Vox 80th Anniversary
ArkivMusic celebrates the 80th anniversary of the Vox Classics label with nearly 200 titles from its catalog on sale now!
Sale ends at 9:00am ET, Tuesday, May 27, 2025.
80 products
French Piano Music / Grant Johannesen
French Piano Concertos
REVIEW:
The various soloists are a delight to listen to, and handle both powerful and sensitive passages with considerable skill. The orchestras generally play well under their individual conductors but in certain passages the horns/trombones are insecure. The background notes are more than adequate though more could have been said about the works themselves. Something should be said about the new style slim double jewel case used by Vox. The internal leaf is poorly designed and the clips, too weak to hold the discs, break off in transit. (Why redesign when an robust version exists, one wonders?)
The analogue recordings of the 70s are clear with no background noise that usually shows up in recordings of this period. The recording of the Pierné work (from 1978) is disappointing; the acoustics are particularly dry and the higher frequencies are lost. These recordings, like all previous Vox concertos reviewed, are pleasantly balanced for piano. The recording venues are not given in the notes.
-- MusicWeb International (Raymond Walker, August 2001)
The Dance
Ivan Moravec Plays Chopin And Debussy

Recorded in 1982/83, Ivan Moravec's Debussy and Chopin recitals for Vox count among the most attractively engineered piano recordings from the early days of digital. Max Wilcox's engineering does full justice to Moravec's luminescent tone and ultra-discreet mastery of the sustain pedal. The runs and arpeggios in Debussy's Reflets dans l'eau, Mouvement, and Poissons d'or flow so naturally and unmechanically that you don't immediately notice how precise and even they really are. The hushed, sustained atmosphere of Debussy's Des pas sur la neige and Estampes' exotic overtones come alive through Moravec's acute sense of timing and tonal application.
Although his less-heroic, more inward path through Chopin's C-sharp minor Polonaise and Polonaise-Fantasie contrasts with Artur Rubinstein's firmer swagger, the approach proves equally valid. And Moravec coaxes half tints and inner voices from his selected Mazurkas and Waltzes without unduly underlining them (the trio of the C-sharp minor Waltz, for instance). Even if you already possess Michelangeli's Debussy Images, Richter's Estampes, or Rubinstein's Chopin, Moravec deserves equal space in your collection. A bargain not to be missed. [2/26/2002]
--Jed Distler, ClassicsToday.com
The Story Of Tchaikovsky
Includes work(s) by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
The Stories Of Vivaldi & Corelli
Includes work(s) by Antonio Vivaldi, Arcangelo Corelli.
The Stories Of Foster & Sousa
This disc contains musical selections and narration discussing the lives of Stephen Collins Foster and John Philip Sousa.
The Story Of Verdi
Includes work(s) by Giuseppe Verdi.
The Story Of Haydn
Includes work(s) by Franz Joseph Haydn.
The Story Of Bach
Includes work(s) by Johann Sebastian Bach.
The Stories Of Schumann & Grieg
Includes work(s) by Robert Schumann, Edvard Grieg.
The Story Of Johann Strauss
Includes work(s) by Johann Strauss Jr..
The Story Of Berlioz
Includes work(s) by Hector Berlioz.
The Story Of Chopin
Includes work(s) by Frédéric Chopin.
The Story Of Beethoven
Includes work(s) by Ludwig van Beethoven.
The Story Of Mendelssohn
Includes work(s) by Felix Mendelssohn.
The Story Of Handel
Includes work(s) by George Frideric Handel.
The Story Of Brahms
Includes work(s) by Johannes Brahms.
The Story Of Wagner
Includes work(s) by Richard Wagner.
The Story Of Dvorák
Includes work(s) by Antonín Dvorák.
The Story Of Mozart
This disc contains musical selections and narration discussing the life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
The Story Of Schubert
Includes work(s) by Franz Schubert.
Holst: The Planets; Smetana: Má Vlast / Susskind, St. Louis
Mendelssohn: Songs Without Words / Rena Kyriakou
A thoughtfully integrated yet scintillating-when-appropriate (the final variations) rendition of the Variations sérieuses proves more than mere filler, although more dynamically characterized and colorful interpretations can be had, past (Horowitz, Cortot) and present (Perahia, Thibaudet). I hope the balance of Kyriakou's Vox Mendelssohn cycle will appear in due course.
--Jed Distler, ClassicsToday.com
The Classical Novaes - Beethoven, Mozart
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
