić and Silvestri are always fun, too. Who do I listen to so little modern Tchaikovsky? Must find that Honeck - sounds exciting.
The la Scala one?
That was fascinating - thanks again.
I first heard the 5th conducted by Ray Conniff... grateful to have never heard that version again.
Sure, there are some omissions on your list I like to mention.
Monteux with the LSO (on Vanguard IIRC). His RCA recording has been mentioned by others, but the LSO recording not so I believe.
Then: Paavo Järvi on alpha. In your review on ClassicsToday you wrote "Paavo Järvi Thrills in Tchaik 5" (title of the review) and "the performance of the Fifth Symphony is spectacular". So I expected this in this video.
BTW the other Tchaikovsky symphonies recorded by Paavo Järvi have never been reviewed on the website. That is strange. Is there a review to expect?
(sorry if this appears twice - the first try seemed to be refused of canceled)
I just never got around to writing about them (and didn't find them as interesting).
Trombonists owe a great deal to Gunter Wand. As with his Beethoven 5th, he brings great balance to the Tchaikovsky which lets the trombones have their moment. I really enjoyed this video Dave and have spent a very happy late afternoon, here in Aberdeenshire 🏴🇬🇧, listening to the Wand which I'd never heard before and thoroughly enjoyed.
That's great!
Thank you for your selection, Dave! (BTW I'm a huge fan of Stokowski recording). I think that a very underrated Fifth is Ozawa/Boston (DGG)... What do you think about it?
I would be very interested in your opinion about a recording that the Penguin guide absolutely raved about. It was an EMI Eminence recording with the LPO/ Sian Edwards. It was coupled with Tatiana's Letters scene from Eugene Onegin which I absolutely adored.
I liked it very much--her disc of tone poems and overtures was even better, I thought. I reviewed them when they first came out...I see the latter disc is still available, but the there's no sign of the symphony.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Many thanks for your reply. I had to listen to Francesca on Amazon Music and OMG what a performance. I didn't realise that this existed. The tension is immense. Loads of tam-tam. The RLPO strings/woodwind are definitely on top form. The sonics have certainly held up well. Many thanks for recommending this recording. One to compete with Sletlanov.
As a newcomer to the world of classical music, hungry to discover and learn as much as possible, I love that I can use the following search template in YT and your videos will be first in the results: ‘%composer-name %symphony-number “best”’ :)
Wonderful!
There is also an RCA recording with Seiji Ozawa and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra that is very good as well, from 1969.
Thanks for this🙏 your first was Stokowski; mine was George’s Prêtre on Angel. Fairly recent at the time. I was a kid, and the music blew me away. I have no idea after so many years how good the performance may have been, but I notice you have no French conductors on your list🙌🙌
Monteux could easily have been there, as has already been mentioned.
I really think Stokowski's elision of that pause in the finale is a great improvement. Maybe if Pyotr Ilyich had heard it he would have exclaimed, Of course! and rewritten it.
I am very fond of Monteux's sensible, lucid clarity yet not at all impassive interpretation with the Boston Symphony on RCA.
For me, the bete noire in this symphony isn't the finale but the sheer banality of that oscillating woodwind figure in the first mvt. One of the things I loved about the Klemperer version is he magically all but banishes the triviality of it (which Szell does not do.)
That's my favorite part. Trivial? Nonsense. Deliciously scored, and (rare for Tchaikovsky) humorous.
I have owned a LP recording of Sawallisch conducting this symphony that used to be my favourite of them all, however, somehow it has gotten lost in the depths of my huge stock of LPs. I remember that I liked it for its lack of excess and the shapeliness of the performance. It's hard to track down this relatively early LP from Sawallisch, so I cannot recall what label it's on, but I do recall that it seemed surprising that he recorded the music for that particular company. Anyway, as Munch's and Markewitch's recording sank into my consciousness with the years passing, they overtook Sawallisch in my esteem, but Sawallisch's recording always seemed like something pretty special to me.
Any thoughts on Gergiev, Vienna Philharmonic live ? Finale is thrilling for me (and not just because audience erupts)
Yes, but it's scruffy played
@@mauryq2150 agreed
Oh yes! I enjoyed that one a lot. The intro/motto theme is the most sombre version I have heard in any version And as I remember it the rest is equally expressive.
Thank you for this nice selection. I would like to add a beautiful version (I didn't find it in the various comments) Ferenc Fricsay with the Berlin PO in 1949 (excellent mono) DG. What do
you think about it ?
