He did alot of eye contact in the rehearsals. In concerts he trust the Orchestra with his great memory too. Genius.
@classicalalways10 жыл бұрын
Rattle is fantastic here - and such a rarity to hear one conductor to talk so honestly and with great insight about a legendary conductor. And he is doing so about arguably one of the 2 greatest figures in his orchestra history - very bold and incredible.
@venturarodriguezvallejo15676 жыл бұрын
+classicalalways One of the THREE greatest conductors in the BPO history. Please do not forget Celibidache, who was immediately after Fürtwangler and was far closer to the style of him. One (Karajan) sought for beauty of sound...and money; the other (Celi) always sought for ultimate Truth. As Fürtwangler did, by the way.
@karldelavigne81344 жыл бұрын
@@venturarodriguezvallejo1567 But the greatest was Nikisch.
@callanorourke61953 жыл бұрын
@@venturarodriguezvallejo1567 Karajan may have been driven by financial interest but he was totally dedicated to artistic integrity. The former did not lead to a debasement of the latter. Make no mistake, Karajan produced brilliant, sublime sound worlds.
@leonardoiglesias23942 жыл бұрын
He cant talk honestly about anything that have to do with the berlin philharmonic, see….
@christianvennemann90083 жыл бұрын
Aside from all the amazing things said in this interview, Sir Simon has such a relaxing ASMR voice.
@dagmarvandoren9364 Жыл бұрын
And he speaks English. That helps you. You feel safe.......karajan. sprach deutsch...that was different......when you don't speak it,at all...now back to the safe place....
@christianvennemann9008 Жыл бұрын
@Dagmar Van Doren I've actually listened to a couple videos of Karajan talking, and (despite the fact I had no clue what he was saying) I found his voice super relaxing
@dagmarvandoren9364 Жыл бұрын
Danke. Thank you you are,a peace maker....
@aristoteles279710 ай бұрын
mister Rattle is my favorite conductor,i like his understanding of music and his good humor in the rehersals,and how is communicating with the orchestra
@DDBconducts10 жыл бұрын
What an unpretentious, elegant way to say how much Karajan wasn't his cup of tea
@TheStockwell10 жыл бұрын
I agree. This is one of the most bracingly ambivalent interviews I've ever seen. On one hand, Rattle is amazed by the sound and power of Karajan's orchestra. On the other hand, Rattle seems tangibly repulsed and baffled by Karajan's technique and results.
@FunOfTheChase10 жыл бұрын
Glad you saw that too.
@TheStockwell10 жыл бұрын
FunOfTheChase It's hard not to miss! The Digital Concert Hall has a fascinating Karajan documentary, "Beauty as I See It," and Rattle's comments about Karajan in it have the same respectful and cautious tone, complete with his "no bullshit" line in talking about him: “Speaking to him was like interviewing a veteran, a general, like Patton” and “If you conduct the Berlin Philharmonic, you are a statue that needs to be toppled.” YIKES!
@cogidubnus19536 жыл бұрын
That wasn't quite what he was saying...I thought, in a truly British way, he said precisely and exactly what he thought...perhaps you don't get it...we don't do "nice"
@TomLeg6 жыл бұрын
A composer, conductor, musician who doesn't have a period is interchangeable and therefor meaningless.
@teacake_945 жыл бұрын
Could literally listen to this guy talk all day
@Ch9-77082 жыл бұрын
Karajan is one of those miracles that come every hundred years. He shaped his world to his liking, he shaped everything to perfection...
@bomcabedal Жыл бұрын
... and nearly killed off classical music altogether in the process.
@wolfie71231 Жыл бұрын
According to who, you and your pocket rocket?
@bomcabedal Жыл бұрын
@@wolfie71231Showing your age? But I'll bite: combination of star cult, adjacent huge salaries and overhead, the introduction of the traveling conductor phenomenon, and (subsequent) artistic impoverishment by reducing the repertory to a few key works that can be recycled everwhere. That _kinda_ worked as long as record profits still existed, but now that has gone it weighs heavily on the sector.
@magustef87102 ай бұрын
Karajan DAS Wunder der Eitelkeiten. Ein NaRzisst in Gänze.
@abelsincain10 жыл бұрын
Wow, the description of a great artist with his pros and cons. Thank you.
@sergiorodriguez5119 жыл бұрын
THE
@juliahenriques2109 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised he didn't talk about the dynamics, the way Karajan explored volume, which makes appreciating whatever he conducted impossible unless you turn it up.
@vanhunks5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. Just found this video. Always loved the way von Karajan's hands moved!
@youtubister10 жыл бұрын
One of the most insightful analyses of one conductor on another conductor. Most illuminating.
@retf054ewte32 жыл бұрын
I really love that Rattle appreciates the good things.
@georgechaldezos84716 жыл бұрын
A little churlish to criticise Karajan for closing his eyes and not communicating directly with musicians during performance. Karajan communicated directly (including banter and jokes) during rehearsal, but a performance was a time to put over an almost zen-like concentration for musicians, himself and the audience. The results as we know can be stunning.
