Jazz
Camilla George
73 products
LE SACRE DU PRINTEMPS (DECCA PURE ANALOGUE SERIES)
DECCA
Available as
Vinyl
$41.51
Jan 23, 2026
Vinyl LP pressing. Solti once likened the city of Chicago and it's illustrious orchestra to a "sleeping beauty" when he arrived as music director in autumn 1969. It was the name of another ballet - Stravinsky's Rite of Spring - which was to reveal just how incendiary the new relationship had become within five years of recording which still hurls itself out of the speakers half a century after it was made. Introducing Decca's new all-analogue vinyl series, DECCA PURE ANALOGUE, presenting some of the most iconic recordings from the Decca & Philips archives. The series is mastered by Rainer Maillard and cut by Sidney C. Meyer at the renowned Emil Berliner Studios, pressed on 180g vinyl at Pallas and presented in deluxe gatefold sleeves in hand-numbered, limited editions. Only original analogue sources are used (2-track stereo and 4-track quadraphonic tapes, plus analogue masters of early digital recordings) and no extra devices are utilized in the signal pass, i.e. no digital sound processing at all.
IN THE WEE HOURS
OA2
Available as
CD
Bay Area guitarist George Cotsirilos returns to the intimate language of solo nylon-string guitar on "In the Wee Hours," illuminating beloved standards and two original compositions with patience and depth. Recorded largely in unedited first takes over several years, his seventh recording on OA2 unfolds with the quiet authority and refined lyricism that have defined Cotsirilos's career-from his celebrated quartet release Refuge to earlier trio and solo recordings praised for their fluidity and swing. Here, classics such as "Come Sunday," "Haunted Heart," and the title ballad are rendered with a meticulous touch and subtle dynamic shadings that reveal the hidden architecture of each melody. Alternating between exquisite instruments by Jos' Ram�rez and Alberto Morales, Cotsirilos draws out warm, singing tones that blur the line between jazz phrasing and classical resonance. "- an impeccable sense of timing especially in revealing the hidden rhythms of complex melodies. His approach to harmony is whimsical, but patently beautiful at all times." - All About Jazz " - an unerring sense of swing and melody. His solos, while displaying accuracy and technique, are filled with soul." Vintage Guitar Magazine
Kodaly: Hary Janos Suite; Prokofiev: Lt Kije Suite / Szell
CBS Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Jan 11, 2008
KODALY: HARY JANOS SUITE PROK
Debussy: Pelléas Et Mélisande / Pierre Boulez
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$41.99
May 14, 2008
One might have thought that the exceptional nature of this opera, lull of vague thoughts and understated music, would prove elusive on disc, but Boulez's much praised 1970 recording, made after his performances of it at Covent Garden, reappears amid a positive welter of recommendable versions of the work, making choice increasingly difficult. His long introductory essay that accompanied the original LP issue, setting out his ideas on the opera and its casting, has unfortunately now been dropped; but in particular he made a point of the importance of the orchestra — "to reduce the score to an accompanied recitative is conspicuously to betray it" — and under his direction the orchestral sound is truly splendid, reflecting his reaction against the "bloodlessness" with which the drama is often presented.
The French of his completely non-French cast (contrasting with those of Dutoit and Jordan Decca, 3/91 and Erato, 12/91 respectively) is let down only by George Shirley—I am surprised that Boulez did not insist on something being done about his poor vowels—and though, as a tenor, he conveys Pelléas's youthfulness, his tone is rather unyielding for much of the time. The other slightly disappointing piece of casting is David Ward, who makes old Arkel sound merely glum (though that seems to have been the reading Boulez wanted). But the strength of this performance lies with the intelligent and vocally assured Sdderström and with Mcintyre's superb character study of Golaud, against his will eaten up with a jealousy that drives him to near-madness; and exceptionally good is the boy Anthony Britten as little Yniold. The recording, always very satisfying, is now "enhanced using 20-bit technology", if you know what that means: at any rate, it sounds fine to me.