I wish Szell had left out that cymbal crash in the finale. I've collected an awful lot of Tchaikovsky 5ths and the one I keep going back to is Andre Previn and the RPO on Telarc. Thrillingly played and recorded.
Rodzinski's 1954 mono recording for Westminster I think is pretty spectacular. He does cut a huge part in the fourth movement so this may really upset some listeners, but i find his conducting inspired. If you don't mind the mono sound, i think a lot of listeners will enjoy it.
No one needs it. There are too many other fantastic versions out there, in great sound and without cuts.
I am interested to give some of these a go, as my ears are so accustomed to Rostropovich and the LPO from the 70s for 5 and 6, which I have on vinyl from some time ago. The recordings may not have the dynamic range of some of the more modern outings but I just love the dynamic intensity that he pulls from the orchestra and the apparent warmth I feel ensues. I have already listened to ten minutes or so of the Haitink and while it sounds amazing, I strangely felt no emotion whatsoever and the tempo appeared a tad fast for my liking. Thanks for the recommends, anyway. We will see if my ears can become accustomed to anything else or if I am just entrenched in the majesterial Mstislav
Ten minutes is nothing. You have to live with alternate versions if your view of a work has become entrenched over years of hearing the same thing over and over.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Ha! Thanks for the reply Mr H. I should have specified, I only listened to 10 minutes of Haitink's Tchai 5 as it was very early doors and I couldn't sleep. I will no doubt listen to the whole recording at some point. I am not one to just brush people aside and I do appreciate his work, which I think I have specified elsewhere. He and the Concertgebouw had an amazing rapport and produced a wondrous sound together. I do have some recordings of their pairing. I will be listening to your other recommends with interest of course as I said, when I have the time. Thanks to your help I have now accustomed my ears to the Sergestam 'Sibelius' recordings which I really appreciate. I am sure I will pick up some other sound nuggets/ different interpretations of familiar works along the way. Have a good day from the UK 🇬🇧
David, you talk approvingly of Karajan's 76-79 Tchaikovsky cycle for DG. I am curious to know your opinion of his 1971 EMI recordings of 4, 5 and 6, which I don't recall you discussing in any of your Tchaik videos.
All of his Tchaikovsky, as I said, was very good. We'll get to the EMIs. Hang in there.
Do not forget Karajan's Dvd recordings of Tchaikovsky's symphonies no:s 4,5 and 6 made in 1973. They are in my opinion his best recordings. And I have heard them all many times.
I have a hunch now about the 70s emi karajans. Or maybe they don't qualify as a project.
The Karajan EMI trilogy is well played, but the sound is congested. I don't remember which symphonies suffered from this most.
The Emi recordings were originally recorded within a new technical ( and marketing) concept: "Quadrofonie". I owned the LP's and was overblown by this sound, which was quite different and spectacular, but later on I became irritated of the loss of clearity. On cd the sound was still more a disaster in clearity, but nowadays I listen only to this Karajan versions of no 4-6, because of their whitehot intensity of the playing , all in "Chord Guy"-style. So moving. And that with the Mravinsky and the Jansons in the collection.
I got a bit confused when you talked about the Svetlanov recordings from the 1990s. I thought I owned one of them, but I don’t. I do have though the complete set of the Tchaikovsky symphonies with Svetlanov from 1967 (w/ USSR SO). In case you know them: are they similar to his later recordings from the 1990s or did he do them quite differently?
They are similar interpretations in vastly inferior sound.
Thanks. Then I don’t need to get the later Svetlanov recordings. After all, the ones from 1967 are remastered and sound not too bad. And for a good sounding Tchaikovsky symphony cycle I still have the Jurowski on LPO.
Where do the Denon recordings of 4 and 5 fit in ? Weren't they in 2009 ?
@@bobmcgowan7460svetlanov was very dead by 2008
Thanks for not recommending Pletnev. I was at his live concert of Tchaikovsky and found it not good. But everybody was commenting that it was great. I am just an amateur without enough self-confidence, so you have helped me now. What do you think about Gergiev?
The PAUSE - I can't imagine the finale without it! Mengelberg added aa "a" to the B Major chord just before it to dissuade the audience from applauding before the symphony was actually over!
I'm surprised that Dorat/LSO on Mercury doesn't get a mention. Part of a great cycle of the symphonies conducted by him and a fiery but classical account of the work that always has me cheering to the rafters. Terrific Mercury engineering too.
Don't be surprise. Ever. You have to draw the line somewhere.
Great choices and the reasons for including them. Also the accompanying vocal recital (baritone?).