@karldelavigne81344 жыл бұрын
He wasn't criticising, but rather expressing his bafflement.
@alaalfa88394 жыл бұрын
Mr. Bean had closed eyes when conducting.....I dont think orchestra has eye contact with conductor....Somme cello players have closed eyes sometimes as Gautier Capucon. What about orchestras who play without conductor. But is possible Rattle isnt judging him. BUt why conductor shouldnt go behind camera as he said of Karajan..today people like all kinds of art the production is also art, its aesthetic art...like photography is art, documentary is art. Paul McCartney did music and fine art.
@nenabuenaflor70464 жыл бұрын
We
@louisyoung10893 жыл бұрын
I don't believe this was a criticism, he seems genuinely confused as to why and how Karajan felt it was best to close his eyes in performance. When Simon Rattle conducts, you can observe him focusing his visual attention almost phrase-for-phrase on different orchestral sections; it's clear his conducting technique relies heavily on visual cues for communication. Karajan's method of control is almost a polar opposite to that. Both conductors create(d) wonderful music, but it's clear why Rattle is unable to understand how Karajan was able to do what he did, given his own method.
@harropmiki9 жыл бұрын
Amongst the behavioral anecdotes that everyone somehow feels obliged to repeat in discussions of von Karajan, Sir Simon says some fresh and thrilling things, about seeing music as color, about the value of unfinished rehearsal, about how rehearsing a piece from a musically innovative composer can bring fresh air into an old more traditional favorite. Personally, I connected with von Karajan the day I started spending time watching Maurice Bejart choreographing. Both had similar visceral relationships with music, Bejart conducted dance, and von Karajan danced music.
@fondvillahermine10 жыл бұрын
Very good interview with Sir Simon Rattle , such a warm and intelligent man and a wonderful conductor
@spectator40667 жыл бұрын
A charming, respectful and very amusing portrait of Karajan. But whatever Sir Simon may criticize, the charisma of Karajan cannot be denied. His artistic music videos are unequaled til today, for example the mentioned Don Quixote with Rostropovich.
@jefolson69892 жыл бұрын
Interesting. I can't watch them, knowing they were the equivalent of "lipsynched" to their studio recording. They are truly " music videos"( produced as visuals) not performances. ( his live performance videos are quite different)
@leonsangala5 жыл бұрын
min 3:50 the Brahms - Strauss rehearsal anecdote..... . looking for the sound.. incredible the process so the musicians of the orchestra would emulate the Strauss sound on the Brahms rehearsal .... OUT OF THIS WORLD !!!
@MrPoupard10 жыл бұрын
It's a measure of Karajan's stature that > 25 years after his death his presence still looms so large over the BPO.
@Robylazarus9 жыл бұрын
Excellent. Thanks for sharing.
@stranraerwal3 жыл бұрын
a gentle man, he describes and remembers Karajan as only a Gentleman could.
@ROBINdulce10 жыл бұрын
¡Magnífica entrevista! Ofrece una visión muy equilibrada de las ideas tan ambiciosas y específicas que tuvo el Maestro von Karajan y de sus métodos autocráticos para alcanzarlos. Un hombre implacable, sin duda, adecuado para una época que parecería superada. Hoy basta prender la pantalla para regresar al futuro: 28 de junio de 1914.
@jefolson69892 жыл бұрын
I have watched Rattle grow from being a kind of weirdo young conductor, who no one really knew what to do with, into the elder statesman of music we see here. He has surprised many of us!
@philipkuttner79453 жыл бұрын
Karajan was a great conductor is the sense that he could get everything he wanted from the orchestra without having to talk. But as a musician he was limited. The sound was always glorious, but great music is usually about more than sound. He was the ideal Richard Strauss conductor, and a fascinating Wagner conductor. But his rounding all the edges came at a great price. Beethoven, Verdi, Brahms . . . They sometimes demand gruffness, clarity of phrasing, variety of emotions. For me, listening to Karajan is like riding in an amazingly plush limousine that isn't going anywhere in particular. Listen to his Brahms Third, his Beethoven 3rd. Perfectly beautiful. Then listen to Walter, Furtwängler, Bernstein, Toscanini. Suddenly the music has meaning, it breathes, it sometimes startles you. You may not agree with the interpretation, but there IS an interpretation. For these reasons, I learn so much about the music from these conductors, and so little from Karajan. As a young conductor in the 50's he was much more animated. But one becomes what one wants to be, and what he became I find irrelevant.
@vjekop9323 жыл бұрын
I agree with everything except for the Brahms. I think Karajan's Brahms was wonderful idk. When I listen to his 1978 cycle it just sounds right, like it should always be played that way. But that's a matter of taste.
@paulripley21786 жыл бұрын
A highly intelligent, nuanced account of Karajan and his work. To be recommended.
@sofiagalacm.ok16 жыл бұрын
Genial Simon Rattle!!! I love him!!! Greetings :)
@Johannes_Brahms653 жыл бұрын
Some day another genius will give a talk about Simon Rattle.
