Turns out yesterday was 237th anniversary of Boston Tea Party also - and Senate paid tribute.
Tonight is something more modern:
I heard NC Symphony play this (the 3rd) in 2006, from the nosebleed seats way in the back. It was a life changing experience to hear this live, back when the (then new) conductor had something to prove. I never knew a symphony could do this, and it cured my fear of venturing beyond safe Dvorak and Tchaikovsky, and Shostakovich was right there waiting. This is more earthly, yet more complex than Shostakovich. Possibly the richest harmonies I've heard in any music. There are several instances of real peace here, which is rarely found in Shostakovich symphonies. And some angry fffs on occasion too. Overall a gigantic symphony.
I have only heard this Karajan version, but it feels as convincing as the live one I heard. I generally don't like Karajan recording if heard after I am already familiar with the work, so I'd like to hear other versions at some point. Pls recommend one if you know any that are good.
EDIT: I found some reviews for this album:
"This Honegger disc is one of Karajan's very finest efforts, featuring simply astounding playing from the Berlin Philharmonic. Although Herbert von Karajan probably would have wanted to be remembered as a great conductor in the central German repertoire, his best orchestral recordings often were in pieces that stood outside of his "Fach". This Honegger disc is certainly one of them. It seems like only yesterday that DG reissued it in its "Originals" series, but now thanks to Arkivmusic.com's on-demand program with Universal it hopefully will be available forever.
The Second Symphony, for strings and trumpet, features simply astounding playing from the Berlin Philharmonic, with an impact and sonority that the orchestra certainly can't equal today. The "Liturgique" also has an uncommon degree of bite and excitement; there's none of that excessive smoothness that made Karajan sometimes sound like the "snake oil salesman of music". Stravinsky's Concerto in D probably is his coldest, most sterile creation (leaving aside some of the very late pieces), and this gracefully immaculate performance suits its "pure" aesthetic to perfection. Very good sonics, again better than Karajan often got from the yellow label, complement one of his very finest efforts.
--David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com"
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"Karajan lived through two world wars and the Cold War, and died only weeks before the fall of the Berlin Wall. Many of his greatest orchestral performances were of works that anticipated war or embodied a state of what he called “complete catastrophe” -- works such as Sibelius’ Symphony No. 4, Mahler’s Symphony No. 6, or Shostakovich’s Tenth Symphony. But the Honegger Symphony No. 3, written in the immediate aftermath of WWII, drew from him performances of overwhelming intensity.
-- Richard Osborne, NPR.org"