-- L.S., Gramophone [4/1992]
The French of his completely non-French cast (contrasting with those of Dutoit and Jordan Decca, 3/91 and Erato, 12/91 respectively) is let down only by George Shirley—I am surprised that Boulez did not insist on something being done about his poor vowels—and though, as a tenor, he conveys Pelléas's youthfulness, his tone is rather unyielding for much of the time. The other slightly disappointing piece of casting is David Ward, who makes old Arkel sound merely glum (though that seems to have been the reading Boulez wanted). But the strength of this performance lies with the intelligent and vocally assured Sdderström and with Mcintyre's superb character study of Golaud, against his will eaten up with a jealousy that drives him to near-madness; and exceptionally good is the boy Anthony Britten as little Yniold. The recording, always very satisfying, is now "enhanced using 20-bit technology", if you know what that means: at any rate, it sounds fine to me.
-- L.S., Gramophone [4/1992]
George London - Of Gods And Demons
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Aug 31, 2012
Of Gods and Demons
Mozart: Piano Concertos No 21, 26 / Casadesus, Szell
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Nov 25, 2008
Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 21 & 26
Androcles and the Lion / Original Television Cast
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Apr 22, 2014
Based on George Bernard Shaw's play, the 1967 television special Androcles and the Lion recounts the story of Androcles, the simple-hearted Christian tailor whose friendship with a lion saves himself and his friends from martyrdom in the Roman Colosseum. Set to music by Richard Rodgers, the cast includes British comedian Norman Wisdom as Androcles, Noel Coward as Caesar and features Ed Ames, John Cullum and Geoffrey Holder.
Tracks:
1. Opening 4:45 – Orchestra
2. Velvet Paws 5:45 – Norman Wisdom
Dialogue: Norman Wisdom and Patricia Routledge
3. Follow in Our Footsteps 1:52 – Ed Ames and Chorus
4. Strangers 5:00 – Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Dialogue: Inga Swenson and John Cullum
5. A Fine Young Man 6:45 – Ed Ames
Dialogue: Ed Ames and Brian Bedford
Strength Is My Weakness – Norman Wisdom and Ed Ames
Dialogue: Norman Wisdom, Ed Ames, Inga Swenson and Brian Bedford
6. Gladiators’ Ballet 3:07 – Orchestra
7. The Emperor’s Thumb 2:47 – Noel Coward
Dialogue: Noel Coward, Inga Swenson, Kurt Kasznar and Clifford David
8. No More Waiting 4:50 – Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Dialogue: Norman Wisdom, Inga Swenson and John Cullum
9. The Arena Pantomime 3:55 – Norman Wisdom and Orchestra
10. Don’t Be Afraid Of An Animal 4:51 – Noel Coward and Norman Wisdom
Dialogue: Noel Coward, Norman Wisdom and Bill Hickey
11. Reprise: No More Waiting 4:23 – Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Dialogue: Noel Coward, Norman Wisdom, Ed Ames, Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Velvet Paws – Norman Wisdom
Tracks:
1. Opening 4:45 – Orchestra
2. Velvet Paws 5:45 – Norman Wisdom
Dialogue: Norman Wisdom and Patricia Routledge
3. Follow in Our Footsteps 1:52 – Ed Ames and Chorus
4. Strangers 5:00 – Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Dialogue: Inga Swenson and John Cullum
5. A Fine Young Man 6:45 – Ed Ames
Dialogue: Ed Ames and Brian Bedford
Strength Is My Weakness – Norman Wisdom and Ed Ames
Dialogue: Norman Wisdom, Ed Ames, Inga Swenson and Brian Bedford
6. Gladiators’ Ballet 3:07 – Orchestra
7. The Emperor’s Thumb 2:47 – Noel Coward
Dialogue: Noel Coward, Inga Swenson, Kurt Kasznar and Clifford David
8. No More Waiting 4:50 – Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Dialogue: Norman Wisdom, Inga Swenson and John Cullum
9. The Arena Pantomime 3:55 – Norman Wisdom and Orchestra
10. Don’t Be Afraid Of An Animal 4:51 – Noel Coward and Norman Wisdom
Dialogue: Noel Coward, Norman Wisdom and Bill Hickey
11. Reprise: No More Waiting 4:23 – Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Dialogue: Noel Coward, Norman Wisdom, Ed Ames, Inga Swenson and John Cullum
Velvet Paws – Norman Wisdom
WILD HORSES: ROCK STEADY
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.98
Oct 04, 2011
Wild Horses/Rock Steady (Cti Records 40T)
Strauss: Ein Heldenleben, Don Juan / Ormandy, Szell
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
STRAUSS: EIN HELDENLEBEN, DON
Beethoven: Piano Concertos Nos 1 & 3 / Fleisher, Szell
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
...This is vibrant and virile music making full of passionate sweep, arresting clarity, and genuine, chamber-like give and take between soloist and orchestra.