@wei2190sd3 жыл бұрын
Rattle is not a genius.
@dashunin2 жыл бұрын
@@wei2190sd "Big is seen from a distance". IMHO, Karajan and Celibidache are difficult to compare with Furtwangler, Mengelberg or Bruno Walter; nevertheless, they were the greatest conductors of their generation.
@AdamCzarnowski4 жыл бұрын
When your attention is being constantly and conciously drawn towards the personality of the performer, you are being deliberately distracted from the most important thing. The composer and his music.
@embo6710 жыл бұрын
Great interview. Very wise words about a great conductor.
@nickbaritone3 жыл бұрын
I sang in the chorus of Damnation of Faust with Maestro Rattle. He’s not only a good conductor, but he also has charisma.
@RolandKarlBryce9 жыл бұрын
The legend of Karajan is preserved, because of his attention to detail and obsessive search for 'capture'. The most interesting aspect in filming musical perfomances where we witness the coductors facial expressions reveals one of the most important cosmetic effect decisions that Karajan made: he would have seen himself conducting and at some point realised that in performance with cameras running, he is not appealing: he has a squint, at times, enough and probably witnessed other expressions that he simply didnt like about himself. In the narcissitic manner that befits any podium position, all eyes are on you! When Karajan closes his eyes, however a new and wonderful power emanates from his filmed persona: it is compelling to observe and we are literally 'inside' the sound world that he sought and graded and crafted so compellingly, so successfuly. I am surprised that Simon doesn't 'get that'. Watching Rattle conduct from TV/Film clips is too distracting for me. He communicates excellently with his orchestra but the visual aspect is disturbing and detracts from the sound world. When I finally listened to their Beethoven symphony cycles, back to back, without Rattles nostril flaring expressions getting in the way, I loved the sounds of both versions! Sorry Simon, closed eyed Karajan works on film. Open-eyed Rattle works live, but puts me off watching! Get it now?
@tmsphere8 жыл бұрын
+Roland Bryce i like to listen to music not to watch it. Karajan the "spectacle" means nothing to music making.
@ralphnuolo33594 жыл бұрын
Roland Bryce is just ridiculous that Rattle mentioned that , he should close eyes also
@grassmugge Жыл бұрын
Here is the difference between You and Rattle - no gossip from him.
@codonauta Жыл бұрын
You can say everything about these, but conducting with closed eyes all the time looks like odd and arogant.
@JoseOliveira-rk3ed10 жыл бұрын
Really funny... he speaks with a smile and diplomatic way (quite sensitive considering his current position) but he actually has nothing good to say about the man! Every single point is mentioning words like "utterly repelent", etc.
@francinesicard4646 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately for Rattle, with him the BPO has lost its shine and his rendition of Beethoven symphonies or concerti are boring.
@vagadellestelle5 жыл бұрын
@@TheGreatPerahia with all his stiff upper lipped approach, Simon Rattle is not worth a fart of Karajan.
@karldelavigne81344 жыл бұрын
Really? He calls the Webern/Schoenberg cycle "a miracle", etc.
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
I thought he gave credit where it was due and criticism was done often with the caveat that he didn't understand. Indeed Karajan's habit of looking at his own hands during conducting was a way of directing the orchestra, intensifying their concentration is an example of what Sir Simon may have missed. I appreciated the nuanced assessment. The goal of being balanced and not partial is almost entirely missing from political journalism today but we still see it in the media woth regard to the Arts . Thank God
@joebloggs3964 жыл бұрын
@@TheGreatPerahia No, he's just not worshiping him and is looking at him as a fellow conductor. He's polite and tries to balance his opinion, whether you like that or not. Not all cultures have to idolise.
@markhughes79273 жыл бұрын
I listened to a very late interview of Nicolas Harnoncourt with Stephanie Klein of BBC Radio 3 - despite the interviewer very great depths of Soul, Understanding, and Perception came across to me who was not much aware of him. I wonder how the two men would compare from such an experienced conductor as Rattle is? I suppose that there is always the duality for matching quality à la Mahler and Sibelius from essential difference in outlook.
@QFbGrEdut4 жыл бұрын
What a soothing voice he has 😌
@alsenwulf Жыл бұрын
Schade, daß er nicht mehr bei den Berlinern ist ... jedes Konzert war ein Genuß.
@aryanalasvandian15792 жыл бұрын
What a description, and who will describe you Sir Simon Rattle the great?
@keithjones781010 жыл бұрын
The 1963 Berlin Philharmonic . Never surpassed.
@Quim14416 жыл бұрын
It's kinda better now.
@franziskakre83096 жыл бұрын
+Joaquim Méndez it was much better under Karajan.
@martijn11116 жыл бұрын
When you disregard the orchestras of Chicago and Cleveland of those days, I suppose.
