Johannes Brahms
539 products
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Brahms: Sonatas for viola & piano
$21.99CDUrania Records
Jan 30, 2026LDV14133 -
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Brahms: Concerto for violin and cello, Op. 102 in A minor &
$23.99CDNimbus
Jan 02, 2026NI6463 -
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Dancing in Vienna
$18.99CDSOMM Recordings
Aug 15, 2025SOMMCD 0708 -
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Brahms: Clarinet Sonatas, Op. 120 & 3 Intermezzi, Op. 117
$20.99CDFuga Libera
Dec 12, 2025FUG855 -
Two Sonatas for Cello and Piano
$14.99CDFineline
Jan 23, 2026FL 72433 -
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My Music Garden
$20.99CDWinter & Winter
Oct 31, 2025910294-2 -
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Darkness
$16.99CDChallenge Classics
Apr 17, 2026CC 720029 -
Brahms & Goldmark: Violin Concertos
$20.99CDChannel Classics
Nov 21, 2025CCS46225 -
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Complete Works for Viola, Vol. 1
$16.99CDChallenge Classics
Sep 05, 2025CC 720019
Finzi & Brahms: Music for Clarinet & Piano / Habershon, Lenehan
20 Years Hohenstaufen Festival
Brahms: Sonatas for viola & piano
Vienna 1913 - Brahms, Kornauth & Korngold / Herold, Staemmler
The years 1900-1914 were perhaps the most thrilling period in European music history: the cradle of what we now call musical Modernism. This was the time when the great “avant-garde schools” took shape: in Paris, Berlin, Saint Petersburg, and particularly in Vienna. Music branched out into a multitude of aesthetics, styles, and genres, as we can see in in the variety of terms that attempt to describe art in that period: Impressionism, Expressionism, Art Nouveau, Neo-Classicism, Foklorism, Late Romanticism, Symbolism, and others. Our program selection for this album focuses on two works written in Vienna in 1913 – the “summer of the century”, as author Florian Illies calls a pivotal year that put an end to the long 19th century and introduced the somber 20th century. The two works are Alban Berg’s Four Pieces for Clarinet and Piano op. 5 and Egon Kornauth’s Sonata for Clarinet and Piano. 1913 was the year of several “scandalous” premieres: Schoenberg’s Gurrelieder, Berg’s Altenberglieder, Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, and others that were less scandalous: Debussy’s Images pour Orchestre, Max Reger’s Isle of the Dead, Sibelius’s Luonnotar, de Falla’s La vida breve, and Richard Strauss‘s Festliches Präludium.
Brahms: Concerto for violin and cello, Op. 102 in A minor &
The Complete Brahms, Schubert & Schumann Studio Recordings 1
Brahms & Contemporaries, Vol. 2
Dancing in Vienna
Elly Ney Plays Brahms & Schubert / M. Fiedler, Melichar, Berlin Philharmonic
German pianist ELLY NEY’s posthumous reputation has, perhaps justifiably, been tarnished by her links to the Nazi regime, but 80 years on it’s easier to focus on her pianism and acknowledge she was one of the finest pianists of her generation. A previous APR release (APR7311) presented her interpreting a wide range of composers, but she came to be regarded as one of the great interpreters of the Austro-German repertoire and here she tackles two of the masterworks, including a monumental performance of the Brahms Second Piano Concerto with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the first version recorded by a woman. Brahms specialist, Max Fiedler, ostensibly conducts, though our booklet note reveals Alois Melichar as the uncredited conductor who completed the project after Fiedler’s sudden death. The suite of Schubert dances which completes the release appears never to have been reissued before.
Brahms: The Piano Concertos
Brahms: Complete Songs, Vol. 6
Brahms, Ligeti, Mozart, Schumann: Horn Trios
Brahms: Reimagined Orchestrations / Stern, Kansas City Symphony
Reminiscence
Brahms: Clarinet Sonatas, Op. 120 & 3 Intermezzi, Op. 117
Two Sonatas for Cello and Piano
Brahms: Complete Symphonies & Other Works / Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
Iván Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra released Symphonies Nos. 1-4 and a large variety of other works by Johannes Brahms between 2009 and 2021. On this box set you will find all of these highly acclaimed Channel Classics recordings. Brahms worked on his First Symphony for many years, a long process driven by extremely diverse musical impulses. The Guardian reviewed Fischer’s recording as “monumental in every sense of the word”. In the Second Symphony, which took him only a summer to compose, Brahms shows us his masterful skill in developing large-scale architecture from the simplest motifs. Iván Fischer refers to the beginning of Brahms’ Third Symphony as being “A life’s story in ten bars – there is no more magnificent opening of a symphony than the first 34 seconds of Brahms’ Third.” Many consider the Fourth Symphony to be the finest of all romantic symphonies. And what a wonderful start: a fragmented melody like a hovering leaf blown up and down by the wind. Iván Fischer: “Never has tenderness been composed more movingly.” BBC Music Magazine gave this recording a Double 5-Star review, noting that “This is an orchestra whose players listen to each other intently.”
