Romantic Era
3839 products
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Alt-wien
$20.99CDHaenssler Classic
Mar 13, 2026HC24050 -
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Chopin Sonata, Op. 58 & Liszt Sonata, S. 178
$16.99CDNimbus
Mar 20, 2026NI7115 -
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Brahms: Sonatas for viola & piano
$21.99CDUrania Records
Jan 30, 2026LDV14133 -
Mendelssohn: Works for Solo Piano, Vol. 3
$21.99CDChandos
Apr 24, 2026CHAN 20347 -
Suk, Dvorak & Janacek: Orchestral Works
$16.99CDNimbus
Mar 20, 2026NI7114 -
Donizetti: String Quartets, Vol. 3
$29.99CDUrania Records
Jan 30, 2026LDV14132 -
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K. Szymanowski & A. Scriabin: Preludes
$21.99CDUrania Records
Jan 16, 2026LDV14129 -
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Chopin: The Complete Nocturnes
$25.99CDDivine Art
Oct 24, 2025DDX21249 -
Brahms: Concerto for violin and cello, Op. 102 in A minor &
$23.99CDNimbus
Jan 02, 2026NI6463 -
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Nicolas Medtner - The Complete Solo Piano Recordings
$29.99CDAPR
Nov 07, 2025APR7315
Berlioz, Biarent, Gounod: La chanson du vent / van Dieren, Mizumoto
Schumann, Liszt, Beethoven: Hommage to Beethoven / Blettenberg
The programme on this CD begins and ends with transcriptions of works by Beethoven. The first piece is the Allegretto (2nd movement) from Beethoven’s 7th Symphony in the arrangement by Franz Liszt, and the programme ends with a solo piano version of Beethoven’s song An die Hoffnung, created especially for this CD. The two pieces form a framework of sonorities and emotions that set the basic mood for this musical journey. The Allegretto serves as a prologue: it looks ahead, indicating the direction we shall be taking. At the other end of the programme, the song transcription serves as an epilogue: it looks back, taking stock of all that has occurred. On the one hand, there is a somber mood that runs through the entire programme: we find it in the Allegretto’s passages in minor, in the Schumann variations, in the third movement of the Beethoven sonata, and in the recitativo-like passages of An die Hoffnung. These are complemented by episodes of light: the A-Major sections of the Allegretto, the first, second, and fourth movements of the sonata, and, ultimately, the hopeful, optimistic sonorities we find in the song transcription with the final cry: “O, Hope!” (Aris Alexander Blettenberg)
Alt-wien
Franck & Martin: Piano Quintets / Klett, Armida Quartett
Premiered in 1919 in Zurich by the leaders of string sections of the Tonhalle Orchestra with Frank Martin himself at the piano, it displays a wide variety of influences, all forming part of a 29-year-old musician’s search for his own artistic voice. At the same time, the Quintet’s style is thoroughly individual, notably in its choice of rich harmonies. Providing a marked contrast to Frank Martin’s filigree, pared-down early style, César Franck’s profuse, monumental Piano Quintet in F Minor (1879) is typical of the Franco-Belgian composer’s late output. All of Franck’s characteristics seem to blend together in this work which he wrote at the age of 57: Wagnerian chromatic harmonies, dramatic developments similar to those we know from his symphonic poems and oratorios, and a polyphonic musical thinking “in organ registers”
Mendelssohn: Music for Men's Chorus / Bernius, SWR Vocal Ensemble
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy composed a total of 38 songs for male voices a cappella between 1820 and 1847. He wrote many of them for his own use among family or friends. He also liked to use these secular choruses as gifts or personal thanksgiving. Now the male voices of the SWR Vokalensemble under the direction of Frieder Bernius have presented a recording of these songs. The result is an impressive testimony to these compositions, which are among the least explored parts of Mendelssohn's oeuvre.
Adam: Griseldis, ou Les Cinq Sens
Robert Schumann: Fantasies
Beethoven for Harp
Fauré: Pelléas et Mélisande Suite, and more / Tingaud, Ireland NSO
This program spotlights Gabriel Fauré’s orchestrated songs and his music for the stage, of which his suite from the incidental music for Pelléas et Mélisande includes some of his best-loved music. Performances of Fauré’s spectacular Wagnerian drama Prométhée are a real rarity, while the eloquent Shylock suite, based on Shakespeare, contains some of his most elaborate symphonic music. Fauré orchestrated only a small number of his more than 100 songs, but these include the transcendentally beautiful love song Les Roses d’Ispahan, with its harmonic subtleties and gorgeous coda.
Eight images of infinity - Beethoven's last piano sonatas
Chopin Sonata, Op. 58 & Liszt Sonata, S. 178
The Last Epiphany - Brahms, Glanzberg & Schubert / Dahlmann, Djeddikar
An extraordinary disc. Baritone Thilo Dahlmann couples the innocence and beauty of Brahms’ Volkslieder with the the despair and mourning of Glanzberg’s Holocaust Lieder. Glanzberg’s scantly known Lieder are imbued with a stunning melodic gift. Through the juxtaposition of these two masterworks, the musicians highlight one of the most tragic cultural ruptures in history.
Brahms: Sonatas for viola & piano
Mendelssohn: Works for Solo Piano, Vol. 3
Suk, Dvorak & Janacek: Orchestral Works
Bruckner 3 - Version 1877
Donizetti: String Quartets, Vol. 3
Liszt: Annees de Pelerinage
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.
Liszt: Complete Piano Music, Vol. 65 - Piano Works on Hungar
Alzira
K. Szymanowski & A. Scriabin: Preludes
Mendelssohn: Sacred Choral Music [14 CD] / Bernius, Stuttgart Chamber Choir
This 14-album box contains all the recordings of the complete sacred vocal music of Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy with the Kammerchor Stuttgart under the direction of Frieder Bernius. The complete recording on the CARUS label, which took more than two decades to complete, was highly praised by the press and won many awards. Now Bernius' masterful interpretations, which unfold Mendelssohn's sense of cantabile melody and differentiated harmony in a high sound culture and colorful, transparent diction, are available in a complete set.
French School pianists play French concertos
Chopin: The Complete Nocturnes
Brahms: Concerto for violin and cello, Op. 102 in A minor &
Liszt: La Leggierezza / Yang Yang Cai
A stunning debut by 24 years old Chinese pianist Yang Yang Cai. For her first disc she carefully selected six very diversified works by Liszt, in order to convey all her pianistic qualities: prowess and virtuosity, but also philosophical insight and colouristic finesse. Her craftsmanship, musicality and fine taste are perfectly in balance.
Beethoven: Violin Sonatas Nos. 2, 4 & 9 "Kreutzer" / Weithaas, Várjon
Both highly in demand on a worldwide scale as unique, exceptional chamber music performers, Antje Weithaas and Dénes Várjon each ideally combine the highest degree of enthusiasm and precision: their energetic, passionate playing is the result of intense concentration. In Vol. I of their complete recording of Beethoven’s violin sonatas, Weithaas and Várjon have chosen not to follow chronological order, but to seek out thrilling contrast and fascinating variety instead – thus making Beethoven’s rapid evolution as a composer all the more astounding.
Global Wagner – Bayreuth to the World ft. Katharina Wagner, Alex Ross & More
