Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven
40 products
Fiedler's Favorite Marches / Boston Pops Orchestra
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
The world famous conductor offers a special reissue of his 1971 RCA double-LP.
Alfred Brendel Plays Beethoven Piano Sonatas Vol I
Vox
Available as
CD
$29.99
Jan 01, 1991
Piano Sonatas 27,28,29 "Hammerklavier," 30,31,32. Alfred Brendel concludes his famous recordings of Beethoven's Piano Sonatas.
Midori Live At Carnegie Hall
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Apr 23, 1991
Live at Carnegie Hall
Casals Edition - Schubert, Beethoven: Piano Trios
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Schubert & Beethoven: Piano Trios
Ave Maria - Sacred Arias And Choruses
Naxos
Available as
CD
Classical Music
Beethoven: Complete Violin Sonatas / Rosand, Fissler
Vox
Available as
CD
$35.99
Jan 01, 1995
Beethoven: The Complete Violin Sonatas
Home For The Holidays / Eaken Piano Trio
Naxos
Available as
CD
All proceeds earned by the Eaken Piano Trio from this recording will be donated to Habitat for Humanity, International.
Beethoven: Septet Op. 20; Sextet Op. 81b
MDG
Available as
CD
$23.99
Apr 01, 1995
BEETHOVEN Septet in E?. Sextet in E? • Consortium Classicum • MDG 3010594 (60:02)
Of the two works on this disc, the Septet for clarinet, horn, bassoon, violin, viola, cello, and double bass, has gained a firm foothold in the repertoire with some 40 recordings currently listed. Begun in 1799, it’s an early work, as indeed are all of Beethoven’s works for winds alone or for winds with strings, despite some misleadingly high opus numbers resulting from later publication dates.
Less often recorded, and a bit of an oddity in the composer’s catalog, is the Sextet for two horns and string quartet, op. 81b. Like the Septet, it too was written in the mid 1790s. Though it shares a common opus number with the much later-composed “Les Adieux” Piano Sonata, op. 81a, the two works are not related.
Beethoven never wrote anything like the Sextet again, but the real puzzle of the piece lies in how to classify it. Divertimento-type works scored for two horns and a string quartet were not uncommon in the latter part of the 18th century, and both Haydn and Mozart wrote for this complement of instruments. But it’s in the way Beethoven writes for the horns that makes the Sextet so unusual. It’s almost as if he conceived the piece as a chamber concerto for two horns with the accompaniment reduced to the four essential supporting string voices, not entirely unlike Mozart’s downsizing of some of his early piano concertos for performance à quattro —by a string quartet accompanying the solo piano.
In the Sextet, the horns are the stars of the show, with brilliant fanfares and lots of technically challenging busywork, while the four strings are relegated to a subsidiary role, coming to the fore only long enough for the horn players to catch their breath. The piece is also in three movements (fast-slow-fast), rather than the more common multimovement wind and mixed wind-and-strings chamber works of the period, further reinforcing the chamber concerto notion.
Whatever the Sextet is or Beethoven intended it to be, it’s an interesting experiment from the composer’s early curiosity shop but not a memorable masterpiece. Not so the Septet, which is surely one of Beethoven’s most expansive and important early works. Its exceptional popularity in the composer’s own lifetime, overshadowing later works he considered superior, is reported to have caused him considerable annoyance. Nonetheless, with an eye on the cash register, in 1803 or thereabouts he arranged the op. 20 Septet for clarinet (or violin), cello, and piano, and published it as op. 38. This is not the same piece as another trio Beethoven wrote in B?-Major for this same combination of instruments, nicknamed the “Gassenhauer” Trio, op. 11, which is often included in its violin version as No. 4 of the composer’s standard canon of piano trios.
Founded by clarinetist Dieter Klöcker in the early 1960s, Consortium Classicum has distinguished itself as one of the world’s leading chamber ensembles, acclaimed especially for its performances of 18th- and 19th-century repertoire for winds. But as is clear from these performances recorded in 1994, string players are no strangers to the group. Why this MDG CD has only now arrived for review I can’t say for sure, but I suspect it has been available abroad for many years and is just now being distributed here in the U.S. But the Consortium has recorded the Septet and Sextet more than once, and this is not the same 1974 pairing of these works on a cpo CD reviewed by Richard A. Kaplan in Fanfare 30: 5.
