Romantic Era
3839 products
-
Beethoven: Early Piano Sonatas, Opp. 2-7-10
$16.99CDBrilliant Classics
Mar 20, 2026BRI96978 -
Beethoven, Schubert & Vorisek: Works for Cello & Fortepiano
$20.99CDAudite Musikproduktion
Sep 12, 2025ADT97829 -
Liszt: Symphonic Poems
$20.99CDGenuin
Jul 04, 2025GEN 25916 -
Dvorak: String Quartet, Op. 96, String Quintet, Op. 97 & Hum
$20.99CDAudite Musikproduktion
Oct 24, 2025ADT97828 -
Nostalgia
$19.99CDarcantus Musikproduktion
Apr 17, 2026ARC25051 -
Malin Bystrom - German Opera Scenes & Arias
$21.99SACDBIS
Apr 17, 2026BIS-2775 -
-
-
Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 & Serenade for Wind Instruments, Op.
$20.99CDSWR
Nov 21, 2025SWR19162CD -
Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 2 "Lobgesang"
$21.99SACDBIS
Apr 03, 2026BIS-2761 -
Schubert + Schumann
$21.99SACDBIS
Apr 10, 2026BIS-2760 -
-
-
Ludwig van Beethoven: Late Works for Flute and Piano
$20.99CDAudite Musikproduktion
Sep 05, 2025ADT97822 -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Brahms: Complete Trios
$14.99CDBrilliant Classics
Jun 13, 2025BRI96746 -
-
-
-
-
-
Beethoven: Early Piano Sonatas, Opp. 2-7-10
Beethoven, Schubert & Vorisek: Works for Cello & Fortepiano
Goldmund Quartett
Liszt: Symphonic Poems
Dvorak: String Quartet, Op. 96, String Quintet, Op. 97 & Hum
Nostalgia
Rachmaninoff, Liszt & Piazzolla
Haochen Zhang Plays Beethoven & Liszt
Malin Bystrom - German Opera Scenes & Arias
Liszt: Piano Works
Chopin: The Young Chopin / Zuber, Lin, Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra
Hailed as an “irresistibly fluid” by The New York Times and “illuminating” by the Cleveland Plain Dealer, pianist Eric Zuber releases his debut album, The Young Chopin, with the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra and conductor Wilbur Lin. The release celebrates the early piano repertoire of Frédéric Chopin (1810 – 1849), including his Variations on ‘Là ci darem la mano’ from Mozart’s Don Giovanni, Op. 2; Andante spianato & Grande polonaise brillante, Op. 22; and his Piano Concerto No. 1 in E Minor, Op. 11.
Zuber writes, “The ingenuity of [Chopin’s early] piano writing shows a complete technical understanding of the craft of the instrument, and the seductive beauty of his melodic and harmonic writing is second to none. And to think he was only 17 when he wrote the variations as a school assignment! These early compositions are tremendously difficult from a technical perspective, and Chopin was clearly seeking to showcase his abilities as a pianist. Yet, there is little of the empty displays of virtuosity that appear in the works of some of his contemporaries. Everything serves a purpose to create a clear emotional effect.”
Beethoven: The Late Piano Sonatas
Beethoven: The Last Piano Sonatas
Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 & Serenade for Wind Instruments, Op.
Nelson Freire - The SWR Recordings
Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 2 "Lobgesang"
Schubert + Schumann
Brahms: Symphony no. 2 & Dvořák: Symphony no. 7 / Hrůša, Bamberg Symphony
The Bamberger Symphoniker’s collaboration with the record label Tudor has evolved in cycles. It began with Joachim Raff’s œuvre, a pioneering step into overlooked repertoire. Then stepped up to the Greats with Schubert’s symphonies: the first recording to follow the new Schubert edition was enthusiastically hailed as a refreshing new departure interpreted with historical awareness. Reaching for the stars under the aegis of Jonathan Nott, the scores of Gustav Mahler then entered the Bamberg Konzerthalle. That whole cycle has won countless prizes and awards, becoming a milestone of Mahler discography.
