Symphony Recommendation


My favorite symphonies are Beethoven No. 5, No. 9, and Dvorak No. 9. Both of my CDs are Teldec label. I'm not very happy with the recordings. I would like to invite recommendationd for the best recordings of these three symphonies. Anybody tried XRCD remastered copies? Could you share your impression with us?
aliu
As far as the Beethoven symphonies go... I'd say the milestone recordings are Herbert von Karajan with the Berlin Philharmonic, and Carlos Kleiber with the Vienna Philharmonic. You can't go wrong with either performance, and the Vienna and Berlin Phil players have this music in their blood. If you ever want to delve into the Brahms symphonies, I think von Karajan and the Berlin Phil are again the benchmark.

The only catch is that all of these recordings are fairly old. I know Deutsche Grammaphone has a remastered version of the Kleiber recordings, and I'm sure they should have remastered versions of the von Karajan recordings too. I, for one, am waiting for SACD's remasters... wishful thinking I suppose.

Anyway, best of luck, and happy listening. Beethoven's music is near and dear to me, and I hope these recordings bring you as much pleasure as they have for me. Happy listening!
EWHA has hit the button on the nose with the best recordings. There are a few esoterics out there, mainly on old RCA LP's but I think that would not be worth your time.
Keith
Please, please listen to the RCA re-issue of Reiner and the Chicago Symphony playing Beethoven #5 and Schubert Unfinished
The Kleiber 5th is one of the best. I like the Dvorak 9th by Solti/Chicago. Probably the Karajan Beethoven 9th or maybe Bernstein.
Aliu,

After you enjoy the performances mentioned above, here is my suggestion -

Beethoven Symphony No. 5 (op. 67):
1. Walter with Columbia Symphony Orchestra on Sony.
2. Furtwangler with Berlin Philharmonic (mono recording in
1947) on Music & Arts.

Beethoven Symphony No. 9 (op.125):
1. Bohm with Berlin Philharmonic (digital recording in
1983) on Deutsche Grammaphone.
2. Celibidache with Munich Philharmonic on EMI.
3. Furtwangler with Berlin Philharmonic (mono recording in
1942) on Music & Arts.

Dvorak Symphony No. 9 (op.95):
1. Kubelic with Berlin Philharmonic on Deutsche Grammaphone.
2. Neumann with Czech Philharmonic on Supraphon.

In my opinion, these suggested recordings provided me different perspectives of these masterpieces. In short, SUBTLE.

Happy Listening.

Otto