Like his teacher and mentor Artur Schnabel, Fleisher underlines Beethoven's harmonic tension by either distending or slightly speeding up certain runs and arpeggiated sequences, yet rarely at the expense of accuracy...although he's not one to slave over making every long trill perfectly even and tapered. Under George Szell's eagle-eye, the Cleveland Orchestra members achieve staggering unanimity in regard to articulation and marcato phrasing, but with more heart and singing impulse than in Szell's relatively stiffer Beethoven accompaniments for Emil Gilels eight years later...
--Jed Distler, ClassicsToday.com [reviewing the Third Concerto, Sony 78767]
Like his teacher and mentor Artur Schnabel, Fleisher underlines Beethoven's harmonic tension by either distending or slightly speeding up certain runs and arpeggiated sequences, yet rarely at the expense of accuracy...although he's not one to slave over making every long trill perfectly even and tapered. Under George Szell's eagle-eye, the Cleveland Orchestra members achieve staggering unanimity in regard to articulation and marcato phrasing, but with more heart and singing impulse than in Szell's relatively stiffer Beethoven accompaniments for Emil Gilels eight years later...
--Jed Distler, ClassicsToday.com [reviewing the Third Concerto, Sony 78767]
Haydn: Symphonies 97, 98 & 99 / Szell, Cleveland Orchestra
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
This is an especially significant release in Sony's distinguished “Masterworks Heritage“ series, returning the Symphonies 97 and 99 (recorded in 1957) to the catalog and comprising the first stereo release of each. Sonically this transfer offers radical improvement over the old Epic LP of four decades ago. The early stereo image, if not particularly directional, provides greater spread than did the monaural engineering of the Epic disc and, of greater importance, tames the occasionally painful shrillness of that earlier edition. Moreover, this 99 is Szell's only recording of the work and is thus an essential component of his discography. It and 97 receive fleet, tautly controlled readings stamped by textural clarity featuring well-defined winds and brass and benefiting from Szell's sensitivity to motivic structure. I had always thought this 97 to be more intense than the conductor's stereo remake (currently available on a bargain Sony CD), but comparison reveals that this is mainly an illusion created by the dryness of the Epic version, recorded in a Severance Hall lacking the shell that was later added to enhance resonance and was in place when the remake was produced.
The reading of 98 (recorded in 1969) has been on CD for some time and should be more familiar. It is generally stylish, but a bit too bland and comfortable, lacking the flair and animation of the magnificent Toscanini and Colin Davis versions. In the main, however, this is a welcome reissue. Exposition repeats are observed in the first movements of 98 and 99, but not in the finale of the former or in the initial movement of 97.
-- Mortimer H. Frank, FANFARE
The reading of 98 (recorded in 1969) has been on CD for some time and should be more familiar. It is generally stylish, but a bit too bland and comfortable, lacking the flair and animation of the magnificent Toscanini and Colin Davis versions. In the main, however, this is a welcome reissue. Exposition repeats are observed in the first movements of 98 and 99, but not in the finale of the former or in the initial movement of 97.
