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Renato de Barbieri: The Historical HMV Recordings (1956)
IDIS
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$16.99
Sep 02, 2011
Classical Music
BEETHOVEN, L. van: Symphony No. 7 / GERSHWIN, G.: An America
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$16.99
Nov 01, 2008
Classical Music
Beethoven: Piano Sonatas
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Daniel Barenboim began his career as "child prodigy" with great technical qualities. The young pianist had studied first with Claudio Arrau, then with Edwin Fischer. He recorded this, his first LP, featuring three famous Beethoven sonatas, in 1958, when just sixteen. It can be seen as a sort of challenge: show to the public that a young pianist could compete with the most famous soloists of the time. We can easily tell that the young Barenboim met that challenge; his talent, interpretations and performance technique underlining the beginning of a long artistic and human story still being told.
Opera Arias (Soprano): Tebaldi, Renata - VERDI, G. / PUCCINI
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Classical Music
Karajan Spectacular (1946-1958)
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Classical Music
The Art of Andrés Segovia Vol. 6
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$16.99
Nov 05, 2010
Classical Music
MOZART, W.A.: Piano Concerto No. 2 / Symphony No. 40 (Anda)
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Classical Music
Beethoven: "archduke Trio", Op. 97; Schubert: Trio, Op. 99 D. 898
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BEETHOVEN Piano Trio in Bb, op. 97, “Archduke.” SCHUBERT Piano Trio in Bb, op. 99 • Tr di Trieste • INSTITUTO DISCOGRAFICO ITALIANO 6678, mono (69:52)
These recordings are taken from radio air checks in Cologne on March 12, 1958 (Schubert) and September 23, 1959 (Beethoven). I do not believe these are the same performances by this long-lived, estimable ensemble that can be heard in Deutsche Grammophon’s five-disc compilation of the Trio di Trieste’s complete recordings, but I wouldn’t swear to it since I don’t own that set.
The Trio di Trieste was one of the 20th century’s longest-surviving piano trios, and one that has often been compared to the Serkin-Busch and Cortot-Thibaud-Casals Trios. The comparison is more apt, I think, to the latter than it is to the former, for these are readings of a fairly Romantic persuasion, with tempos, dynamics, and phrasing undergoing frequent adjustments to fit the mood of the moment. Within that interpretive paradigm, however, it has to be said that the playing of Renato Zanettovich, Lebero Lana, and Dario De Rosa is of a beguiling beauty that simply silences any criticism of the ensemble’s stylistic approach.
My only regret is that I never got to see and hear the Trio di Trieste perform live—though I suppose these air checks are the next closest thing to it—for whatever one might point to that the players don’t do right in terms of observing the absolute letter of the scores, one cannot cite a single thing they do wrong in terms of intuiting the music’s spirit and emotional core. These performances simply transcend any mundane considerations as they ascend into the realm of the sublime. For a glimpse of the starry firmament Beethoven reveals to us, listen to the hushed, almost trembling awe the players convey in the closing measures of the “Archduke” Trio’s great Andante . It will make you want to fall to your knees in wonderment. This is the performance of this movement I have sought my entire life, and finally I have found it. All else, as the sage said, is mere commentary.
In closing, let me just say that the sound of these recordings is so good it’s not even necessary to qualify it with an excuse about their source. If I were not writing this review for the regular composer section of the magazine, I could easily see submitting it as an entry to the Classical Hall of Fame. Is further recommendation needed?
FANFARE: Jerry Dubins
These recordings are taken from radio air checks in Cologne on March 12, 1958 (Schubert) and September 23, 1959 (Beethoven). I do not believe these are the same performances by this long-lived, estimable ensemble that can be heard in Deutsche Grammophon’s five-disc compilation of the Trio di Trieste’s complete recordings, but I wouldn’t swear to it since I don’t own that set.
The Trio di Trieste was one of the 20th century’s longest-surviving piano trios, and one that has often been compared to the Serkin-Busch and Cortot-Thibaud-Casals Trios. The comparison is more apt, I think, to the latter than it is to the former, for these are readings of a fairly Romantic persuasion, with tempos, dynamics, and phrasing undergoing frequent adjustments to fit the mood of the moment. Within that interpretive paradigm, however, it has to be said that the playing of Renato Zanettovich, Lebero Lana, and Dario De Rosa is of a beguiling beauty that simply silences any criticism of the ensemble’s stylistic approach.
My only regret is that I never got to see and hear the Trio di Trieste perform live—though I suppose these air checks are the next closest thing to it—for whatever one might point to that the players don’t do right in terms of observing the absolute letter of the scores, one cannot cite a single thing they do wrong in terms of intuiting the music’s spirit and emotional core. These performances simply transcend any mundane considerations as they ascend into the realm of the sublime. For a glimpse of the starry firmament Beethoven reveals to us, listen to the hushed, almost trembling awe the players convey in the closing measures of the “Archduke” Trio’s great Andante . It will make you want to fall to your knees in wonderment. This is the performance of this movement I have sought my entire life, and finally I have found it. All else, as the sage said, is mere commentary.