The Consortium’s execution is clean and sharply focused and the recording, as is customary for MDG, is brightly lit and very well balanced, clearly delineating each instrument. I find this to be a most enjoyable and recommendable CD. Still, if this particular coupling appeals to you, I wouldn’t want to suggest that the Consortium Classicum is preferable to two other very fine identically programmed discs, one with the Gaudier Ensemble, now on Hyperion’s mid-priced Helios label, and the other with the estimable Nash Ensemble on the unfortunately not so inexpensively priced ASV Gold label. In both cases, I find the playing a bit more spirited and perhaps more spontaneous than I do the Consortium Classicum’s performances. But the Septet, despite Beethoven’s dismay at its popularity, is popular for good reason and well worth having in more than one version. So, recommended.
FANFARE: Jerry Dubins
Beethoven: Piano Sonatas Vol 4 / Alfred Brendel
Vox
Available as
CD
$29.99
Jan 01, 1992
Piano Sonatas 2,3,7,8 "Pathetique" 11,12 "Funeral March," 24. Brendel's monumental cycle continues with this delightful collection.
Beethoven & Chopin & Schumann Piano Concerti
Vox
Available as
CD
$29.99
Jan 01, 1992
Includes work(s) for piano by Johann Sebastian Bach, Christoph W. Gluck, Camille Saint-Saëns, Johannes Brahms, Ludwig van Beethoven. Soloist: Guiomar Novaës.
Alfred Brendel Plays Beethoven Sonatas Vol 2
Vox
Available as
CD
$29.99
Jan 01, 1991
Classical Music
Alfred Brendel Plays Beethoven Piano Sonatas, Vol Iii
Vox
Available as
CD
$29.99
Jan 01, 1996
Piano Sonatas 1,5,6,9,10,13,14 "Moonlight," 15 "Pastoral," 25. Performed by the noted Beethoven interpreter Alfred Brendel.
Beethoven: Eroica Variations, Etc / Bruno Gelber
Orfeo
Available as
CD
$20.99
Aug 16, 1984
Classical Music
Beethoven: Archduke Trio - Kakadu Variations - Allegretto, WoO 39
Naxos
Available as
CD
$19.99
Jun 03, 1994
BEETHOVEN: Archduke Trio / Kakadu Variations / Allegretto, W
The Lark Ascending - Violin Showpieces
Naxos
Available as
CD
Lark Ascending (The): Violin Showpieces
Casals Edition - Beethoven: Complete Cello Sonatas, Etc
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$15.99
Feb 22, 1994
"We can start with the celestial heights of Casals and Serkin. These discs were made at the Prades Festival concerts in 1952 and 1953, and now and then you will hear the great man Casals grunt as he attacks a phrase. Casals was 76 in 1952, and his bow arm was in less than perfect control but this performance is classic."
-– Herbert Russcol, WQXR, 1969
"Humane and wonderfully wise…a revelation of warm, human, profound interpretation."
-– Edward Sackville-West (1901–1965), novelist and music critic
"Excellent both tonally and in matters of balance. Two perfectly matched musicians operate here. For every bold stroke of the Casals bow there is an equivalently authoritative gesture from Serkin."
-– Harold Schoenberg, (1915 – 2003) author and New York Times music critic
-– Herbert Russcol, WQXR, 1969
"Humane and wonderfully wise…a revelation of warm, human, profound interpretation."
-– Edward Sackville-West (1901–1965), novelist and music critic
"Excellent both tonally and in matters of balance. Two perfectly matched musicians operate here. For every bold stroke of the Casals bow there is an equivalently authoritative gesture from Serkin."