-- Mortimer H. Frank, FANFARE
VALI: Flute Concerto / Deylaman / Folk Songs (Set No. 10)
Naxos
Available as
CD
The Persian composer, Reza Vali, began his music studies at the Tehran Conservatory of Music, finally settling in the United States. His compositions include pieces for orchestra, string quartet, piano and voice, and chamber ensemble.
TOVEY: Symphony in D major / The Bride of Dionysus: Prelude
Toccata
Available as
CD
Classical Music
Mozart: Symphonies 35 & 39 / Szell, Cleveland Orchestra
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Jan 07, 2010
MOZART: SYMPHONIES 35 & 39 SZ
TOVEY: Cello Concerto / Air / Elegiac Variations
Toccata
Available as
CD
Classical Music
Schubert: Symphonies 8 & 9 / Szell, Cleveland Orchestra
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Schubert: Symphony No. 8 in B Minor, D. 759 "Unfinished" & S
Basie's Basement / Count Basie
RCA
Available as
CD
$17.99
Sep 24, 2010
Track Listing
1. Hey, Pretty Baby
2. Seventh Avenue Express
3. Walking Slow Behind You
4. Mister Roberts' Roost
5. Don't You Want a Man Like Me
6. South
7. You Call Yourself a Jungle King (I Found Out You Ain't a Doggone Thing)
8. Sophisticated Swing
9. House Rent Boogie
10. Basie's Basement
11. Brand New Wagon
Personnel includes: Count Basie (piano); Jimmy Rushing (vocals); Preston Love, Rudy Rutherford, C.Q. Price, Earl Warren (alto saxophone); Paul Gonsalves, Buddy Tate (tenor saxophone); Jack Washington (baritone saxophone); Ed Lewis, Snooky Young, Harry "Sweets" Edison, Clark Terry, Jimmy Nottingham, Gerald Wilson (trumpet); Bill Johnson, Ted Donnelly, George Matthews, Eli Robinson, George Washington (trombone); Freddie Green (guitar); Walter Page (bass); Jo Jones, Butch Ballard (drums).
Recorded between January 3 and December 12, 1947.
But for the fact that it only has 11 tracks, this mid-priced compilation (not to be confused with the identically titled Bluebird collection covering Basie's early-'30s recordings with the Bennie Moten band) could easily get the highest rating. And this could be the place to start for any rock fans wondering what Basie was about, at least some of the time. This disc shows Basie and company (especially singer Jimmy Rushing) working in an R&B mode, doing such songs as Willie Dixon's "You Call Yourself the Jungle King (I Found Out You Ain't a Doggone Thing)," "Hey, Pretty Baby," "Brand New Wagon," and "Walking Slow Behind You." Rushing and the band sound like they're pushing toward Chess Records' turf. And the astonishing thing is that they pull it off -- if these records had sold in any serious number, Basie and Rushing might have had a whole second career in R&B, right up there with Big Joe Turner. There's a minimum of annotation, and not all of the sound is quite perfect -- amazingly, the 1991 remastered "Basie's Basement" featured here has a click or two in evidence, for which there's no excuse. But the sound quality everywhere else is pretty much beyond reproach, and there's also one number here, "Mister Roberts' Roost," a laidback instrumental prominently featuring Basie's piano, that's otherwise unavailable.