@MusikPiratCH6 жыл бұрын
I strongly disagree: the BPO under Wilhelm Furtwängler was much more open to (what I call) "real" music! I remember the answer by Furtwängler as he once had to hold strict tempo and was asked afterwards how he found it: "It sounds so awfully direct!" I admit that's a completely contrary (at least to Karajan's "beauty of sounds") interpretation of music (like Leonard Bernstein). However I think it's the only way to "true" music (both Furtwängler and Bernstein were composers). That's the re-composing way of conducting (that I adore more than any "Karajan sound")! You can hear this in the Beethoven Symphonies. (And that's the reason why I rate Furtwängler the greatest ever Beethoven conductor followed by Bernstein and now Jansons)! Even for the greatest conductors MY path went from (20th century): Arthur Nikisch, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Leonard Bernstein, Carlos Kleiber to (21st century) Mariss Jansons (only 5 names without any Karajan)! Unfair? Maybe but a very personal list (of conductors). Isn't that what music is all about? Very personal! What I like another dislikes and vice versa!
@franziskakre83096 жыл бұрын
+MusikPiratCH. Yes, Furtwängler is the greatest conductor for Beethoven. I also admire Bernstein and Kleiber. I cant anything say about Nickisch, because there are not many recordings by him. But Karajan still is one of the greatest. And the matter here is, "Rattle contra Karajan." Karajan is very much better than Rattle. Although he was no composer, he made some of the best recordings and interpretations. Especially his Richard Strauss. And he was very good with singers, though he was sometimes unresponsible. (Helga Dernesch as Isolde!) By the way, it was a great disappointment when the BPO choosed Rattle instead of Jansons. So Jansons made the BRSO to one of the orchestras in the world and Rattle lowered the level of the BPO.
@arthureustaquio88358 жыл бұрын
First time for me to hear Simon curse 2:22 XD
@jieqingzhao9285 жыл бұрын
I do think the idea of orchestra members listen to each other like chamber music players was from Abbado, not Karajan.
@AALavdas5 жыл бұрын
You obviously need to see some Karajan rehearsals....
@ralphnuolo33594 жыл бұрын
Jieqing Zhao nop .... of course not , Karajan was and still the best conductor ever
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
No its not an either or situation . Both promoted it
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
@@ralphnuolo3359 there is no such thing as the best conductor ever. It depends partly on repertoire.
@edwardyang82546 жыл бұрын
But every performance art is just show, by definition. I see no reason why classical music shouldn't do the same. Even Mozart and Beethoven did (their music for show). Nobody shows how music "was really done." They show what people want to see.
@johnbarry5036 Жыл бұрын
its fascinating to see SR say complimentary, even great things about HVK but at the same time keep his barely concealed disgust in check. Walking a tightrope.
@writeract26 жыл бұрын
What a qualified interview - he doesn't mince words while he is in effect, mincing words.
@joebloggs3964 жыл бұрын
I think he means to be respectful and is.
@DrewBarnard948 жыл бұрын
Of course Rattle is uncomfortable. Karajan may have been the greatest conductor of all time. Rattle isn't Karajan, nor does Rattle's Berlin have the same sound as Karajan's Berlin did. Yet Rattle is one of the best conductors of the modern day, and a great conductor in his own right. I feel bad for Rattle needing to give this interview, which couldn't be anything than awkward. Pity the man, being compared with Karajan all the time. No other living conductor is so often held to such high standards.
@francinesicard4646 жыл бұрын
Absolutely!
@JM-jy7qy5 жыл бұрын
I enjoy Karajan, Rattle, and all great conductors. Each has his or her own characteristics. I like Carlos Kleiber the best, of course.
@maestroclassico58014 жыл бұрын
It was far more of an issue in the Cleveland Orchestra after George Szell's death.....Maazel, Dohnanyi, and Welser-Most......decent but never in the same league just as Sir Simon could never been in HvK's. Honestly there just weren't many folks that the BPO would have selected after Abbado....Rattle seemed to be the right thing at the right time.
@helmutkomander695510 ай бұрын
Sehr schö erzählt von sir simon rattle übet herbert von karajan
@mogomarkas31877 жыл бұрын
Have not seem Sir Simon Rattle for a while....more and more he looks like Sir Ian Holm.
@schneisi8 жыл бұрын
Rattle will never beat Karajan, but if you understand the english language, but he never cursed about him, its the opposite .
@KosmasLapatas6 жыл бұрын
Alexander Schneider Siemssen exactly.most of the people here didnt understand a word he said!
@AALavdas5 жыл бұрын
Yes, of course!
@jonb40203 жыл бұрын
He has already beaten the loathsome Karajan!
@markarroyo27467 жыл бұрын
To hear someone like Rattle discussing someone of the caliber of Karajan this way is utter hilarity. BPO is now "normal." ...Too bad
@DankChallenger8 ай бұрын
agreed
@urbanviii51034 жыл бұрын
The blood of Szell and Boulez is present in The Cleveland Orchestra, even to this day.
