Fritz Reiner: The Complete Columbia Album Collection
- Sony Masterworks
- September 11, 2020
When the 50-year-old Fritz Reiner was appointed conductor of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra in 1938, he was still relatively unfamiliar in his adopted American homeland. This pupil of Bartók at the Academy of Music in his native Budapest, former conductor of the Dresden Royal Opera, where he worked with Richard Strauss, and for the past 16 years music director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra was still rarely mentioned in the national press and never in record reviews. Although he had actually made some discs in 1938 with the New York Philharmonic, they were issued anonymously.
Everything changed for Reiner when his move to Pittsburgh led to nearly a decade of major recordings for American Columbia. Sony Classical is now pleased to present a new 14-CD box set collecting all of Reiner’s Pittsburgh Symphony discography together with the Columbia recordings he made after moving to New York in 1948 to become a principal conductor at the Metropolitan Opera.
Reiner was already an experienced Wagner conductor when he came to Pittsburgh and, not surprisingly, his first sessions in February and March 1940 included, among other popular selections, the “Ride of the Valkyries”. This is the oldest recording in the new set and Reiner’s first credited commercial record. Electrical problems unfortunately spoiled the remaining 1940 Wagner masters, so those works had to be re-recorded in 1941, but now at the huge Syria Mosque, the orchestra’s regular venue and site of all the other Pittsburgh recordings collected here. Others dating from before the war include Strauss’s Don Juan (from January 1941) and Don Quixote, with cellist Gregor Piatigorsky (November 1941), as well as Debussy’s Ibéria (also November 1941).
Following the wartime national recording ban, Reiner and the orchestra returned to the Syria Mosque in March 1945 to set down some prime examples of the conductor’s widely varied repertoire: Shostakovich’s Sixth Symphony; the premiere recording of Robert Russell Bennett’s suite from Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, commissioned by Reiner; his Hungarian friend Léo Weiner’s Divertimento No. 1; the Galánta Dances by another compatriot, Zoltán Kodály; and Beethoven’s Second Symphony.
A number of his most memorable Pittsburgh recordings were made in February 1946: the first-ever studio production of the Concerto for Orchestra by his erstwhile teacher Bartók; Brahms’s Hungarian Dances and the First Piano Concerto with Rudolf Serkin; Falla’s El amor brujo, a perennial Reiner favorite, with the fine mezzo soloist Carol Brice, who also recorded Mahler’s Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen during those sessions; and the suite from Strauss’s Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, which Reiner had introduced in the US at Cincinnati. None of these except the Brahms concerto and the Strauss has ever before appeared on CD at Sony Classical.
Reiner conducted his last Pittsburgh recording, Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben, in November 1947. Two years later, his first New York sessions for Columbia took place at the 30th Street Studio, producing a remarkably stylish complete set of Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos. Also being released by Sony Classical on CD here for the first time, it features such illustrious names as harpsichordists Sylvia Marlowe and Fernando Valente, flautist Julius Baker, trumpeter William Vacchiano, oboist Robert Bloom, violist William Lincer and cellist Leonard Rose. A few months earlier, Fritz Reiner made one his most famous recordings of all. He was at the Metropolitan conducting Strauss’s Salomé with the finest exponent of the title role, Ljuba Welitsch, making her house debut. In the midst of the run in March, at the 30th Street Studio, Columbia captured the final scene on disc, a recording that has retained its benchmark status.
In 1953, the final chapter of Fritz Reiner’s long career began when he became music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and began a celebrated series of stereo recordings for RCA Victor. But any full appreciation of this legendary conductor’s legacy has to include his earlier achievements for Columbia Records in Pittsburgh and New York. For all Reiner’s countless aficionados around the world, Sony Classical’s new 14-CD box set will be essential listening.
REVIEW:
Strauss's Don Quixote is jam-packed full of character, whether biting, lyrical or touched by gentle humour, and it is blessed by memorable solo playing from cellist Gregor Piatigorsky and violinist Henri Temianka. Reiner's first recorded treatment of Strauss's Don Juan is, like his first Chicago recording, all breathless excitement. A Wagner programme features an excellent Venusberg Music as well as orchestral snippets from The Ring and the disc’s highlights, the Overture and a ‘three-piece suite’ from Die Meistersinger. Eight Brahms Hungarian Dances are given highly charged readings.
While the sound quality of these fairly late mono recordings is, as one might expect, highly variable, the transfers themselves are extremely clean.
