Dear Pepe, thank you for your thoughtful response.
Jose Echenique wrote:Well Seán, this is what yours truly thinks:
Stay away of the Hogwood cycle, it´s rather boring. No less than Nicholas McGegan, who played the flute in that cycle, told me that Hogwood underrehearsed everything, that he had no clear ideas about the scores (he just went along without saying much to the orchestra), and he plainly described the recordings as a joke. I think that is a little too hard, but quite frankly Brüggen, Gardiner and others outclass him big time. If you want the early symphonies Harnoncourt has recorded them with the Concentus Musicus, for the middle and late symphonies you can´t go wrong with Brüggen.
I was considering getting the Karl Böhm, BPO cycle but I would prefer to listen to smaller forces particularly in the earlier symphonies. I do like Harnoncourt, his Haydn recordings with Concentus Musicus are marvellous. I considered getting the Harnoncourt recordings of symphonies 1 to 25, but I want a full cycle so perhaps I should consider getting this set and Harnoncourt's recordings of the later symphonies with the RCO?
As for the Mozart Gardiner cycle, there are unfortunately ups and downs. The Idomeneo, Abduction, Clemenza di Tito and Don Giovanni are glorious, among the finest Mozart opera recordings ever which is saying quite something. But unfortunately the Marriage of Figaro is ruined by a dull Cherubino who is made (by Gardiner!!!!) to do some unmusical things that are ever harder to take with repeated listenings. The Susanna and Countess are rather pale too, a great pity, because it could have been a great recording, but even more infuriating is Gardiner´s choice for Sarastro in The Magic Flute, he hired a hideous singer (Harry Peeters) to sing what George Bernard Shaw described as the only music fit to be put in the mouth of God. The Pamina, infuriatingly because she deserved to be in a far better recording, is exquisite.
On the other hand he has the finest Konstanze ever for Abduction (Luba Orgonasova), and a Callas-like performance from Julia Varady as Vitellia in Clemenza di Tito, that is quite simply, to die for. The Cosí fan Tutte is fine, with a young and ardent cast, but Cherubino and Sarastro are much too important in their operas to ignore them.
Lovely summary Pepe, thank you.
So, if the price is right, go for the Gardiner, but the Hogwood symphonies are definitely NOT recommended.
Thanks.