Reminiscence
Neeme Järvi in Concert / Estonian National Symphony Orchestra
The legendary conductor Neeme Järvi celebrated his eighty-fifth birthday in the summer of 2022, in Tallinn, giving a series of concerts with his beloved Estonian National Symphony Orchestra. This album serves not just as a commemoration of those wonderful concerts, but also as a personal calling card for this remarkable musician. The concert overture Polonia, published in 1836, may well have been inspired by Wagner’s encounters with defeated Polish nationalists in Leipzig in 1832. Wagner wrote several concert overtures during this period – whilst plans for his revolutionary operatic output were developing – including Christoph Columbus and Rule Britannia!!
Max Reger composed the Serenade in G major in 1905 – 06; it demonstrates the style and talent of this too-little-heard composer. Brahms set Schicksalslied (Song of Destiny), a poem by Friedrich Hölderlin, in two movements with chorus, but then added a third, an orchestral postlude. Ave verum corpus, possibly Mozart’s best-known setting for chorus, rounds off the program.
REVIEWS:
The quality of choral singing of the Latvian State Choir is rightly celebrated, and this is a beautifully shaped performance [of the Schicksalslied], with vocal warmth and blend, and the orchestral postlude bringing a radiant conclusion.
-- BBC Music Magazine
This is a marvellous recording...Although Brahms’s Schicksalslied enjoys numerous recordings, Järvi’s is distinguished by the radiance and depth of the first and last sections as well as the vehemence of the central allegro.
-- Gramophone
As well as being a thoroughly attractive concert conducted with characteristic élan by Chandos star conductor Neeme Järvi, this program represents for collectors a very useful way of acquiring a variety of pieces, some unfamiliar, some less so… this is a very tempting disc.
-- CDChoice.co.uk
Brahms: Violin Sonatas
Brahms: Complete Symphonies / Kubelik, Vienna Philharmonic
My Music Garden
Brahms, Kahn & Frühling: Trios for Clarinet, Cello & Piano / Quantum Clarinet Trio
The human factor determines the path. The Clarinet Trio op. 114 by Johannes Brahms more or less represents the DNA of the Quantum Clarinet Trio, and the piece was one of the driving forces behind the founding of this young chamber ensemble, whose members first met at the Mozarteum University in Salzburg in 2014. At that time, Italian clarinettist Elena Veronesi had been searching for fellow musicians to collaborate in a late work trio, and she found them in the German cellist Johannes Przygodda and Korean pianist Bokyung Kim. What started as a project has now evolved into a permanent ensemble. This great Brahms trio has continued to be a enterprise in which life converges with art.
Cellists, pianists and clarinettists usually come together when a work requires such a constellation, the line-up going their own separate ways once the project is completed. Compared to piano trios or string quartets, these particular instruments unfortunately rarely come together as a fixed ensemble. The Quantum Clarinet Trio is a welcome exception to the rule, making this encounter with one of Brahms' most important works much more than just a "fleeting liaison".
Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 2 & Three Intermezzi, Op. 117
Darkness
Brahms & Goldmark: Violin Concertos
Brahms & Wadsworth: Fire-Flowers / Luminous Voices
Luminous Voices presents Brahms’"Ein deutsches Requiem" alongside contemporary pieces by Zachary Wadsworth in the album 'Fire-Flowers.'
Exploring themes of loss, grief, and hope, the album is led by Timothy Shantz. Laura Brandt (soprano), Jonathon Adams (baritone), Cheryl Emery-Karapita (piano), and Leanne Regehr (piano) collaborated to bring these pieces to life. Wadsworth's"Battle-Flags," is inspired by Walt Whitman’s Civil War experiences. Brahms’ iconic Requiem reflects personal tragedies and calls for empathy. The album concludes with"Fire-Flowers," where Wadsworth captures E. Pauline Johnson’s poem in a musical tale of optimism and renewal.
'Fire Flowers' will be available on January 12, 2024.
Brahms & Koncz: Sonatas for Clarinet & Orchestra
Brahms: Complete Songs, Vol. 5 / Wunderlin, Carrel, Eisenlohr
Curated by pianist Ulrich Eisenloh, this series of Brahms songs has received widespread acclaim. As with Volume 4, this fifth instalment features soprano Alina Wunderlin and tenor Kieran Carrel, in a selection that contains one of Brahms’ best-loved songs, Minnelied.
