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発送元: ディスクユニオン大阪クラシック館
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GUSTAV MAHLER : WUNDERHORN LIEDER SYMPHONY NO. 5 / ANDRIS NELSONS MATTHIAS GOERNE LUCERNE FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA
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- アスペクト比 : 1.78:1
- 言語 : ドイツ語
- 製品サイズ : 1.42 x 19.02 x 13.97 cm; 122.47 g
- EAN : 4260234831146
- 商品モデル番号 : ACC10354
- メディア形式 : インポート
- 発売日 : 2016/5/27
- 吹き替え: : None
- 字幕: : 英語, 日本語, フランス語, ドイツ語, 韓国語
- 販売元 : Accentus
- ASIN : B01CV4LM7W
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- カスタマーレビュー:
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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
2014年3月23日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
交響曲第1番~第7番のBDアルバムに続き、マーラーの最高傑作とも言われている第9番のアバド・ルツェルン祝祭による2010年夏の演奏。作曲者の魂が乗り移ったかの如く自由・流麗かつ緻密なアバドの指揮に感動。もう少し長生きしてほしかったです。
2011年5月16日に日本でレビュー済み
Amazonで購入
マーラーの交響曲の最後となる作品であり、正に大作曲家として最後を飾るに相応しい実に気宇壮大な巨大作品です。未完成ながら、第10番に相当する作品がありますが、デリク・クックによって、補完されています。全くのマーラーの手による交響曲は、この第9番を以て終わっています。従って、正にマーラーの作曲活動の最後を飾る作品であり、また、それに相応しい大作であると思います。
多くを語る力量は、残念ながら私にはなく、ここでは、第5楽章アダージオの素晴らしさを語れれば幸いと思います。
このアダージオは、正に鮮烈に聞こえました。静かに、巨人、英雄ともいわれるべきひとが次第にこの世を去って行く際の静逸さ、尊厳さ、愛惜の情、偉大さへの追憶、自然への慈しみとその賛歌、これらが一体となって、大曲の最後を飾ります。エンディングは、正に美しく、その長いフレーズは、沈潜した楽の音を繰り返し歌いながら、静かに、ゆっくりと消えゆきます。指揮台に立つアバドは、しばし、黙したまま、余韻を噛み締めるかのようであり、感動が沈潜するまで、佇んだままの状態でした。ここで表出される楽想は、他に例えようがないほど、感動的であり、圧倒的です。
アバド、ルツェルン祝祭管弦楽団によるマーラーのブルーレイ全集も、「大地の歌」を別とすれば、あと8番を残すのみになりました。
多くを語る力量は、残念ながら私にはなく、ここでは、第5楽章アダージオの素晴らしさを語れれば幸いと思います。
このアダージオは、正に鮮烈に聞こえました。静かに、巨人、英雄ともいわれるべきひとが次第にこの世を去って行く際の静逸さ、尊厳さ、愛惜の情、偉大さへの追憶、自然への慈しみとその賛歌、これらが一体となって、大曲の最後を飾ります。エンディングは、正に美しく、その長いフレーズは、沈潜した楽の音を繰り返し歌いながら、静かに、ゆっくりと消えゆきます。指揮台に立つアバドは、しばし、黙したまま、余韻を噛み締めるかのようであり、感動が沈潜するまで、佇んだままの状態でした。ここで表出される楽想は、他に例えようがないほど、感動的であり、圧倒的です。
アバド、ルツェルン祝祭管弦楽団によるマーラーのブルーレイ全集も、「大地の歌」を別とすれば、あと8番を残すのみになりました。
2020年7月8日に日本でレビュー済み
先ず画質が本当に美しい。万全の態勢で収録に臨んだのだろう。そしてアバドの指揮ぶり!指揮芸術という言葉があるのならまさにその頂点だと思う。最後の祈るようなアバドの表情は泣ける。
他の国からのトップレビュー

Alfredo
5つ星のうち5.0
Estuve allí
2022年10月31日にスペインでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Asistí a este concierto y me apetecía rememorarlo con el DVD. El uzbeko Bronfman es un monstruo al piano, su "Emperador" es realmente imperial. Y la Schéhérezade en manos de Nelsons y el Concertgebouw es un festín para los oídos. Inolvidable.

