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Great Conductors of the 20th Century etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Great Conductors of the 20th Century etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.40 - Furtwangler

CD1 [80:00]

Beethoven: Symphony No.3 'Eroica'
Live recording: Herkulessaal, Munich, September 1953
Wiener Philharmoniker


Beethoven: Symphony No.9 'Choral' (beginning)


CD2 [78:18]

Beethoven: Symphony No.9 'Choral' (conclusion)
(with Erna Berger, Gertrude Pitzinger, Walther Ludwig & Rudolf Watzke)
Live recording: Queen's Hall, London, May 1937
Philharmonischer Chor Berlin
Berliner Philharmoniker


Beethoven: Symphony No.5
Live recording: Staatsoper, Berlin, February 1944
Berliner Philharmoniker



THE BIOGRAPHY - WILHELM FURTWÄNGLER (1886-1954)

Wilhelm Furtwängler was born in Berlin in 1886, the eldest son of the leading archaeologist of his time and of a painter. His musical gifts were apparent early, and he was educated by private tutors, often while travelling in Greece, Italy and Egypt. He began composing as soon as he could play the piano, and always regarded himself as primarily a composer, though one who was waylaid by conducting. Furtwängler was, in a conscious way, the successor to the German Idealist philosophers and the great line of Classical composers, and also to Wagner. He rapidly achieved fame and became chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic on the death of Arthur Nikisch in 1922. This remained the orchestra with which he was most closely associated, though his links with the Vienna Philharmonic were also strong, and he conducted many other orchestras in Europe and the Americas. When the Nazis came to power in 1933, Furtwängler was torn between his allegiance to the great humanist tradition he represented (and felt that he should maintain), and his abhorrence of the racist-cultural policies of the Nazis. There were angry confrontations, but in the end he stayed in Germany, and this decision gave rise to great hostility towards him, especially in the USA. He spent his last years living in Switzerland, but touring in many countries, and died exhausted in November 1954. His posthumous reputation and influence has grown ever larger in the intervening decades.
THE RECORDINGS
Though Furtwängler had intense feelings for the whole mainstream German tradition, including Wagner, his hero was Beethoven. As Michael Tanner explains in the essay accompanying this set: 'The element of titanic struggle in Beethoven's work, the aspiration to overcome all manner of obstacles by dint of the heroic will, and the achievement of ecstasy, exaltation and ultimate serenity, were what Furtwängler was supremely concerned with and what led him to perform Beethoven's symphonies far more often than any other works.' Of the nine symphonies, the Fifth is the one he conducted most during his career (and there are no fewer than eleven versions available on record, from 1926 [his first ever recording] to 1954). The hitherto unissued live performance in this compilation dates from the darkest days of the Second World War and at a concert that had to take place in the State Opera House (because by then the Berlin Philharmonic's concert hall had been bombed by the Allies). Furtwängler tended to perform the 'Eroica' and 'Choral' symphonies less often and to hold them in reserve for particular occasions. The occasion for this previously unreleased 'Eroica' was a concert given by the Vienna Philharmonic in Munich, between visits to the Salzburg and Edinburgh Festivals in September 1953, and the 'Choral' Symphony was performed at the first of two concerts by the Berlin Philharmonic in London, prior to a Wagner Ring cycle conducted byFurtwängler at Covent Garden in May 1937.

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http://www.filesonic.com/file/913137474/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 40- Furtwangler.part3.rar

Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.38 - Kubelik



CD1 [78:32]


Dvorák: Slavonic Rhapsody No.3
Kingsway Hall, London, January 1959
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra


Martinu: Symphony No.4
Studio Domovina, Prague, June 1948
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra


Berlioz: Ballet des sylphes ('La Damnation de Faust') May 1950
Philharmonia Orchestra

Mendelssohn: Overture to 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' February 1953
No.1 Studio, Abbey Road Studios, London
Philharmonia Orchestra


Hindemith: Symphonic Metamorphosis on Themes by Carl Maria von Weber
Orchestra Hall, Chicago, April 1953
Chicago Symphony Orchestra


CD2 [76:46]

Schumann: Genoveva Overture
Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin-Dahlem, September 1964
Berliner Philharmoniker


Schubert: Symphony No.3
Musikvereinssaal, Vienna, January 1960
Wiener Philharmoniker


Mahler: Symphony No.10 - Adagio
Herkulessaal, Munich, April 1968
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks


Janácek: Sinfonietta
Musikvereinssaal, March 1955
Wiener Philharmoniker



THE BIOGRAPHY - RAFAEL KUBELIK (1914-1996)

