
Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast 100 Years of Beethoven's Eroica (recordings)
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Sep 25, 2025 Delve into the art of interpretation as the podcast examines the evolution of conducting techniques through historical recordings of Beethoven's Eroica. From exploratory early 1920s styles to the contrasting philosophies of legendary conductors like Toscanini and Furtwängler, listeners are treated to insights on tempo, phrasing, and expressive choices. Discover how the historical performance movement shaped modern interpretations and what these diverse recordings reveal about understanding classical music today.
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Interpretation Shapes Listening
- Interpretation shapes how we hear a piece more than the written score alone.
- Joshua Weilerstein uses multiple Eroica recordings to reveal interpretive differences across time.
Early Recording Reorchestration
- Early recordings often altered orchestration for practical or stylistic reasons.
- Oskar Fried's 1924 Eroica uses a bassoon instead of the cello melody at the opening.
Romantic Flexibility In Early Tempo
- 1920s performances favored broad tempos and expressive rubato.
- Conductors then commonly slowed for soft passages and sped up for dramatic ones.