-- Gramophone (Rob Cowan)
Product Description:
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Release Date: September 11, 2020
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UPC: 190759367728
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Catalog Number: 19075936772
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Label: Sony Masterworks
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Number of Discs: 14
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Composer: Various
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Orchestra/Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
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Performer: Reiner
Works:
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La Valse
Composer: Maurice Ravel
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Images: Ibéria
Composer: Claude Debussy
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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La damnation de Faust: Marche hongroise
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Danse "Tarantelle styrienne"
Composer: Claude Debussy
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg: Prelude to Act I
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Siegfried: Waldweben
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Lohengrin: Prelude to Act I
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Lohengrin: Prelude to Act III
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Die Walküre: Ride of The Valkyries
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Tannhäuser, Act I: Bacchanale and Venusberg Music
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Act III: Vorspiel
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Act III: Dance of the apprentices
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Act III: Entrance of the Meistersingers
Composer: Richard Wagner
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 36
Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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A Night on Bald Mountain
Composer: Modest Mussorgsky
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Porgy and Bess "A Symphonic Picture"
Composer: George Gershwin
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Concerto No. 1 in D Minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 15
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Rudolf Serkin (Piano)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Concerto for Orchestra, Sz. 116
Composer: Béla Bartók
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Kamarinskaja "Wedding Song and Dance Song"
Composer: Mikhail Glinka
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Il signor Bruschino: Overture
Composer: Gioacchino Rossini
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
Composer: Gustav Mahler
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Carol Brice (Contralto)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Magnificat in D Major, BWV 243, No. 2: Et exultavit
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Ensemble: Columbia Broadcasting Symphony
Performer: Carol Brice (Contralto)
Conductor: Daniel Saidenberg
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Magnificat in D Major, BWV 243, No. 9: Esurientes implevit bonis
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Ensemble: Columbia Broadcasting Symphony
Performer: Carol Brice (Contralto)
Conductor: Daniel Saidenberg
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Mass in B Minor, BWV 232, Part I, No. 10: Qui sedes ad dexteram Patris
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Mass in B Minor, BWV 232, Part IV, No. 26: Agnus Dei
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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El Amor Brujo
Composer: Manuel de Falla
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Carol Brice (Contralto)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 5 in G Minor
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 7 in F Major
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 12 in D Minor
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 13 in D Major
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 6 in D Major
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 21 in E Minor
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 19 in B Minor
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Dances (21), WoO 1: No. 1 in G Minor
Composer: Johannes Brahms
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Rosen aus dem Süden, Op. 388
Composer: Johann Strauss II
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Schatz-Walzer, Op. 418
Composer: Johann Strauss II
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Wiener Blut, Op. 354
Composer: Johann Strauss II
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Rodgers: The Carousel Waltz
Composer: Richard Rodgers
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Ein Heldenleben, Op. 40
Composer: Richard Strauss
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Le bourgeois gentilhomme, Op. 60
Composer: Richard Strauss
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Symphony No. 35 in D Major, KV. 385 "Haffner"
Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Orchestral Suite No. 2 in B Minor, BWV 1067
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Little Fugue in G Minor, BWV 578
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Mozart: Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, KV. 550
Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Op. 54
Composer: Dmitri Shostakovich
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Colas Breugnon, Op. 24: Overture
Composer: Dmitry Kabalevsky
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Dances of Galánta
Composer: Zoltan Kodály
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Divertimento No. 1 for String Orchestra, Op. 20 "Nach alten ungarischen Tänzen"
Composer: Leo Weiner
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Suite No. 1 in D Major, Op. 43: V. Marche Miniature
Composer: Peter Tchaikovsky
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Hungarian Pictures, Sz. 97
Composer: Béla Bartók
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Brandenburg Concertos (6), BWV 1046-1051
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Don Giovanni, Act I: "Don Ottavio! son morta!"..."Or sai, chi l'onore"
Composer: Wolfgana Amadeus Mozart
Ensemble: Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Don Giovanni, K. 527, Act II: "Crudele! Crudele?"..."Non mi dir, bell'idol mio"
Composer: Wolfgana Amadeus Mozart
Ensemble: Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Songs and Romances, Volume I: 36. Mne grustno
Composer: Alexander Dargomïzhsky
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Songs and Romances, Volume I: 46. Melnik
Composer: Alexander Dargomïzhsky
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Rustic Song in F Minor "Where are You Little Star"
Composer: Modest Mussorgsky
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Hat dich die Liebe berührt
Composer: Joseph Marx
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Pierrot Lunaire, Op. 21: 5. Valse de Chopin
Composer: Joseph Marx
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Gedichte aus 'Letzte Blätter' (8), Op. 10: 3. Die Nacht
Composer: Richard Strauss
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Lieder (4), Op. 27: 2. Cäcilie
Composer: Richard Strauss
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (Piano)
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Salome, Op. 54: Final Scene
Composer: Richard Strauss
Ensemble: Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Performer: Ljuba Welitsch (Soprano)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Don Quixote, Op. 35
Composer: Richard Strauss
Ensemble: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Grogor Piatogorsky (Cello)
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Don Juan, Op. 20
Composer: Richard Strauss
Conductor: Fritz Reiner
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Concertino for Piano and Orchestra, H. 55
Composer: Arthur Honegger
Conductor: Fritz Reiner