Giving no regard to the advantages (and disadvantages) of a famous name, Rafael Kubelik (1914-1996) succeeded in conquering the world with his baton, just as his celebrated father Jan had conquered the world with his violin. In January 1934, fresh from the Prague Conservatory and not yet 20, Rafael Kubelik made his debut with the Czech Philharmonic. In October 1937 he took the orchestra on tour to Britain, deputising for Václav Talich, and was hailed as 'one of the most gifted conductors of the day'. During the first years of he so-called Protectorate, Kubelik directed the Brno Opera. In 1942, following the closure of the theatre there, he took over Talich's orchestra as chief and, despite Nazi oppression, successfully maintained a high profile for Czech music. After liberation, Kubelik established the Prague Spring International Festival. Then came the Communist coup in February 1948. Finding the limitations imposed on artistic freedom unacceptable and vowing not to return until democracy had been restored, Kubelik emigrated to England, where the BBC hoped he would succeed Sir Adrian Boult. Instead, his burgeoning international career took him to Chicago. On his return to London, Kubelik was engaged for three seasons at Covent Garden (1955-58), achieving phenomenal success with Jenufa and Les Troyens. Meanwhile, he was in ever increasing demand at major festivals, especially Salzburg and Lucerne. By 1961 he was at the helm of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, remaining with them until the mid-1980s. News of the 'Velvet Revolution' in his homeland so rejuvenated Kubelik that he came out of retirement to conduct his old orchestra in an unforgettable performance of Smetana's Má vlast for the opening concert of the 1990 Prague Spring Festival.
THE RECORDINGS
The recordings have been chosen to reflect the musical institutions and repertoire with which Kubelik was most closely associated during his career. Czech music and the Czech Philharmonic are strongly represented. Kubelik gave the Prague premiere of Martinu's Symphony No.4 in 1946, and took it on tour to Paris, Brussels, Geneva and Poland before recording it in June 1948, shortly before he emigrated to the West. This rare recording is reissued here for the fist time on CD. His musical life in England included a fruitful relationship with Walter Legge's Philharmonia Orchestra, heard here in Berlioz (a reminder of Kubelik's championship of Les Troyens, which he performed during his period at Covent Garden) and Mendelssohn. In Chicago (1950-53) he was as keen as ever to programme contemporary music and a particular favourite was Hindemith's orchestral showpiece, a superb vehicle for the virtuosity of his Chicago players. Back in Europe, Kubelik made recordings in Vienna, including this vital reading of Janácek's Sinfonietta, an essential item throughout his career, and the superbly played Schubert 3rd Symphony. Following his appointment in Munich in 1961, Kubelik recorded mainly with German orchestras. With the Berlin Philharmonic he recorded the complete symphonies of Dvorák and Schumann, and the crowning glory of his years with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra was the recording of the complete Mahler symphonies.


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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.39 - Celibidache

CD1 [69:07]

Nielsen: Overture 'Maskarade'
Live recording: Danish Radio Concert Hall, Copenhagen, December 1970
Danish National Symphony Orchestra


Berwald: Symphonie singulière
Live recording: The Academy of Music, Stockholm, June 1967
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra


Mendelssohn: Symphony No.4 'Italian'
Live recording: Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin-Dahlem, November 1953
Berliner Philharmoniker


Tchaikovsky: 'The Nutcracker' - 4 dances from Suite Op.71a
Kingsway Hall, London, December 1948
London Philharmonic Orchestra


CD2 [77:49]

Hilding Rosenberg: 'Marionetter' Overture
Live recording: Konserthus, Gothenburg, October 1962
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra

Heinz Tiessen: 'Hamlet' - Suite
Live recording: Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin-Dahlem, October 1957
Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin


Mozart: Symphony No.25 K183
Kingsway Hall, London, December 1948
London Philharmonic Orchestra


Prokofiev: Symphony No.1 'Classical'
Zwölf-Apostel-Kirche, Berlin, February 1948
Berliner Philharmoniker


Johann Strauss II: Overture 'Die Fledermaus'
Annen-Polka & Tritsch-Tratsch-Polka
Johann Strauss I: Radetzky March
Live recording: Concert Hall, Copenhagen, December 1970
Danish National Symphony Orchestra



THE BIOGRAPHY - SERGIU CELIBIDACHE (1912-1996)

Sergiu Celibidache was born in 1912 in the Moldavian region of Romania. He revealed remarkable talents for music, dance and intellectual pursuits at a very early age. In 1936 he moved via Paris to Berlin, where he studied with Heinz Tiessen, who became his musical mentor. Though Martin Steinke was his spiritual guide, he owed his most profound experiences to the concerts of Wilhelm Furtwängler. When Furtwängler was blacklisted at the end of the war and his designated successor, Leo Borchard, was accidentally shot dead, Celibidache assumed control of the Berlin Philharmonic 'overnight'. He quickly reformed the scattered remains of the orchestra into a first-rate ensemble and roused the spirits of the Berliners with his ecstatic fervour. On Furtwängler's return to the orchestra, the two men shared the duties of principal conductor. Celibidache's last concert with the BPO was on the day before Furtwängler's death in 1954. A fortnight later the position of principal conductor was given to Herbert von Karajan, who was thought to have superior marketing potential. In contrast, Celibidache, who stopped making commercial recordings altogether in 1953, criss-crossed the globe as a much sought-after, and feared, trainer of orchestras. For many years he worked mainly with radio orchestras in Sweden, Denmark and southern Germany, elevating them to heights they would never reach again. It was not until 1979, when he took charge of the Munich Philharmonic, that he again became the official principal conductor of a body of musicians, which, as he had promised, he shaped into an ensemble of inimitable quality and world stature. He remained with the orchestra until his death in 1996.
THE RECORDINGS
Though Celibidache's 1948 studio recordings have been available on CD before, this compilation offers new remasterings of Mozart and Tchaikovsky with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and Prokofiev with the Berlin Philharmonic. The more recent material on these 2 CDs is taken from radio broadcasts made between 1953 (the year Celibidache stopped making commercial discs) and 1970. New to the conductor's discography are Mendelssohn's 'Italian' Symphony from Berlin in 1953, Berwald's best known work and an 'exquisitely wrought' overture by Hilding Rosenberg, made in Stockholm in 1962, the year of Celibidache's debut with the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, and extracts from the 1970 Christmas concert in Copenhagen (featuring winning performances of Nielsen and the Strauss family). The real rarity here is another radio broadcast new to CD: the music inspired by Shakespeare's Hamlet was included in a concert given in Berlin in 1957 as a tribute to Heinz Tiessen, Celibidache's teacher, on the occasion of the composer's 70th birthday.