The next step? Staying in Vienna with symphonies by Johannes Brahms while remaining true to Gustav Mahler’s Bohemian homeland with Antonín Dvořák. The Bamberger Symphoniker and Jakub Hrůša’s cycle of the four Brahms symphonies and Dvořák’s last four symphonies is the first recording to give an overview of their extraordinary universe and cast light on their musical affinity, in a vivid soundscape with a contemporary pulse.
REVIEWS:
This enticing release is a further addition to the ongoing series twinning symphonies by Brahms and Dvořák, a theme validated by the kinship between both the composers and the cross-fertilisation of their styles. The orchestra and conductor here have since 2016 been producing a stream of admirable concerts and releases...
The ominous, growling opening of Dvořák’s Seventh is perfectly realised and Hrůša immediately reveals his mastery of the form through the application of subtle rubato in his phrasing without the musical thread going slack. Again, lovely woodwind playing strikes a pastoral note, recalling the Brahmsian inspiration to the work but the darker, denser, “Germanic” orchestration also underlines that link; this is a lilting, songful and unhurried account which never loses the skein of disquiet lurking beneath the dancing, three-quarter-time melodies and the faintly disturbing, mysterious conclusion with distant horns intoning gnomically leaves the listener in ambivalent mood, paving the way for the similarly enigmatic Poco adagio. As with the first movement, Hrůša presides over relaxed, flowing playing underpinned by a prominent bass line and a solid, rhythmic stability modulated by judicious use of rubato and rallentando. The stately grandeur of the music is maximised, ensuring that Dvořák does not come across as just a lightweight, jolly tunesmith.
This is attractively packaged in a dark green cardboard digipack with colour and black and white photos, trilingual notes and an interview with the conductor by German musicologist and critic Wolfgang Sandner, who describes the unusually warm and friction-free friendship between the two composers whose works make a welcome match for this release, especially, as Sandner remarks, Dvořák’s Seventh Symphony is regarded as the most “Germanic” of his mature works.
-- MusicWeb International (Ralph Moore)
Ludwig van Beethoven: Late Works for Flute and Piano
Brahms: Symphony No. 1 & Dvořák: Symphony No. 6 / Hrůša, Bamberg Symphony
The Bamberger Symphoniker’s collaboration with Tudor has evolved in cycles. It began with Joachim Raff’s œuvre, a pioneering step into overlooked repertoire. Then stepped up to the Greats with Schubert’s symphonies: the first recording to follow the new Schubert edition was enthusiastically hailed as a refreshing new departure interpreted with historical awareness. Reaching for the stars under the aegis of Jonathan Nott, the scores of Gustav Mahler then entered the Bamberg Konzerthalle. That whole cycle has won countless prizes and awards, becoming a milestone of Mahler discography.
The next step? Staying in Vienna with symphonies by Johannes Brahms while remaining true to Gustav Mahler’s Bohemian homeland with Antonín Dvořák. The Bamberger Symphoniker and Jakub Hrůša’s cycle of the four Brahms symphonies and Dvořák’s last four symphonies is the first recording to give an overview of their extraordinary universe and cast light on their musical affinity, in a vivid soundscape with a contemporary pulse.
This release also includes 8 of Brahms's Hungarian Dances, each orchestrated by one of these extraordinary contemporaries.
Yuri Ahronovitch conducts Tchaikovsky
Brahms by Arrangement, Vol. 2 - Orchestrations by Robin Holloway
Composers who orchestrate the music of earlier colleagues often serve them best when they add something of themselves to the work in hand. These three orchestrations by the English composer Robin Holloway (b. 1943) demonstrate his profound understanding of and affection for two of the most important Romantic composers – and his re-imagining of Brahms’ Sonata for Two Pianos (which Brahms himself recast as his Piano Quintet) as a symphony gives one of the greatest of all compositions a wild and thrilling energy, making it also a masterpiece of our own age.