Andreas Obermüller
5つ星のうち5.0
Sehr inspiriert
2022年6月7日にドイツでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Ich sammle Scheherazade Aufführungen. Insbesondere der Anfang des 2. Teils ist für manche Dirigenten und Orchester eine Hürde. Es sind keine Stargeiger, die diese prägnante Melodie spielen. Ich bin sehr angetan von dieser Aufführung. Nelsons ist freudig bei der Arbeit und das Orchester ist sowieso ein Spitzenorchester. Dazu noch alles live gespielt. Famos auch das 5. Klavierkonzert von Beethoven. Nicht die Spur hölzern oder nur so runtergespielt, sondern lebendig interpretiert. Wundervoll, wie dieses Standardkonzert ein schönes Erlebnis wird. Volle 5 Punkte!

Loco
5つ星のうち5.0
Acquisto Obbligatorio per tutti i Mahleriani
2019年1月15日にイタリアでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Ogni commento é inutile, questa edizione dal vivo della stupenda nona di Mahler resterá per sempre un riferimento assoluto per tutti i direttori d'orchestra a venire. Il lungo silenzio alla fine del quarto tempo con Abbado trasfigurato in contemplazione é per me uno dei momenti piú profondi della mia passione per la musica e per Mahler. Ovviamente anche la super orchestra di Lucerna non ha bisogno di commenti.
W Mahler
W Abbado
W Mahler
W Abbado

R. Mathes
5つ星のうち5.0
A performance for the ages but also one worthy of a more considered discussion.
2011年9月5日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
I have been waiting for this performance for a while. This score is one of the great documents we have I believe, up there with the 9th of Beethoven, the Matthew Passion and the Haydn Quartets of Mozart. It is a miraculous piece of music and I own every available recording. I have argued with colleagues and friends about the various versions, the relative strengths and weaknesses of Bernstein and Karajan, Barenboim and Boulez, Barbirolli and Gergiev and you name it (Horenstein, Walter etc etc etc.) What a wonderful world it is to have such a work and such great orchestras and conductors regularly playing and recording it. While it was nice to see the young, gifted and fresh faced Mahler Youth Orchestra playing it under Abbado in a DVD released a few years ago, I was disappointed with it. I found the playing good and Abbado's interpretation solid and well organized but something was missing. Compared with the heaven storming Mahler performances happening each summer in Lucerne, and recorded on video, it didn't even compare. After viewing the Lucerne Mahler 6 and Mahler 3 I thought to myself "I hope to God they document an Abbado Mahler 9 again but with Lucerne! It deserves a performance by that incomparable Festival group conducted by Claudio, their knight with shining baton."
Well........................here it is. All the reviews would declare it the performance of the ages, the essential, incandescent Mahler 9. The silence at the end for 2 minutes, those extraordinary players, Abbado's knowledge of the score. The beauty, the artistry, the dedication to the text, none of Bernstein's extremes, Rattle's intrusive penchant for detailing everything, Karajan's cold architecture or even Gergiev's wild flights of "where is he going and where did that come from???" Just Claudio Abbado performing a score he knows better than any other conductor alive and conducting literally the greatest symphonic players on the planet who would do anything he asks of them.
Is it what all these reviews say it is?? The performance to die for, the be all and end all performance of this piece???
Mmm....I would have to say it almost is. I believe it a performance worth 5 stars, the inner movements in particular wonderful as detail is everything with movement two and three. I disagree strongly with one of the other reviewers here who accuses Abbado of seeming not interested and not "into it". That is ridiculous. He has been battling health issues for years and has had to cancel many a performance each year for the past half decade. The man is 77 and had a life and death battle with stomach Cancer. Make no mistake. He is completely immersed in the score and his performance is completely dedicated in every way. There is no doubt that he is giving his all.