1. Hey, Pretty Baby
2. Seventh Avenue Express
3. Walking Slow Behind You
4. Mister Roberts' Roost
5. Don't You Want a Man Like Me
6. South
7. You Call Yourself a Jungle King (I Found Out You Ain't a Doggone Thing)
8. Sophisticated Swing
9. House Rent Boogie
10. Basie's Basement
11. Brand New Wagon
Personnel includes: Count Basie (piano); Jimmy Rushing (vocals); Preston Love, Rudy Rutherford, C.Q. Price, Earl Warren (alto saxophone); Paul Gonsalves, Buddy Tate (tenor saxophone); Jack Washington (baritone saxophone); Ed Lewis, Snooky Young, Harry "Sweets" Edison, Clark Terry, Jimmy Nottingham, Gerald Wilson (trumpet); Bill Johnson, Ted Donnelly, George Matthews, Eli Robinson, George Washington (trombone); Freddie Green (guitar); Walter Page (bass); Jo Jones, Butch Ballard (drums).
Recorded between January 3 and December 12, 1947.
But for the fact that it only has 11 tracks, this mid-priced compilation (not to be confused with the identically titled Bluebird collection covering Basie's early-'30s recordings with the Bennie Moten band) could easily get the highest rating. And this could be the place to start for any rock fans wondering what Basie was about, at least some of the time. This disc shows Basie and company (especially singer Jimmy Rushing) working in an R&B mode, doing such songs as Willie Dixon's "You Call Yourself the Jungle King (I Found Out You Ain't a Doggone Thing)," "Hey, Pretty Baby," "Brand New Wagon," and "Walking Slow Behind You." Rushing and the band sound like they're pushing toward Chess Records' turf. And the astonishing thing is that they pull it off -- if these records had sold in any serious number, Basie and Rushing might have had a whole second career in R&B, right up there with Big Joe Turner. There's a minimum of annotation, and not all of the sound is quite perfect -- amazingly, the 1991 remastered "Basie's Basement" featured here has a click or two in evidence, for which there's no excuse. But the sound quality everywhere else is pretty much beyond reproach, and there's also one number here, "Mister Roberts' Roost," a laidback instrumental prominently featuring Basie's piano, that's otherwise unavailable.
Strauss: Don Quixote, Horn Concerto No 1, Don Juan / Fournier, Bloom, Szell
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Just how masterly Szell was as a Straussian is demonstrated in all three of these items, recorded in 1960 and 1961. By then Szell had built the Cleveland Orchestra into what was regularly described very fairly — as the finest in America. These performances with a slight reservation over the hectic opening of Don Juan bear out not just what tautness and precision of ensemble the orchestra were achieving, but the thrusting emotional intensity. Szell as a person was one of the most daunting of conductors, chilling anyone around him; he certainly had musical fires within him, a point I never doubted in the conversations I had with him in his last years. I am glad that the One of the century's great cellists, Pierre Fournier, in Don Quixote accompanied by George Szell Photo 11 m 1' booklet-note includes memories from the horn player, Myron Bloom, bearing out what feelings there were behind the chilly facade.
Bloom, one of the greatest of American horn players, promoted by Szell to be first horn in Cleveland in 1955, a year after he joined the orchestra, is also very well celebrated here. I was sorry when after Szell's death and Maazel's succession, he was persuaded to go to the Orchestre de Paris to sort out their horn section, for he made far too few solo recordings, and in Cleveland he might have made many more. This one of the Horn Concerto No. 1 is marvellous at bringing out the enormous range of dynamic and tone colour Bloom had at his command. In the outer movements lightness and agility are wonderfully contrasted with heroic power, and in the central slow movement the impact of the braying.fortissinio in the middle section is all the greater when set against such gentle poetry in the outer sections.
The other artist here celebrated is of course the cellist, Pierre Fournier, who made this version of Don Quixote several years before recording it with Karajan in Berlin for DG. The contrasts are fascinating, for against my expectation Fournier is freer in his rubato with Szell, who prefers more flowing speeds than Karajan, making this a noble portrait, the more intense for not being so expansive. The opening of Don Juan, as I said, is hectic in its pursuit of brilliance, but very quickly Szell finds the same combination of opulence and urgency that marks the rest of the disc. A most welcome historic reissue, very well transferred, with sound both warm and detailed.