-– Harold Schoenberg, (1915 – 2003) author and New York Times music critic
Beethoven: The Late String Quartets / Budapest Quartet
Bridge Records
Available as
CD
$37.99
Feb 18, 1997
REVIEWS:
Billboard (11/27/99, p.54) - Recommended
Billboard (11/27/99, p.54) - Recommended
Beethoven: Symphony No 9 / Erich Leinsdorf, Boston So
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Oct 04, 1988
Beethoven: Symphony No. 9
Beethoven: Five Piano Concerti, Choral Fantasy / Brendel
Vox
Available as
CD
$35.99
Jan 01, 1995
Beethoven: The 5 Piano Concertos & Choral Fantasy
Beethoven: German Dances
Naxos
Available as
CD
$19.99
May 14, 1991
Beethoven: 11 Dances, "Mödlinger Tänze" - 12 German Dances -
Beethoven: Chamber Music For Horns, Winds And Strings
Naxos
Available as
CD
$19.99
May 17, 1995
Beethoven: Chamber Music for Horns, Winds and Strings
Age Of Elegance - Greatest Hits
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.98
May 14, 1996
This disc includes both ADD and DDD recordings.
The Maiden's Prayer - Leaves From Grandmother's Piano Album
Naxos
Available as
CD
$19.99
Sep 05, 1994
The Maiden's Prayer: Leaves from Grandmother's Piano Album
The Classical Novaes - Beethoven, Mozart
Vox
Available as
CD
$29.99
Jan 01, 1993
Seeing the name Guiomar Novaes makes me feel like a kid again, blowing my allowance on Everests and Vox Boxes and Vanguards and the like (Serious Record Collector's Disease can strike early and hard—parents, know the telltale signs!). By the time I hit puberty (the verb is entirely appropriate) I had acquired several of the Brazilian pianist's Chopin discs for Vox, although I did so more by happenstance than by design.
And then I was a child no more, and it was time to put away childish things. Novaes and her discographie companions were filed away with the rest of my immaturity as I graduated to bigger allowances, and bigger labels and artists. A few years ago I remember actually sneering at an acquaintance's suggestion that we listen to Novaes's recordings of a few Chopin Nocturnes. "How good could she be?' ' I asked him and myself.
I now eat my words, because Novaes is very good indeed. These three sets were both a trip down Memory Lane and a voyage into new territory. I knew about her close association with Chopin's music, but I didn't know to what extent she made her mark in Romantic and Classical repertoire. "The Classical Novaes" is Exhibit A: consider her serene, stately "Emperor" Concerto, a performance which doesn't deign to impress the listener with mere technical display. Also, consider her Mozart, a perfect blend of clarity and emotional involvement. This is music from the Classical period played with a Romantic sensibility, but one that doesn't glorify the artist at the expense of the art. With Novaes, Beethoven and Mozart came first.
The other two sets are similarly impressive by means of similar virtues. Novaes never hurries, never pounds, and never distorts, and while it would be easy to find more viscerally exciting or technically mind-boggling performances of these works, it would be hard to find ones that are classier or more poised. The Grieg concerto is a particular highlight: this is an uncommonly serious reading, one that blows the powdered sugar right off the snow drifts, and frankly, one of the best that I have ever heard. As for the Chopin, it goes straight to the listener with its intimacy. There's nothing special about Novaes's fingers, particularly in the Études and in the concerto, but the playing goes to the heart. And those Nocturnes! There are several great recordings of these works, but Novaes's are the ones that makes the recording process itself disappear, with her mellow colors and seamless line.
The orchestral accompaniments are passable and better than I expected, particularly when Perlea is on the podium. The 1955-ish sound ranges from dim (the Chopin sonata) to quite good (the Nocturnes), although one would expect some distortion in the concerto recordings. Vox has given us better-looking and better-made booklets than in the past, and the program notes are surprisingly intelligent and thorough, considering the price you'll pay for these sets. Oh yes, the price. Vox Boxes, usually go for $5-6 per disc, which means that you can pick up all three of the sets, plus Vox Box CDX2 5501, which includes some more of Novaes's concerto recordings (Beethoven 4, Chopin 2, and Schumann, all conducted by Klemperer) and some treasurable encores, for about the cost of a routine visit to the dentist. Skip a visit, eat fewer sweets, floss more often, and buy these discs. They would make great presents for old and new CD collectors too.