The reason I say almost is that while I was impressed with the sound, the playing, the conducting and the all around beauty of this disc and its presentation, far superior to the Youth Orchestra disc as expected, a voice in the back of my head led me to go to my collection and pull out an old document. What is the difference between this wonderful performance and an, iconic, legendary, timeless one. Is it execution?? No. This disc proves that it isn't because there is no better played Mahler 9 on the planet than this and there never will be again. This will be the greatest single performance of the Mahler 9 ever from a notes perspective guaranteed. Is it something else, the ineffable that can't be described???
I had stopped in recent years listening to the Bernstein/Mahler performances. I bought into the adage that they are distended and out of date; over the top and if Mahler were alive when Bernstein were giving those performances he would have had more than a word or two to say about tempo distortions and abusing his directions. It has been these Lucerne performances and some of the more faithful to the letter Abbado-style Mahler performances that have become my go-to discs choices in recent years. My admiration for Abbado, including his new Mozart and Beethoven recordings, knows no bounds.
ALL THAT SAID----today I went back and pulled out an old document. I watched Bernstein's old video of Mahler 9 with the Vienna Philharmonic taped at the Berlin Philharmonie in March of 1971. The video quality is not that good, the sound is middling and yet..........................I must say. That, to me, is the ultimate Mahler's Symphony No. 9!!!! I was just blown away by the intensity of the tempo choices, the rubato, the dynamics, the pacing and the emotion. Absolutely extraordinary on every level.
Yes---The Lucerne Festival Orchestra play this piece as if their life depends on it and the Vienna Phil look like they are shopping for toothpaste.
Yes---The video and audio quality of the new Abbado is as good as it is possible to get with our 21st century technology.
But---just listen to Bernstein's reading of the main "ewig" theme from Das Lied that begins the 1st movement and to the return of it twenty minutes later. Listen to the abandon of the third movement. Bernstein's performance is so deep, his understanding of the harmonic rhythm and the underlying musical logic is unrivaled. We shall not see the like of him again ever. I had completely forgotten. As these moments rushed past I thought, "this really was a hallowed time in performance history. Bernstein conducting Mahler." Overblown? I guess so at times but life changing.
The Abbado is wonderful and well nigh perfect. It is so faithful textually. Mahler does NOT ask for a slowing, a rallentando when the "ewig" theme returns. He writes, "Wie von Anfang" "Like the beginning". So........Abbado does not slow down at all at the recapitulation. He is almost dry eyed. Bernstein does slow, not in a smarmy manner, but just so that it is all the more heartbreaking. Would Mahler object? I cannot imagine why he would. At that moment I can't imagine the piece played in a manner more attuned to the emotional reality of the music. I am assuming for Bernstein the "beginning" is a recollection that Mahler's music refers to, a beginning that is remembered but is not the same. After 20 minutes of music that fights itself from within Bernstein ushers this section in like no other. In Abbado's hands the moment is lovely and beautiful. In Bernstein's hands the moment is transcendent.
The bottom line is that both versions are magnificent and it could easily be argued that Abbado's is the one to buy if you have to choose one version (it is probably the most letter perfect while also being emotionally moving). For the Mahler 9 lover though I would say "Buy the Abbado but don't expect it to be the final be all and end all."
One must say that Abbado surpasses himself in the final movement and really achieves almost a Bernstein level of depth and intensity. It is incredibly moving. That movement assures this is a 5 star DVD. We shall not see the like of the Abbado Lucerne relationship again and it must be appreciated. Still; it must be said that Bernstein's Mahler 9 knows no equal in my mind and the Vienna Video is his finest I think. The Bernstein Live in Berlin/Mahler 9 is a bit messy and the Trombones miss the big climax in the 4th Adagio Movement though that version should be experienced for any Mahler 9 lover. The NY Phil reading is early and good but not close to the Lucerne Abbado in terms of clarity or knowledge of the score. The Concertgebouw Bernstein is a must but a bit distended and extreme. Again: The Vienna video????
Wow. Remarkable!!!
We are lucky to have both these documents quite frankly and I will return to them both and may amend this review again.