A live performance led by Giuseppe Sinopoli just popped into my feed and it’s amazing. Anyone out there who can enlighten me about him? Sorry to come off as totally ignorant but I was blown away, especially the finale, and all I know about him is what I found on Wikipedia. Thanks in advance.
The Muti cycle appears to be reissued in 2017 on Brilliant Classics at a much lower price. Any drop-off in sonics?
Thanks, Dave for this informative repertoire review. My first exposure to Tchaikovsky 5 was via the old Koussevitzky/BSO recording on RCA 78's. A warm bath, if ever there was one. You rightly criticized Bernstein/DG, but what about Bernstein/Sony? I recently purchased the Sony Bernstein Tchaikovsky cycle, in one of that label's bargain boxes, and was swept away by that conductor's passionate way with the composer. I had never previously heard those performances. Otherwise Ormandy/Sony has been my reference recording for many years.
Hola David
No tuviste en cuenta a Ashkenazy ?
Creo que tú mismo lo mencionaste alguna vez como grabación de referencia.
No para No. 5--pero Manfred y No. 6.
Gracias.
While I find much of his work to be inconsistent, Gergiev’s recording with Vienna is one of my favorites of this piece - and certainly my favorite Gergiev performance.
Okay, I hate to be the guy that says "But what about THIS recording?" but for sheer edge of your seat excitement, I really, really like Serge Koussevitzky's recording with the Boston Symphony. It came as part of a 2CD set which I bought for his famous BBC Symphony recording of the Sibelius 7 which turned out to be a baffling disappointment (I don't understand why the critics drool over that recording.) but a few years later, I pulled it out and decided to give the Tchaik 5 a try, and WOW! I was spellbound. The 1944 mono sound isn't bad at all, but the sheer energy and excitement of the performance blew me away. Definitely worth a listen!
I'm so glad you are "that guy".😊 The Koussetvitsky recording is incredible. For sheer excitement, nothing comes close, except perhaps the Silvestri.
I’ve got Mravinsky & the ‘77 Karajan which I like a lot. I got both very cheaply.
I have both, too...
I heard Bernstein conduct Tchaikovsky's Fifth at Tanglewood one year - rather, I heard the broadcast. It felt like he succumbed to the "slow" = "profound" disease. It was horrible. He made it sound like Bruckner. Got great reviews in the press for some reason I'll never understand. The year before he did a Sibelius Fifth that was incandescent - one of the best performances of that work I've ever heard in my life. What can I say? That's Lenny in a nutshell.
I've always had a soft spot for Ozawa's Boston Symphony recording - that was the first recording of the piece I ever owned so I think some of it is nostalgia - but it's a fine performance.
Bernstein did a tchaik 6th at Ravinia with a slow movement alone taking 45 minutes. He was able to hold attention, but just barely. Last time I saw him. He had a terminal case of the SLOW=PROFOUND disease toward the end. Then there is his Enigma variations.....which still isnt over years after his death.
Do you remember what a fuss was made over the Gergiev/Vienna Phil when it first came out? Well I rushed out and got it and didnt get a stirring of any part of my anatomy! Also glad you mentioned von Matacic. (I've always loved his Sheherezade). Barbirolli's 5th is also very heartfelt and exciting, with an intense, swift 1st movement.
There’s a crazy one w Rostropovich and LPO from mid ‘70 where Alan Cumberland is shredding the timpani part w scales and extra notes and what have you. One to bring out for a laugh!
Thanks for the talk, David. I like all these choices, but, for me, the greatest recording of all remains Solti/Chicago/Decca. It shocked me, because I didn't much care for his 4th or 6th. They were OK but not great. But his 5th, is just stunning, IMO.
It's mine, too. The last movement can raise you out of your seat. He let the brass do what they do best.
The entire performance moves forward as it should.
I like the Boston/Monteux as well.
So glad to see Szell at the top of this list, it was probably the first recording of the Fifth that I bought almost 50 years ago and that I still thoroughly enjoy today. Every time I hear it one word comes to mind--perfection!
Bernstein's 1st recording with the NY Phil is glorious! There is also a video recording with the BSO from 1974 that's stunning!
Love your show. Your love and knowledge for music are amazing, and because of that knowledge, I have a curious question. On the Old Time Radio Show "The Shadow" Episode: Night Without End air date 10/16/1938, who wrote the music for that specific episode? Not the theme that begins the show, but you can Google the episode and listen. I think you will love it, as well. Many thanks 😊
Just heard Wands performance (ahem on you tube!!) what a great performance. You wouldn't think that he'd get Tchaikovsky's music, but he did. I thought it was going to be slow and ponderous.