In closing, let me just say that the sound of these recordings is so good it’s not even necessary to qualify it with an excuse about their source. If I were not writing this review for the regular composer section of the magazine, I could easily see submitting it as an entry to the Classical Hall of Fame. Is further recommendation needed?
FANFARE: Jerry Dubins
BRAHMS, J.: Symphony No. 1 / Double Concerto, Op. 102 (Furtw
IDIS
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Classical Music
V 3: GIULINI COLLECTION
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Classical Music
MOZART, W.A.: Symphonies Nos. 35, 36 and 40 (Pittsburgh Symp
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Classical Music
Knappertsbusch conducts Mozart and Beethoven
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Classical Music
Karajan Spectacular, Vol. 4
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As well as for EMI and DG, the two labels harboring the lion’s share of his discography, Herbert von Karajan also worked and recorded for Decca for a time in the 1950s and 1960s, exclusively with the Vienna Philharmonic, bringing the orchestra to a peak in performance following the inflicted personnel ravages that dimmed its luster. The unforgettable Brahms First Symphony was recorded in 1960, the Tragic Overture in 1964. The very sensitive and gentle performance of the Haydn Variations was realized in 1955 with the Philharmonia Orchestra. All recordings were newly re-mastered in 2015.
Furtwängler Conducts Brahms, Vol. 2 (Live)
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Two years before the end of World War II, Wilhelm Furtwangler conducted a memorable and touching performance of Brahm's German Requiem in Switzerland. After careful and complex digital remastering, that performance is now available on CD.
Wilhelm Backhaus plays (1950, 1961)
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Classical Music
Locatelli: Concerti, Op. 1 Nos. 8, 11 & 12; Vivaldi: Concerti, Op. 4 Nos. 1, 2 & 3
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• 2014 marks the 250th anniversary of Locatelli’s death
• I Musici”, founded 1951, made this very important recording of Locatelli’s Tre Concerti Grossi op. 1 in 1959
• This performance is still considered as one of the best ever realized of this little known masterpieces.
• At the end of this CD there are the Vivaldi’s three Concerti, op. 4, recorded 1962
Bartók: Concerto No. 2 - Prokofiev: Concerto No. 1 (Live)
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With his versatility as a performer, noted virtuoso and Professor of Music Franco Gulli (1926-2001) in his career dealt with all the classics of the violin repertoire from Vivaldi to the contemporary composers. On this CD, IDIS offers Mr. Gulli’s interpretations of two classics of the 20th c. violin repertoire: Béla Bartók’s 2nd Violin Concerto, recorded in 1959 and played with incredible poetry and beauty of sound; and a 1957 recording of Sergei Prokofiev’s Concerto no 1 in D Major op 19, where Gulli is accompanied by the iconoclastic conductor Sergiu Celibidache.
Sir John Barbirolli Conducts Mahler Symphony No. 9 (1960)
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Classical Music
MOZART, W.A.: Marriage of Figaro (The) [Opera] (Karajan) (19
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Classical Music
SCHUMANN, R.: Symphonies Nos. 1 and 4 (Berlin Philharmonic,
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Classical Music
Dvorák & Mozart: Piano Trios
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Trio di Trieste was founded in 1933 when the members, Dario De Rosa, Renato Zanettovich, and Libero Lana, were only twelve years old. Later, Libero Lana was replaced by Amadeo Baldovino. Lana is heard on the Mozart recording, and Baldovino is heard on the Dvorak. The group has performed uninterrupted concert performances all across the world for more than sixty years- that’s more than 3,000 concerts. The Trio are members of the Roman Academy of St. Cecilia, and were awarded the prize of the President of the Italian Republic by the Grand Officer of Merit. They have regularly been invited to all of the major international festivals. This release focuses on radio recordings that the trio made in 1956 and 1964. The first work is Antonin Dvorak’s Trio in F minor for violin, cello and piano op. 65, followed by Mozart’s Trio in E major for violin, cello and piano.
Schubert: Piano Trio No. 2 - Beethoven: Piano Trio No. 3
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Classical Music
The Beginning of a Legend, Vol. 3: Narciso Yepes
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Narciso Yepes became a star at the beginning of the 1950s with the soundtrack of the movie Jeux Interdits; he could be easily considered as the only guitar soloist comparable to Andrés Segovia. Shy and reserved, Yepes took little advantage of his fame at the time, realizing few recordings, with most quickly deleted from the catalog. This faithfully re-mastered IDIS CD collects a set of recordings performed by Yepes during the years 1960-63, consisting of repertoire from the Renaissance to the 20th c.
VERDI, G.: Otello [Opera] (Vinay) (1958)
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Classical Music
Otto Klemperer conducts Beethoven, Vol. 1 (1960)
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Classical Music