Thank you Gustav Mahler (Claudio Abbado and Leonard Bernstein--and the Lucerne and Vienna players!)
Well........................here it is. All the reviews would declare it the performance of the ages, the essential, incandescent Mahler 9. The silence at the end for 2 minutes, those extraordinary players, Abbado's knowledge of the score. The beauty, the artistry, the dedication to the text, none of Bernstein's extremes, Rattle's intrusive penchant for detailing everything, Karajan's cold architecture or even Gergiev's wild flights of "where is he going and where did that come from???" Just Claudio Abbado performing a score he knows better than any other conductor alive and conducting literally the greatest symphonic players on the planet who would do anything he asks of them.
Is it what all these reviews say it is?? The performance to die for, the be all and end all performance of this piece???
Mmm....I would have to say it almost is. I believe it a performance worth 5 stars, the inner movements in particular wonderful as detail is everything with movement two and three. I disagree strongly with one of the other reviewers here who accuses Abbado of seeming not interested and not "into it". That is ridiculous. He has been battling health issues for years and has had to cancel many a performance each year for the past half decade. The man is 77 and had a life and death battle with stomach Cancer. Make no mistake. He is completely immersed in the score and his performance is completely dedicated in every way. There is no doubt that he is giving his all.
The reason I say almost is that while I was impressed with the sound, the playing, the conducting and the all around beauty of this disc and its presentation, far superior to the Youth Orchestra disc as expected, a voice in the back of my head led me to go to my collection and pull out an old document. What is the difference between this wonderful performance and an, iconic, legendary, timeless one. Is it execution?? No. This disc proves that it isn't because there is no better played Mahler 9 on the planet than this and there never will be again. This will be the greatest single performance of the Mahler 9 ever from a notes perspective guaranteed. Is it something else, the ineffable that can't be described???
I had stopped in recent years listening to the Bernstein/Mahler performances. I bought into the adage that they are distended and out of date; over the top and if Mahler were alive when Bernstein were giving those performances he would have had more than a word or two to say about tempo distortions and abusing his directions. It has been these Lucerne performances and some of the more faithful to the letter Abbado-style Mahler performances that have become my go-to discs choices in recent years. My admiration for Abbado, including his new Mozart and Beethoven recordings, knows no bounds.
ALL THAT SAID----today I went back and pulled out an old document. I watched Bernstein's old video of Mahler 9 with the Vienna Philharmonic taped at the Berlin Philharmonie in March of 1971. The video quality is not that good, the sound is middling and yet..........................I must say. That, to me, is the ultimate Mahler's Symphony No. 9!!!! I was just blown away by the intensity of the tempo choices, the rubato, the dynamics, the pacing and the emotion. Absolutely extraordinary on every level.
Yes---The Lucerne Festival Orchestra play this piece as if their life depends on it and the Vienna Phil look like they are shopping for toothpaste.
Yes---The video and audio quality of the new Abbado is as good as it is possible to get with our 21st century technology.
But---just listen to Bernstein's reading of the main "ewig" theme from Das Lied that begins the 1st movement and to the return of it twenty minutes later. Listen to the abandon of the third movement. Bernstein's performance is so deep, his understanding of the harmonic rhythm and the underlying musical logic is unrivaled. We shall not see the like of him again ever. I had completely forgotten. As these moments rushed past I thought, "this really was a hallowed time in performance history. Bernstein conducting Mahler." Overblown? I guess so at times but life changing.
The Abbado is wonderful and well nigh perfect. It is so faithful textually. Mahler does NOT ask for a slowing, a rallentando when the "ewig" theme returns. He writes, "Wie von Anfang" "Like the beginning". So........Abbado does not slow down at all at the recapitulation. He is almost dry eyed. Bernstein does slow, not in a smarmy manner, but just so that it is all the more heartbreaking. Would Mahler object? I cannot imagine why he would. At that moment I can't imagine the piece played in a manner more attuned to the emotional reality of the music. I am assuming for Bernstein the "beginning" is a recollection that Mahler's music refers to, a beginning that is remembered but is not the same. After 20 minutes of music that fights itself from within Bernstein ushers this section in like no other. In Abbado's hands the moment is lovely and beautiful. In Bernstein's hands the moment is transcendent.