@MarshalN4 жыл бұрын
You mean the blood and tears of all those whom Szell and Boulez tortured
@MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist2 жыл бұрын
@@MarshalN Boulez was more genial than Szell
@samnelson82804 жыл бұрын
Rattle is so great. Thanks for sharing
@twoshedsful3 жыл бұрын
“I think he and Robert Wilson the director would have got on very well.” Superb.
@RB-pi9ls4 жыл бұрын
A wonderfully frank story by Sir Simon about Herbert Von Karajan.
@ThomasTVP4 жыл бұрын
People will still remember Karajan long after Rattle's been forgotten, warts and all.
@stephanebelizaire36278 ай бұрын
VIVAT !
@ph83496 ай бұрын
Von Karajan told that he can concentrate better whrn keepung his eyes closed. He didnt want to see player wipe sweat or such. Von Karajan was simply the best.
@Silver07Hawk6 жыл бұрын
Only in His Dreams ..Rattle would be like Maestro /Genius ..Herbert von Karajan..
@frankporter61697 жыл бұрын
Putin??? Now you folks know how he got his job! Reminds me of the school class president who always claimed that the present administration had raised the standards above the former. That's why he's "Class President"!
@luz.francolima3 жыл бұрын
Você e Zimerman só piano interpretando Beethoven marcou a minha alma.🌿🇧🇷🇧🇷🍃💚💛💙
@duwir59592 жыл бұрын
If there would be today a conductor who could conduct verklärte Nacht or Bruckner 8 like Karajan then it would be great. His Boheme with Pavarotti, unbelievable. His Mahler 9...
@clarino80414 жыл бұрын
Karajan: The first and only conductor who is more important than the composer.
@msimom277 жыл бұрын
WHEM I SAW MR.KARAJAN CONDOCTORING THE BEST ORQUESTRE OF THIS PLANET I THINK TO MY SELF : THIS MAN IS A ANGEL OF GOD.HE IS NOT THIS POOR WORLD.POOR MUSIC NOW.HE WAS THE OTHER PLANET AWESOME TIMES.
@christopherczajasager90304 жыл бұрын
Saw???? Did you listen?
@jonb40203 жыл бұрын
An angel? Not likely. The odious and arrogant Karajan was a Nazi who told Sir Malcolm Sargent that when the Germans invaded England he would have Sargent shot.
@pawdaw5 жыл бұрын
It's all about the results. Karajan's unremitting focus on beauty and refinement was often to the detriment of the music. Listening to his recordings these days I feel that iron-clad control he had over the orchestra and feel disappointed by the results. The films are ludicrous because most of the focus is on Karajan; there is that repellent narcissism that Rattle describes. But, there are recordings where his approach truly pays off. The 60s DG Sibelius recordings, the EMI Bruckner 7, the Honegger Symphonies, Shostakovich 10, that wild Prokofiev 5, Debussy Pelléas, much Strauss. I wouldn't be without these.
@philipkuttner79453 жыл бұрын
It's telling that, with the exception of Debussy, none of these composers were at the level of the greatest composers: Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Verdi, Wagner, Brahms, Stravinsky, add your favorites (some will add Shostakovich, but not me).
@allords1Күн бұрын
Von Karajan was a genius. No one comes close.
@ttrons26 жыл бұрын
We all cannot attend your concerts in Berlin or where ever. I have no problem with what Karajan was trying to do. Most in the world do not have that luxury. I feel Simon Rattle is all about the concert performance and the recording is suppose to be a recreation of a concert. The recording stands on its own. Thank god for recordings.
@ralphnuolo33594 жыл бұрын
Sorry but Karajan was far Away from Sir. Simon Rattle , Abbado or Furtwangler , Karajan was sensitive as nobody, he had the guts to polish the Berlin Philharmoniker, that orchestra is what it is thanks to Karajan and if you check the sound then and now is not equal , today is boring , just check the trumpets attack , dynamics , rhythm efficiency back then , all was so tight, so pure , so clear , the level of proficiency was unreal , I just watched the Ravel ending with Karajan and that was electrifying , everything was right until some orchestra players cried because of their ego , that was the beginning of the end , no more titanic concerts , of course he was a character itself, is impossible to be great without ego , musicians didn’t understood at that time , today is worse , everyone wants to be a hero , deal with , Herber Von Karajan is no more , musicians ... remember ..... you’re nothing but a musician and your assignment is to play the right notes , you’re like a chair , like a violin bow , unless you’re the concertmaster you cannot argue and the most important guy is your ship captain ( conductor) , but the most important thing is music , music , MUSIC ! We need another Herbert von Karajan ...... sincerely .
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
No we don't. He had his day. many conductors followed trying to control media, demanding high salaries until classical music is nearly starved for funds as public support falls, ordinary people can't afford tickets. What we need now are conductors who are prepared to create bonds with community like Benjamin Britten did after WW2 , Alsop has done with Sao Paulo and Baltimore. You can' t have conductors now who prescribe a sound across the board. I want my Brahms to sound very dfferent to Mozart to Bernstein to Sculthorpe.