-- Edward Greenfield, Gramophone [2/1998]
Bloom, one of the greatest of American horn players, promoted by Szell to be first horn in Cleveland in 1955, a year after he joined the orchestra, is also very well celebrated here. I was sorry when after Szell's death and Maazel's succession, he was persuaded to go to the Orchestre de Paris to sort out their horn section, for he made far too few solo recordings, and in Cleveland he might have made many more. This one of the Horn Concerto No. 1 is marvellous at bringing out the enormous range of dynamic and tone colour Bloom had at his command. In the outer movements lightness and agility are wonderfully contrasted with heroic power, and in the central slow movement the impact of the braying.fortissinio in the middle section is all the greater when set against such gentle poetry in the outer sections.
The other artist here celebrated is of course the cellist, Pierre Fournier, who made this version of Don Quixote several years before recording it with Karajan in Berlin for DG. The contrasts are fascinating, for against my expectation Fournier is freer in his rubato with Szell, who prefers more flowing speeds than Karajan, making this a noble portrait, the more intense for not being so expansive. The opening of Don Juan, as I said, is hectic in its pursuit of brilliance, but very quickly Szell finds the same combination of opulence and urgency that marks the rest of the disc. A most welcome historic reissue, very well transferred, with sound both warm and detailed.
-- Edward Greenfield, Gramophone [2/1998]
Mendelssohn: A Midsummer Night's Dream / Szell, Stokowski
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
MENDELSSOHN: A MIDSUMMER NIGHT
Charpentier; Poulenc: French Choral Works
Chandos
Available as
CD
$13.99
Jan 01, 2008
This much-admired disc of French sacred music from the seventeen and twentieth centuries, beautifully performed by the Choir of St John's College, Cambridge under George Guest, is now available at chandos Classics price for the first time. These performances were well received on their initial release, with reviews such as 'The choir's silk-sheen sound brings Poulenc motets to perfection' (South Wales Argus) and 'This is another quality disc from Chandos which offers beautiful performances of these attractive French choral works' (Canberra Times). The recording is sure to be welcomed at the new, lower, Classics price.
Mahler: Symphony No 4; Mozart: Exsultate, Jubilate / Szell
CBS Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Apr 17, 2007
MAHLER: SYMPHONY NO 4 MOZART
Brahms: Piano Concerto No 1; Strauss: Burleske / Szell, Serkin
CBS Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Dec 16, 2009
At his best, Serkin's driving energy, fierce intelligence, and his unfailing lucidity of touch produced recordings that do that rare thing: they transcend the medium. This is one such.
Serkin is said to have disliked recording and his legacy is mixed, technically and artistically. Yet, at best, his driving energy, his fierce intelligence, his quick mind, and (until comparatively recently) his unfailing lucidity of touch often produced recordings that do that rare thing: they transcend the medium.
One such recording is his 1968 Cleveland account of Brahms's D minor Piano Concerto which Sony have recently reissued...coupled with another Serkin speciality, Richard Strauss's Burleske for piano and orchestra. Serkin "at the peak of his form, emotionally, intellectually, and technically" is how Trevor Harvey described the performance in these columns in May 1969 and I wouldn't disagree with that. From the piano's first entry it is evident that we are in the presence of a musical plain-dealer who is something more besides. The touch is plain but never monochrome, resolute but never harsh. There are miracles of dynamic shading yet dynamic changes that are elementally swift and steep. Above all, there is a revelatory way with rhythm, full of potency and drive in quicker music, and turning the more reflective passages into slow sustained acts of transcendental enquiry. As a reading this has something of Arrau's weight and profundity (Philips D 420 702-2PSL, 11/87) matched to Curzon's lyricism and sense of forward drive (Decca D 417 641-2DH, 10/87, also conducted by Szell). It is not better than either but it has some of the best qualities of both. There are those, it must be said, who are distracted by Serkin's stamping pedalwork and by breathing that has Serkin, like Arrau, cross-hatching the lie of a phrase with his own peculiar form of musical emphysema. Such things don't worry me unduly. You can't expect a man to go up the north face of the Eiger, silently, in carpet-slippers; and, in the slow movement, I find the counterpointing of Serkin's stressful breathing, with the sublimely conjured and spun melody that floats from it, to be a moving re-enactment of the composer's own recalcitrance in the face of the brute marble out of which this concerto is sculpted.
Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra are, needless to say, superb accompanists, and the sound is excellent in an appropriately forthright way, with pianissimos that are not so much pianissimo as properly hushed and innig. I don't agree with the reviewer who found Serkin's account of the Strauss Burleske to be lacking in poetry. Rather, it glints; it is sharp and witty. Above all, the performance redeems the work from its principal failing: the sense it can give of being marginally but fatally over length... [I]f you want a truly worthy memorial of this great pianist from the current batch, there is absolutely no doubt that the Brahms/Strauss disc is the one to have.
-- Gramophone [7/1991]
Serkin is said to have disliked recording and his legacy is mixed, technically and artistically. Yet, at best, his driving energy, his fierce intelligence, his quick mind, and (until comparatively recently) his unfailing lucidity of touch often produced recordings that do that rare thing: they transcend the medium.
One such recording is his 1968 Cleveland account of Brahms's D minor Piano Concerto which Sony have recently reissued...coupled with another Serkin speciality, Richard Strauss's Burleske for piano and orchestra. Serkin "at the peak of his form, emotionally, intellectually, and technically" is how Trevor Harvey described the performance in these columns in May 1969 and I wouldn't disagree with that. From the piano's first entry it is evident that we are in the presence of a musical plain-dealer who is something more besides. The touch is plain but never monochrome, resolute but never harsh. There are miracles of dynamic shading yet dynamic changes that are elementally swift and steep. Above all, there is a revelatory way with rhythm, full of potency and drive in quicker music, and turning the more reflective passages into slow sustained acts of transcendental enquiry. As a reading this has something of Arrau's weight and profundity (Philips D 420 702-2PSL, 11/87) matched to Curzon's lyricism and sense of forward drive (Decca D 417 641-2DH, 10/87, also conducted by Szell). It is not better than either but it has some of the best qualities of both. There are those, it must be said, who are distracted by Serkin's stamping pedalwork and by breathing that has Serkin, like Arrau, cross-hatching the lie of a phrase with his own peculiar form of musical emphysema. Such things don't worry me unduly. You can't expect a man to go up the north face of the Eiger, silently, in carpet-slippers; and, in the slow movement, I find the counterpointing of Serkin's stressful breathing, with the sublimely conjured and spun melody that floats from it, to be a moving re-enactment of the composer's own recalcitrance in the face of the brute marble out of which this concerto is sculpted.
Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra are, needless to say, superb accompanists, and the sound is excellent in an appropriately forthright way, with pianissimos that are not so much pianissimo as properly hushed and innig. I don't agree with the reviewer who found Serkin's account of the Strauss Burleske to be lacking in poetry. Rather, it glints; it is sharp and witty. Above all, the performance redeems the work from its principal failing: the sense it can give of being marginally but fatally over length... [I]f you want a truly worthy memorial of this great pianist from the current batch, there is absolutely no doubt that the Brahms/Strauss disc is the one to have.