Beethoven, Debussy, Mozart, Tchaikovsky et al: Martha Argerich & Ivry Gitlis Live
Martha Argerich and Ivry Gitlis, two of the the greatest musicians of all time, have performed and recorded together many years. Included here is a collection from their live performances given in European festivals
Brahms, Chopin & Mozart: Arthur Rubinstein Live, Vol. 1
Arthur Rubinstein was one of the most famous, loved and admired classical pianists of the 20th century. This set is the 1st volume of DOREMI's series of his live performances and broadcasts.
Brahms: Complete Trios
Mendelssohn & Dvorak: String Quartets
Known & Unknown Romantics - Chopin & Miladowski / Kwiatkowski
Juxtaposing recordings of two composers on one album, one of which is known all over the world and the other completely forgotten, is surprising and requires breaking mental patterns. Fryderyk Chopin (1810–1849) needs not be introduced to anyone; his oeuvre is performed, admired and commented almost all over the globe. In turn, we know almost nothing about Florian Stanislaw Miladowski (1819–1889). Therefore, the DUX initiative, which restores the memory of this forgotten output by putting it in the context of an era whose best showcase is Chopin’s music, is all the more valuable. It is no coincidence that the works presented on the album represent similar music genres, belonging to romantic resources, intimate in their reception. We can find here mazurkas, impromptus and the Polonaise in B-flat Major by Miladowski as well as mazurkas and nocturnes by Chopin. The latter is better represented on our two-disc album: we will also find here four Scherzi and the Variations in D Major on Là ci darem la mano from the opera Don Giovanni by Mozart. Therefore, listeners can prepare for a genuine piano feast, in which two different individuals, two voices from the past speak a similar musical language, testifying to the era of romanticism with their music. Lukasz Kwiatkowski, a talented young Polish pianist with many prizes, honorable mentions and performances with famous orchestras under his belt, will play the piano. He also develops his musical passions by working as a scientist – he is associated with the Academy of Music in Lódz as a researcher and lecturer.
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 5; 1812 Overture / Abravanel, Utah Symphony
Learn more about the VOX Label, the Elite Recordings production team, and the reissuing of these classic Utah Symphony recordings on the Naxos Classical Spotlight Podcast!
Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony is paired here with his ‘noisy festival piece’, the 1812 Overture. These Vox Audiophile Edition recordings were originally released in 1974 as quadraphonic LPs and also appeared in 2001 as part of a complete Tchaikovsky symphonic edition on the Vox label. The Elite Recordings for Vox are considered by audiophiles to be among the finest sounding examples of orchestral recordings.
REVIEW:
Abravanel brings a startlingly fresh and very American tone to the climaxes of the first movement. The string sound is well defined and powerful, and the brass playing in the return of the ‘fate motif’ of the second movement is exhilarating. In fact, the articulation of the opening is markedly more exacting than many other discs; more than anything, it is the intensity of the high points that give this recording such an energetic character. The companion piece, 1812 Overture, is performed with appropriate gusto here, but the real highlight of this disc is the impassioned string playing and vibrant conducting.
-- Classical Music Daily
Mendelssohn, Martinů & Mozart: In the Shadow / Trio Adorno
With its first album, ‘In the Shadow’, the Trio Adorno consciously addresses three compositions, which have hitherto been overshadowed by more famous works and are therefore rarely heard in concert, with the aim of bringing them into the light and into the concert hall. Mozart’s piano trio in D minor, KV 442, is barely known, as the composer never completed it himself. Therefore, it still stands in the shadow of his other piano trios. Martinů’s chamber works – among them the piano trio in C Major – are even more rarely played as his orchestral works. And also Mendelssohn’s piano trio in C minor, op. 66, is much less often heard than its predecessor in D minor, Op. 49. All the more, it’s a pleasure to explore these works together with the Trio Adorno, which received tuition from important figures in the world of chamber music – like among others the Beaux Arts Trio and the Alban Berg Quartet – and which can now look back on a long lasting performing career.