@jonb40203 жыл бұрын
Need another vile creature like Karajan? We certainly don't!
@ralphnuolo33593 жыл бұрын
@@jonb4020 we need great music, certainly we need another mdfkr bahd azz conductor like Herbert, we don’t want a rainbow
@leonardoiglesias23942 жыл бұрын
Ich bin der Nachfolger. Karajan war ein Genie. Ich bin wahrscheinlich auch ein Genie. Sehr raffiniert.
@furdiebant Жыл бұрын
Exactly. He is a charlatan.
@dennistregellis916223 күн бұрын
Most interesting, two such eminent characters, the old adage comes to mind beware if an Englishman is being over polite!
@richardcurtis1626 жыл бұрын
I saw the BPO under Rattle, should have brung my knitting needles,,,, '
@WMS00004 жыл бұрын
Richard Curtis and your grammar book
@ralphoperaphile4 жыл бұрын
For all his thinly veiled distaste for Karajan, betrayed by the repetition of weasel-words like "repellent" and "repulsed", the fact remains that under Rattle's watch, the famous Klang of the BPO was dismantled and he produced nothing of note during his tenure. Now I fear he will go on to disembowel the LSO. Rattle is scared stiff of the metaphysical in music and usually just prods, fiddles and tinkers with a score until nothing memorable or cohesive emerges. As you may divine, I am not a fan. Herbie had his faults and artistic failings, but the kind of poisonous, hysterical antipathy towards him led by that arch-bloviator Norman Lebrecht, does not alter the fact that Karajan's legacy is ten times that of Sir Simon.
@jonb64173 жыл бұрын
OK so you don't like Rattle, and you have every right to your opinion. But the rest is not tenable. Maazel, Boult, Solti and (especially) Kleiber, Klemperer and Tennstedt - all left enduring legacies in terms of music. And without the arrogant Nazi poison that was inside "von" Karajan. Are you aware that he said that after the Germans had won the war he would see that Malcolm Sargent was shot? And he wasn't joking. Yes he was a good, even a great, musician but he was a vile human being and would be better consigned to the dustbin of history.
@ralphoperaphile3 жыл бұрын
@@jonb6417 You cannot hear "arrogant Nazi poison" in his music-making - that's sheer projection. He also inspired great admiration and even devotion in singers who were themselves decent human beings, like Christa Ludwig, who loved working with him. I am not here to take every artist's moral temperature but for every example of Karajan's supposed "nastiness" you will find instances of remarkable but unsung generosity and even kindness. I don't understand the relevance of your citing the legacies of those other conductors as I never denied or even mention them. I do know that he left an extraordinary legacy himself of recordings which are unlikely ever to be surpassed - least of all by Sir Simon.
@furdiebant Жыл бұрын
Your protection was born out. Thankfully he has left London
@phw93866 жыл бұрын
Die Playback Videos sollten mit optischen Bildern des musikalischen Ablaufs den Höreindruck verstärken. Es war eben nicht gemeint nur einen üblichen Videomitschnitt zu machen. Diese Videos muss man vom Hören her "sehen"... Erstaunlich das Rattle das nicht verstanden hat...
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
Great interview. Enjoyed the balance. An attempt to give credit where it is due and explore limitations is never welcomed by fans. I like both conductors : Karajan and Rattle. But you will never get the whole package with one conductor. When I listen to Bernstein I want Alsop, when I listen to Strauss (Richard)I want Kleiber for Barock another set of favourite conductors
@KosmasLapatas6 жыл бұрын
celibidache was a musical genius everybody knew it. Although a snob. When asked of all the great conductors of the past he only acknowledged karajan as talented and toscanini as charlatan.
@clk56394 жыл бұрын
i like his comment about putin, and whether going back to karajan's strength in 2000-2010s would have been postmodern or modern. but then today we have yet another new world. on the one side there is right wing populism, on the other side strongman politics and stronger government tackling covid better. all is about time and place and people and beyond. you know it was a good interview if it continues to generate dialogue after years. kudos.
@jonb40203 жыл бұрын
"Stronger government tackling covid better". Lol. You mean like in New York and California? Or maybe France?
@HansFellner-z4c3 ай бұрын
There is no way bei den Beethoven insbesondere geht kein Weg an Karajan vorbei,das gilt auch für rattle
@josotorres96433 жыл бұрын
Sir Simon Rattle.
@Johannes_Brahms653 жыл бұрын
Lets remember drama is a greek invention!
@johnkeller616810 жыл бұрын
I haven't been watching much of Sir Simon but was so suprised at the fact that he spoke English as his first language i have only watched him work on Das Rheingold and with Berlin bands so i thought his first language was Dutch because he fluently spoke German but said he was rusty.
@franziskakre83096 жыл бұрын
His German is not very good.
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
@@franziskakre8309 it's not bad either! Like the curate' s egg. Overall typical German as second language! Competent in areas of use. Not so serviceable for wide ranging conversation.