To me it's a good example of viewing Russian music through a Germanic lense. And all the better for it. This Wand , the Bruckner guy ?!?😯. Excellent...
The version I grew up with was Abbado/LSO, which I still rate as excellent. Janssons/Oslo is my current favourite. About 20 years ago I bought a CD of Gergiev/ Vienna Phil which I found truly appalling, I was so hoping it would be included in your naughty corner!
This symphony was forever ruined for us here in Australia. Back in the 70s the big sweeping melody from the andante was used in an ad for Winfield cigarette’s featuring the actor Paul Hogan set to the words Aaanyyy hoooowsw haaave a Wiiiiinfiielld! Those responsible should still be in jail.
I don't remember the ad, but the tune was also used as the theme for his TV comedy series (in a disco version!). I bear no ill will in this matter. A little culture for the masses does no harm.
(My guess is the tune was used because it has some resemblance to the Magnificent Seven theme, but is copyright-free.)
Fair enough, but to this day I can’t listen to it without hearing Paul Hogan.
I know the feeling! The pretzel bike at the park under my childhood apartment would play an 8bit version of fur elise. It's a beautiful composition...
Also Beethoven's 5th is brilliant and I like all movements except the first because of how over-memed it is online
Adding my favorites: Dmitriev/St. Petersburg SO, 1993, SONY; Mravinsky/Leningrad PO, 1973, Olympia; Monteux/Boston SO, 1958, BMG; Gergiev/Bavarian RSO, 1989 (unofficial live recording). Now about that Gergiev - maybe impossible to find, but one of the very best I have heard. Maybe one day it will be released officially.
Yes, I should have mentioned Monteux--it's wonderful, but I already had so many...
About younger conductors somehow not "getting" Tchaikovsky, I entirely agree with you, Dave. I find many younger conductors to have a tendency of paying attention to superfluous details and trying to tick the box the quantifiable theoretical stuffs, giving their performance an imo superficial "sophistication". But the raw quality of passion is just not there, it's like going to a movie that promises you a climax but you just wait and wait and it never comes.
Well at 69, I hardly think Simon Rattle qualifies as "younger", but I was horrified when I heard his recording of my favourite part of The Nutcracker: "No 8 A Pine Forest in Winter". I thought it sounded absolutely DREADFUL and completely missed the point. As for the 5th - I love Mravinsky and the Leningrad Philharmonic!
Have you heard the Paul Kletzki 1946 recording w the Philharmonia probably done at Abbey Road studios? Issued in the USA on Columbis Entre LP. It is the one I grew up on and still consider it a great one. Never on cd, but you can find a good transfer on U Tube! Kletzki did a stereo recording with some German orchestra. Good sound, but not as good performance IMO. Guild Records never released the 1946 recording but did release K's Schubert 8th done in the same time period. Give it a listen!
Speaking of Kempe there is a live recording with LSO on BBC Legends which I find much tighter then the Berlin studio one.
Oh dear, what are those “chapters”? “Quinter Vond”? 😂 For a moment I wondered whether it was a joke, now I think it's auto-generated and recognises names fairly well?
I like to hear you SINGING Tchaikovsky - it is so quintessentially human!
The comparison between Tchaikovsky and Brahms is a subject for endless discussion - taken together, they exemplify the creativity of the late 19th century. I once read that at the outset of his career, Tchaikovsky wanted to be not only the greatest Russian composer, but the greatest composer of his time. After the death of Wagner, his only real rival was Brahms. Of course, Brahms never wrote a ballet or an opera. The Fifth was indeed THE symphony in which Tchaikovsky tried to measure up to Brahms - especially as Brahms' Fourth is in the same key.
With the „Pathétique,“ Tchaikovsky composed a symphony which Brahms never could have written - he is in effect the missing link between Brahms and Mahler.
The one genre in which Brahms was doubtlessly superior to Tchaikovsky was the lied - although I love Tchaikovsky's lieder with a passion. It was impossible for Tchaikovsky to be the direct successor to Schubert as was Brahms. We are indescribably lucky to have inherited both Tchaikovsky and Brahms!
Brahms was also incomparably superior in chamber music, but I think you miss the boat here in leaving out Dvorak, who was arguably the greatest of them all in terms of versatility in multiple media.
@@DavesClassicalGuide Don't forget Tchaikovsky's Piano Trio!
I’m with the passionate, excitable drooling school. Much of Tchaikovsky’s music is exciting by nature.
I agree with you regarding Ormandy's Columbia recording. Lush, sweeping and romantic.
I've also seen it critically ripped for being 'wayward'. To get it as sweeping and romantic as it is, one must be somewhat wayward.