-- Raymond Tuttle, FANFARE
And then I was a child no more, and it was time to put away childish things. Novaes and her discographie companions were filed away with the rest of my immaturity as I graduated to bigger allowances, and bigger labels and artists. A few years ago I remember actually sneering at an acquaintance's suggestion that we listen to Novaes's recordings of a few Chopin Nocturnes. "How good could she be?' ' I asked him and myself.
I now eat my words, because Novaes is very good indeed. These three sets were both a trip down Memory Lane and a voyage into new territory. I knew about her close association with Chopin's music, but I didn't know to what extent she made her mark in Romantic and Classical repertoire. "The Classical Novaes" is Exhibit A: consider her serene, stately "Emperor" Concerto, a performance which doesn't deign to impress the listener with mere technical display. Also, consider her Mozart, a perfect blend of clarity and emotional involvement. This is music from the Classical period played with a Romantic sensibility, but one that doesn't glorify the artist at the expense of the art. With Novaes, Beethoven and Mozart came first.
The other two sets are similarly impressive by means of similar virtues. Novaes never hurries, never pounds, and never distorts, and while it would be easy to find more viscerally exciting or technically mind-boggling performances of these works, it would be hard to find ones that are classier or more poised. The Grieg concerto is a particular highlight: this is an uncommonly serious reading, one that blows the powdered sugar right off the snow drifts, and frankly, one of the best that I have ever heard. As for the Chopin, it goes straight to the listener with its intimacy. There's nothing special about Novaes's fingers, particularly in the Études and in the concerto, but the playing goes to the heart. And those Nocturnes! There are several great recordings of these works, but Novaes's are the ones that makes the recording process itself disappear, with her mellow colors and seamless line.
The orchestral accompaniments are passable and better than I expected, particularly when Perlea is on the podium. The 1955-ish sound ranges from dim (the Chopin sonata) to quite good (the Nocturnes), although one would expect some distortion in the concerto recordings. Vox has given us better-looking and better-made booklets than in the past, and the program notes are surprisingly intelligent and thorough, considering the price you'll pay for these sets. Oh yes, the price. Vox Boxes, usually go for $5-6 per disc, which means that you can pick up all three of the sets, plus Vox Box CDX2 5501, which includes some more of Novaes's concerto recordings (Beethoven 4, Chopin 2, and Schumann, all conducted by Klemperer) and some treasurable encores, for about the cost of a routine visit to the dentist. Skip a visit, eat fewer sweets, floss more often, and buy these discs. They would make great presents for old and new CD collectors too.
-- Raymond Tuttle, FANFARE
Prima Voce - Chaliapin
Prima Voce
Available as
CD
$20.99
Oct 01, 1996
Includes work(s) by various composers. Soloist: Feodor Chaliapin.
Milstein, Balsam - The 1953 Library Of Congress Recital
Bridge Records
Available as
CD
$18.99
Jan 01, 1996
Classical Music
Grand Piano - Chopin, Liszt, Beethoven, Et Al / Cortot
Grand Piano (Nimbus)
Available as
CD
$16.99
Oct 01, 1996
The performances on this recording are from Duo-Art piano rolls released between April 1919 and May 1930.
Beethoven: Variations & Vignettes For Piano / Alfred Brendel
Vox
Available as
CD
$35.99
Jan 01, 1992
Includes work(s) for piano by Ludwig van Beethoven. Soloist: Alfred Brendel.
Beethoven: Symphonies Nos 5 & 6 / Edlinger, Halasz
Naxos
Available as
CD
$19.99
Apr 07, 1995
BEETHOVEN: Symphonies Nos. 5 and 6
Beethoven: String Quartets Vol. 1
Naxos
Available as
CD
$19.99
Mar 01, 1993
BEETHOVEN: String Quartets Op. 18, Nos. 1 and 2