-- Gramophone [7/1991]
Haydn: Symphonies Nos 93, 95 & 97 / Szell, Cleveland Orch
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Feb 29, 2008
HAYDN: SYMPHONIES NOS 93, 95 &
Mozart: Piano Concertos 12, 15, 17, 18, 20, 10 / Casadesus, Szell
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$24.99
Aug 31, 2012
Tracks:
1. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.12 IN LA MAJOR I. ALLEGRO
2. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.12 IN LA MAJOR -II. ANDNATE
3. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.12 IN LA MAJOR II. ALLEGRETTO
4. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.15 IN SI BEMOL MAJEUR - I. ALLEGRO
5. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.15 IN SI BEMOL MAJEUR- II. ANDANTE
6. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.15 IN SI BEMOL MAJERU- III. ALLEGRO
7. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.17 IN SOL MAJEUR - I. ALLEGRO
8. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.17 IN SOL MAJEUR- II. ANDANTE
9. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.17 IN SOL MAJEUR- III. ALLEGRETTO
10. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 18 EN SI BEMO MAJEUR- I. ALLEGRO VIVACE
11. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 18 EN SI BEMO MAJEUR- II. ANDANTE UN POCO SOSTENUTO
12. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 18 EN SI BEMO MAJEUR- III. ALLEGRO VIVACE
13. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 20 EN RE MINEUR- I. ALLEGRO
14. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 20 EN RE MINEUR- II. ROMANZE
15. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 20 EN RE MINEUR- III. RONDO- ALLEGRO ASSAI
16. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - 2 PIANOS ET ORCHESTRE NO. 10 IN MI BEMOL MAJEUR- I. ALLEGRO
17. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - 2 PIANOS ET ORCHESTRE NO. 10 IN MI BEMOL MAJEUR- II. ANDNATE
18. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - 2 PIANOS ET ORCHESTRE NO. 10 IN MI BEMOL MAJEUR- III. RONDO. ALLEGRO
1. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.12 IN LA MAJOR I. ALLEGRO
2. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.12 IN LA MAJOR -II. ANDNATE
3. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.12 IN LA MAJOR II. ALLEGRETTO
4. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.15 IN SI BEMOL MAJEUR - I. ALLEGRO
5. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.15 IN SI BEMOL MAJEUR- II. ANDANTE
6. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.15 IN SI BEMOL MAJERU- III. ALLEGRO
7. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.17 IN SOL MAJEUR - I. ALLEGRO
8. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.17 IN SOL MAJEUR- II. ANDANTE
9. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO CONCERTO NO.17 IN SOL MAJEUR- III. ALLEGRETTO
10. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 18 EN SI BEMO MAJEUR- I. ALLEGRO VIVACE
11. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 18 EN SI BEMO MAJEUR- II. ANDANTE UN POCO SOSTENUTO
12. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 18 EN SI BEMO MAJEUR- III. ALLEGRO VIVACE
13. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 20 EN RE MINEUR- I. ALLEGRO
14. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 20 EN RE MINEUR- II. ROMANZE
15. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - PIANO ET ORCHESTRE NO. 20 EN RE MINEUR- III. RONDO- ALLEGRO ASSAI
16. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - 2 PIANOS ET ORCHESTRE NO. 10 IN MI BEMOL MAJEUR- I. ALLEGRO
17. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - 2 PIANOS ET ORCHESTRE NO. 10 IN MI BEMOL MAJEUR- II. ANDNATE
18. SZELL, GEORGE- CASADEUS - 2 PIANOS ET ORCHESTRE NO. 10 IN MI BEMOL MAJEUR- III. RONDO. ALLEGRO
Art & Music: Monet - Music of His Time
Naxos
Available as
CD
Claude Monet (1840-1926) was at the forefront of the Impressionist revolution in painting. Together with a small group of like-minded friends, he scandalized the critics by devising a new way of representing the world in all it's bewildering variety of light and shadow. Here, the world of Monet is given a musical perspective with a carefully chosen selection of pieces by the finest composers of his time. We may enjoy here some of the greatest moments in musical and artistic development in the late nineteenth century, as Impressionism was emerging triumphant. On this CD, Monet's incredible foresight and breathtaking depictions of natural beauty are musically complemented by such landmarks as Debussy's graceful Pr�lude � l'apr�s-midi d'un faune and Bizet's daring masterpiece Carmen. 1 CD with full-color, illustrated, explanatory booklet.