There will never e a definitive performance of Tchaikovsky's Fifth.
No mention of Gergiev and Vienna Philharmonic? ?
Listening to Dave from the beginning of his videos on YT, he seems to never or rarely mention Gergiev. Sir Simon Rattled is mentioned more
Gergiev gets mentioned for his Russian opera sets, which I think contain his best work. As a symphonic conductor, there's not much to talk about.
Tchaikovsky is the favorite of indulgent type of conductor. Whatever they want to do, they can do it in Tchaikovsky. Very sad, very rousing, sweep, in your face volume. Audiences want the big emotions and thrill. Its the musical shiny object. I like it when I hear it, but rarely get a craving for it. Im going to listen to your recommendations. Maybe it will turn me around.
How do you like Svetlanov's version?
Try watching the video.
As you said in another video, Szell would let down his one hair...
All jokes aside, Szell was Amazing!
we are session players all with top music school J or B attendance and degree.. and now in our 40s only do jingles and music for adverts radio and tv.. we are unknows but make good $$.
Our question for you, in your opinion is a conductor necessary. If you look on Quora there are answers all over the spectrum. If a band /orchestra with the highest skilled players stays true to the written music with its dynamics is a conductor necessary.. In younger years playing in some great orchestras my opinion is a conductor is not necessary or always necessary. what do you say sir.?
I say it depends on the work. Stay tuned and I will say something about it.
@@DavesClassicalGuide thanks
As I'm watching this I looked up the Matacic on Amazon - cheapest copy was $53.94 with shipping. SMH...
I'll find it on TH-cam
I do like the earlier Bernstein Tchaikovsky 5 with NYPO.
What about the von Karajan set?
@@UlfilasNZ Thank you for tip
For me, Karajan's 1966 recording with the Berlin Philharmonic is the best. The slow movement is heartbreakingly, achingly beautiful when handled by Karajan. The 1971 might be better recorded but in my view the tempo was better with the former recording.
You can actually hear the woodwinds in the later version. Sometimes.
buy yesterday all 5 symh. Manfred Ouvertures ect. plyed by Muti great btw price new here in Belgium 20 Euro tu for video
Musicologist’s attitude towards Tchaikovsky is proof that musicologists hate music.
I wouldn't say that. There have been very sympathetic critics to Tchaikovsky. But I would agree that for a long time they didn't really understand what he was about and unfairly compared him to the German "classical" tradition.
This is rapidly changing, and the change was led by the late, great Richard Taruskin, my doctoral advisor, whose writings on Tchaikovsky are brilliant examples of how to evaluate that great artist.
@@christopherwilliams9270 He was one of the writers I was thinking about.
@@steveschwartz8944 The chapter "Tchaikovsky and the Human" in Defining Russia Musically is a master class in honoring Tchaikovsky in his context. And in his more general essays and talks on Tchaikovsky, he brings up the comparison to the standards of the Germans. I remember in an older edition of Grout (before Peter got hold of it and fixed a lot) that there was a savaging of Tchaikovsky symphonies by comparing them to Brahms. We should remember that in 1876 Tchaikovsky toured Europe taking in premieres and writing about them for a St. Petersburg newspaper. He heard the premieres of Brahms 1, the Ring, and Carmen, and the only one he really liked was Carmen (something that he shows in Pique Dame). As for Brahms, he panned it as boring and not nearly as dramatic as a symphony should be.
I love Tchaikovsky. The ending of the 1812 makes me stand up, wave my arms as if I was directing, and cry. Then I heard Wagner's ring without words and oh the glory, so much glorious music. They're both overwhelming.
A personal recommendation to go along with Jansons, Szell, and Monteux. Siegfried Kurz and the Dresden Staatskapelle on Eterna/Berlin Classics. Swift and elegantly played.
I'm always disappointed at the end if the trumpets and horns don"t pump it higher with the ffff dynamic. I have no doubt that what Tchaikovsky is asking for is for them to blast...not keep it polite.
Thanks for not recommending Pletnev.
possible best ever recording project? Vivaldi Concertos cond by Claudio Scimone on 16 CDs from Erato b/c it is consistently warm and idiomatic and affirms that Vivaldi did indeed compose a slew of concertos but, pace Stravinsky, they are not all the same.
For the 4th, 5th, and 6th....after Mravinsky, nothing else sounds right...
Well now, that's not true at all. No need to exaggerate.
@@DavesClassicalGuide I'm not saying that's true...just how it plays out in my own listening...I actually wish I were better able to appreciate other approaches. (Which, to some degree, I do with the 6th.)