Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good Peformances -- Monument to a Conductor, June 29, 2000
At this point, Sony has released all of its von Karajan performances of the Beethoven symphonies on five DVDs. They are all very good performances, created for film (rather than concert performance) in the early 80s. Von Karajan conducts the Berlin Philharmonic, his personal orchestra, and the performance is as much von Karajan as Beethoven. Musically, these are very fine performances, with von Karajan in absolute control of the orchestra which plays very precisely. These are the performance as he wanted to present them -- smooth, well thought-out, and note-perfect.There is probably no right way to put symphonic music onto film -- these productions (made by conductor's own film company) spend most of their time focused on the conductor with cut-away shots to both individual and groups of instrumentalists (also singers in the 9th), usually focusing on the instruments themselves rather than the players. It is fascinating to watch von Karajan -- his authority in the music and with this orchestra are clear thoughout each performance. He conducts without a baton and uses his whole body to conduct, though not in a distracting way (I am thinking of Leonard Bernstein here). The sound and picture on these DVDs are excellent; the sound is truly comparable to a well-recorded CD. The soundtrack is available both in stereo and also an excellent 5.1 Dolby mix. The disks have a set of program notes and a biography of von Karajan.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reference interpretations, March 19, 2000
Karajan's version of the famous Beethoven's 5th is one of the most copied, well-know interpretations of this symphony. The noise of the arcs beating the strings is the signature of the Berliner Philharmoniker, and this symphony give us plenty of these. There is nothing I could criticize about this interpretation, it's just the way it should be, no less, no more. I could almost see myself in my room, when I was a kid, conducting like krazy an imaginary orchestra with the stereo at full volume. For those unfortunate ones that knew this symphony from another orchestra/conductor, listening to Karajan's version could be no less than a revelation. The fourth is completely diferent in character, but equally impecable performance. Buy these versions and you'll never have to buy another one.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
good performances- poor DVD quality, December 28, 2000
By A Customer
Many others have noted in reviews of Sony's Karjan series, the audio & video quality are very poor. This would not even be considered adequate for VHS. Aside from the DVD quality, the camerawork is disappointing also. It is full of closeups of the conductor- and some of instrumentalists. The result is that you never get a sense of the big picture, the whole orchestra. The same could be said of the sound. It focuses on specific instruments, and sounds artificial. The performances are otherwise fairly good, though I find them a bit cold.
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