@ibizaking6 жыл бұрын
I really wonder, who all of you have heard BPh under Karajan and under Rattle, or have been in 1 room with HvK or Rattle, to judge them like u do here... they both, with their knowledge and presence, would eat you alive.
@weiterimtext81347 жыл бұрын
Seltsam, wie Simon Rattle über einen anderen Kollegen so allgemein wie ein Fan und nicht wie Kenner spricht. Das, was Simon Rattle sagt, hätte jeder X-Beliebige auch sagen können: Völlig bedeutungslos.
@furdiebant Жыл бұрын
Alles mit ihm ist so
@franziskakre83096 жыл бұрын
If Rattle critisize Karajan its like David Garrett critisize David Oistrach.
@Skidoo224 жыл бұрын
Karajan was a great conductor. Rattle wants to be a great conductor.
@nikolaoskal74389 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, Rattle cannot get over the fact that Karajan is the greatest conductor of all time and it shows in his comments. The post Karajan BPO is led by lesser men. Only Kleiber was equal to the task, but he rejected the offer out of respect for Karajan.
@rt09358 жыл бұрын
+Nikolaos Kal Nah, complete and utter bullshit. No current conductor considers Karajan that good. Mediocre and hated.
@nikolaoskal74388 жыл бұрын
+Laparada del aseo Current conductors are dwarves, filled with envy over the giants of the past.
@MOGGS19428 жыл бұрын
+Nikolaos Kal "the greatest conductor of all time". A very extravagant assertion,and impossible to justify. However,I respect your right to make such a statement.
@tmsphere8 жыл бұрын
+Nikolaos Kal "Karajan is the greatest conductor" I think you've misspelled Furtwangler there.
@lakehayden7 жыл бұрын
snap
@michaeldoyle67029 жыл бұрын
I appreciate Rattle's critique of Karajan, however unoriginal. Yet, the arrogance. The suggestion seems to be that the world has moved on from the naughty ways of Karajan. Just imagine the old man conducting an orchestra of original instruments! Mentioning Putin in the same breath as Karajan takes some nerve, or stupidity. Simon, listen to Karajan in Mahler, Berg, Webern, Shostakovich, in the Italian operas, the classics and romantics. You mention your listening experience as a teen in London with Karajan and the Brahms symphonies. I would be more interested in your opinions of listening to Karajan as a conductor and adult. Perhaps your deep prejudices prevented that.
@egw66599 жыл бұрын
+Michael Doyle It's patently obvious what his opinions of Karajan are from his perspective as a conductor and adult. It also strikes me as ironic that you would say Rattle has deep prejudices given the nature of the man he is discussing. Maybe it's Rattle's irreverence you don't like. I admire people for questioning the mythology that cloaks weighing the real attributes of their esteemed elders.
@michaeldoyle67029 жыл бұрын
+B Gorian No. Its the man's ignorance I don't like. Anyone can be irreverant. Check out my latest comment for an example, although it is also true.
@Xsathrie8 жыл бұрын
Love your comment, Michael Doyle, and totally agree!
@tmsphere8 жыл бұрын
+Michael Doyle so you love karajan and cannot accept any criticism of the man. "Ignorance" is misapplied.
@tmsphere8 жыл бұрын
***** Now how can you judge from your clear fanboy perspective? S. Rattle is very respectful of Karajan but oh what is that? a word of criticism?
@Laotzu.Goldbug5 жыл бұрын
I think it's clear that on some level this guy greatly resents von Karajan.
@patrickdoran14596 жыл бұрын
An also-ran subtly backstabbing a master ...
@jmedlin814 жыл бұрын
this. well said.
@julianblake83856 жыл бұрын
Well, it's not like Rattle had to like Karajan, but he sounds so passive-aggressive. It's like he is pretending to like the guy, but then moves on to trash him subtly. That is so not classy. His praise seems hypocritical and forced. If he didn't want to give any praise to Karajan, he should just have said it and expose he doesn't like him instead of giving these childish, half-fake-praise, half-hidden-aggression answers.
@franziskakre83095 жыл бұрын
I think its not good style. Karajan never ever said anything bad about Furtwängler.
@frogmouth4 жыл бұрын
Karajan was passive aggressive. Singers have some revealing anecdotes.
@BradBolin Жыл бұрын
I used to think Bernstein and von Karajan were so different. Now I see they are both pretentious, just in different ways. That "long breath," just a fraction of a second too long to make it serve the music is one of the things that unites them. I think of them both as too committed to their public image to be truly great artists. I can't imagine someone ever speaking of Carlos Kleiber in this way, even if they didn't appreciate his musical interpretations.
@pablobouvier9276 жыл бұрын
and this is why Karajan is considered a musical genius and Rattler a mediocre conductor...
@theBike456 жыл бұрын
Biggest disapointment was hearing Karajan's horrible interpretation of Schubert's Great Symphony.
