Sunday Classics: Bruno Walter rehearses and plays Wagner's "Siegfried Idyll"
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This is, as best I can tell, a mockup for a Japanese issue of the rehearsal for Bruno Walter's recording of the Siegfried Idyll.
by Ken
When we did our first exploration of the Siegfried Idyll in May, I promised that we would be coming back to the piece, approaching from a different direction. This is it. As I indicated in Friday night's preview ("Bruno Walter comes to America") and last night's ("The 'American' Bruno Walter brings his humanity to Wagner"), we've been heading toward a return engagement with Wagner's Siegfried Idyll as seen through the eyes of the 82-year-old Bruno Walter. Happily, Columbia Records released a 45-minute slab of rehearsal, which gives us an even closer view of his view than the lovely finished recording. Let's plunge right in:
BRUNO WALTER REHEARSES WAGNER'S SIEGFRIED IDYLL
(American Legion Hall, Hollywood, Feb. 27, 1959)
"You see, In Wagner, piĆ¹ piano means 'blot out,' you know, just give in, and it goes to the nothing . . ."
The published rehearsal begins at the upbeat to bar 4:
For reference, here's the finished recording of this same chunk of the piece (though starting at the beginning), bars 1-25:
FOR MORE OF WALTER'S SIEGFRIED IDYLL, INCLUDING A REMINISCENCE BY PRODUCER THOMAS FROST, CLICK HERE
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Labels: Bruno Walter, Siegfried Idyll, Sunday Classics, Thomas Frost, Wagner
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