The bottom line is that both versions are magnificent and it could easily be argued that Abbado's is the one to buy if you have to choose one version (it is probably the most letter perfect while also being emotionally moving). For the Mahler 9 lover though I would say "Buy the Abbado but don't expect it to be the final be all and end all."
One must say that Abbado surpasses himself in the final movement and really achieves almost a Bernstein level of depth and intensity. It is incredibly moving. That movement assures this is a 5 star DVD. We shall not see the like of the Abbado Lucerne relationship again and it must be appreciated. Still; it must be said that Bernstein's Mahler 9 knows no equal in my mind and the Vienna Video is his finest I think. The Bernstein Live in Berlin/Mahler 9 is a bit messy and the Trombones miss the big climax in the 4th Adagio Movement though that version should be experienced for any Mahler 9 lover. The NY Phil reading is early and good but not close to the Lucerne Abbado in terms of clarity or knowledge of the score. The Concertgebouw Bernstein is a must but a bit distended and extreme. Again: The Vienna video????
Wow. Remarkable!!!
We are lucky to have both these documents quite frankly and I will return to them both and may amend this review again.
Thank you Gustav Mahler (Claudio Abbado and Leonard Bernstein--and the Lucerne and Vienna players!)

patrice9263
5つ星のうち5.0
Interprétation magistrale
2013年4月11日にフランスでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Alors ici, nous atteignons des sommets.
Cette 9ième de Mahler par le Lucerne Festival Orchestra sous la direction de Claudio Abbado est un monument érigé à la mémoire du compositeur. Rarement je n’ai été à la fois envouté et charmé par cette interprétation. Véritable « concerto pour orchestre » dans lequel les musiciens de tous les pupitres qui jouent en solistes sont d’une qualité exceptionnelle et les échanges entre les cuivres, les bois et les cordes sont d’une prodigieuse justesse et dignes des membres d’un orchestre symphonique qui joueraient ensemble depuis des dizaines d’années.L’extraordinaire complexité de l’écriture du Rondo-Burleske (contrepoint très dense),attaqué sur un tempo « très décidé », est servie par des artistes/musiciens qui savourent leur bonheur de participer à la grandeur de ce chef d’œuvre. Mahler n’a jamais entendu sa symphonie de son vivant (création Bruno Walter 26 juin 1912) mais si il existe encore quelque part, il peut être fier de cette version qui doit être fidèle à son Ode à la Mort, à la joie d’avoir été vivant et à son second chant d’adieu à la Terre. L'interprétation de l'adagio est vraiment sublime et émeut jusqu'aux larmes.
Réalisation magistrale. A acquérir sans délai.
Cette 9ième de Mahler par le Lucerne Festival Orchestra sous la direction de Claudio Abbado est un monument érigé à la mémoire du compositeur. Rarement je n’ai été à la fois envouté et charmé par cette interprétation. Véritable « concerto pour orchestre » dans lequel les musiciens de tous les pupitres qui jouent en solistes sont d’une qualité exceptionnelle et les échanges entre les cuivres, les bois et les cordes sont d’une prodigieuse justesse et dignes des membres d’un orchestre symphonique qui joueraient ensemble depuis des dizaines d’années.L’extraordinaire complexité de l’écriture du Rondo-Burleske (contrepoint très dense),attaqué sur un tempo « très décidé », est servie par des artistes/musiciens qui savourent leur bonheur de participer à la grandeur de ce chef d’œuvre. Mahler n’a jamais entendu sa symphonie de son vivant (création Bruno Walter 26 juin 1912) mais si il existe encore quelque part, il peut être fier de cette version qui doit être fidèle à son Ode à la Mort, à la joie d’avoir été vivant et à son second chant d’adieu à la Terre. L'interprétation de l'adagio est vraiment sublime et émeut jusqu'aux larmes.
Réalisation magistrale. A acquérir sans délai.