@nigelft5 жыл бұрын
Likewise mine with his Mozart's Requiem ... I really want to enjoy it, but compared to, JEG's, but especially by Sir Neville Mariner, it is flat, and the Tuba Mirum 'muddy' (but I suppose not having Alistair Miles didn't help, either ...) ... But what he was truly exceptional at was Beethoven; his interpretation of the Nine Symphonys beats out both JEG and Sir Georg Solti, although the latter's Ring Cycle would have suggested otherwise ...
@TitanicConcerts6 жыл бұрын
Karajan is one of those conductors you really love when you start seriously listening to classical music. THE BPO were always first rate and Karajan was quite the showman, even on record. I used to think he was the only conductor who could deliver a proper climax until I discovered what a climax really is. It's not about volume. The older I get the more one dimensional Karajan becomes. He's a one trick pony. I've seen Rattle a few times and enjoy him more than HVK. But like Karajan he's made the mistake of trying to record EVERYTHING. The creative peak of HVK's career was probably the 50s when he was with the Philharmonia. So many wonderful recordings that still hold up.
@C.Hawkshaw Жыл бұрын
@lilive What do you think about Celibidache?
@TitanicConcerts Жыл бұрын
@@C.Hawkshaw i definitely rate him higher than Karajan or Rattle. And I agree with him about recordings in general. We need recordings to study and learn music, but music can only really unfold in the now. I’m sorry I never got to see Celi live. As for the recordings of him we have, some are better than others. He is best known for his Bruckner. The slow tempi do take some getting used to and you have to be in the right frame of mind to appreciate it. Probably early in the morning or late at night when you’re half conscious.
@vagadellestelle5 жыл бұрын
He is not worht a fart of Karajan, period.
@jmedlin814 жыл бұрын
I sense a great deal of subtle envy built up in Rattle, over the years, for the truly *great* man he so passive-aggressively slanders
@C.Hawkshaw Жыл бұрын
Yes, either envious that he wasn’t born in a time when a conductor could have autocratic control over an orchestra, or that he himself doesn’t have the force of personality or knowledge to have autocratic control.
@furdiebant Жыл бұрын
Yes
@jurandyrgalvilorero78239 жыл бұрын
Because, I admire much more Simon!
@shonnyno10 жыл бұрын
Does Rattle know Kleiber?????
@2000mavrok4 жыл бұрын
Oh Rattle........how small you are in front of him!
@zigzag2510 Жыл бұрын
Karajan l'avrei riconosciuto anche se avesse diretto i Deep Purple. Sino completamente d'accordo con Rattle. Karajan con umiltà si imponeva su ogni dettato pentagrammatico, al contrario, ad esempio di Bernstein nei confronti di Mahler. Bernstein con veemenza, si sottomise.
@JeonJungkook-xb7bb5 жыл бұрын
I have one question,is Simon rattle dead?
@maestroclassico58014 жыл бұрын
Why no. He left the BPO and moved back to the UK....he conducts the London Symphony Orchestra!
@Katoflauto10 жыл бұрын
Genial !
@MusikPiratCH6 жыл бұрын
Great insights on a conductor I really don't appreciate that much: Herbert von Karajan! I especially liked the answer of Rostropovich: "It needs to sound ugly!" That reminds me of Krystian Zimerman on "beautiful tones": "I like to play ugly sounds if it's needed!" (Indeed I never looked up to Karajan. I still think he did NOT reach his predecessor Wilhelm Furtwängler and that he was lucky to take over one of the two orchestras the BPO. At Karajan's time from the 1970s to Karajan's death I always found Leonard Bernstein to be not only the "better" conductor but the better musician!)
@franziskakre83096 жыл бұрын
Every conductor has his "favourites". Bernstein was great, yes, but "his" Wagnerrecordings never reached the level of Karajans. He was better with Mahler, but Strauss "belongs" to Karajan. By the way, Rattle proves to be insidious, the kind he speaks about Karajan. Karajan never talked about Furtwängler or Toscanini like that. Although Furtwängler intrigued against him. As a matter of fact, Rattle was received with much enthusiasm in Berlin, but he became a real disappointment. Rattle is very arrogant.
@MusikPiratCH6 жыл бұрын
I also don't think Karajan was good at Wagner (but that's always a matter of taste). Joachim Kaiser once told that you shouldn't ask Karajan about Furtwängler! (I think that tells the whole story.) I don't like Toscanini at all. I'm also not that sure about Richard Strauss and Karajan (but perhaps that's only because I don't like Karajan). I think even at Richard Strauss Furtwängler was better! For Johann Strauss (father and son) there is no better conductor but Carlos Kleiber. (Mariss Jansons is also better than Karajan, IMHO! Even Willy Boskovsky was better at the Strauss dynasty.) I don't think Rattle is arrogant. Music is so individual that what somebody likes another dislikes and vice versa. It's always a matter of personal taste and preferences. What I didn't like in the "Karajan-Era" was his presence in Europe. There was no real alternative (in Europe Karajan was like a Monopol)! There was only Bernstein who had the same influence in North America! Even at Furtwängler's peak (with VPO and BPO) there were many other conductors like Erich Kleiber, Felix Weingärtner and so on.