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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.37 - Reiner

CD1 [79:53]

Beethoven: 'Coriolan' Overture May 1959
Brahms: Piano Concerto No.2 (with Emil Gilels) February 1958
Mozart: Symphony No.36 'Linz' April 1954
Orchestra Hall, Chicago
Chicago Symphony Orchestra


Mendelssohn: Scherzo ('A Midsummer Night's Dream')
Academy of Music, Philadelphia, June 1951
The Robin Hood Dell Orchestra (Philadelphia Orchestra)


CD2 [78:39]

Brahms: Tragic Overture December 1957
Wagner: Siegfried's Rhine Journey ('Götterdämmerung') April 1959
Bartók: Swineherd's Dance (from Hungarian Sketches) December 1958
Orchestra Hall, Chicago
Chicago Symphony Orchestra


Richard Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel
Carnegie Hall, New York, September 1950
RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra


Ravel: Le Tombeau de Couperin
Carnegie Hall, January 1952
NBC Symphony Orchestra


Falla: El amor brujo (with Carol Brice)
Syria Mosque, Pittsburgh, February 1946
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra



THE BIOGRAPHY - FRITZ REINER (1888 -1963)

One of the legendary podium giants of the 20th century, the Hungarian-American conductor Fritz Reiner was born in Budapest in 1888 and studied at the Franz Liszt Academy, where Bartók was one of his teachers. In 1914 he was appointed principal conductor of the Dresden Opera, where he worked with Richard Strauss, of whose music he would become a supreme interpreter. In 1922 he succeeded Eugène Ysaÿe as conductor of the Symphony Orchestra in Cincinnati, from where, in 1931, he went to the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia (where one of his conducting students was the young Leonard Bernstein). From 1938 to 1948, Reiner was music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, and in 1953 he succeeded Rafael Kubelik in Chicago, where, over the next ten years, he made a series of recordings with the orchestra that have remained benchmarks to this day. He died in New York in 1963, aged 74.
THE RECORDINGS
Reiner became an American citizen in 1928, during his period as conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony. After his period on the faculty of the Curtis Institute, he moved in 1938 to Pittsburgh, rebuilding the orchestra into a first-rate ensemble, as can be heard here in a new transfer from the original metal parts of the 1946 recording of Falla's El amor brujo. After Pittsburgh, Reiner was active particularly as a guest conductor with orchestras in Philadelphia and New York and at the Metropolitan Opera. These years are represented in this compilation by recordings, new to CD, of Mendelssohn, Richard Strauss and Ravel. But the period for which Reiner will be particularly remembered is the ten years he spent as music director of the Chicago Symphony, heard here in rare recordings of the core repertoire (Beethoven, Brahms, Mozart and Wagner) in which Reiner excelled, and of Béla Bartók, the conductor's former teacher and a composer whose work he championed (not least by making the first commercial recording of Bartók's Concerto for Orchestra).

 

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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.36 - Karajan



CD1 [79:52]

Johann Strauss II: Tritsch-Tratsch-Polka
Musikvereinssaal, Vienna, October 1949
Wiener Philharmoniker

Walton: Symphony No.1
Live recording: Auditorium del Foro Italico, Rome, December 1953
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma della RAI

Mussorgsky (orch. Ravel) Pictures at an Exhibition
Kingsway Hall, London, October 1955 & June 1956
Philharmonia Orchestra

CD2 [79:41]

Waldteufel: 'Les Patineurs' September 1960
Sibelius: Symphony No.4 July 1953
Kingsway Hall
Philharmonia Orchestra


Wagner: Death of Isolde ('Tristan und Isolde') (with Helga Dernesch)
Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin-Dahlem, December 1971
Berliner Philharmoniker


Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No.2 (orch. Liszt/Doppler) January 1958
Weinberger: Polka ('Schwanda the Bagpiper') September 1960
Chabrier: España & Joyeuse Marche September 1960
Offenbach: Barcarolle ('Les Contes d'Hoffmann') January 1959
Kingsway Hall
Philharmonia Orchestra



THE BIOGRAPHY - HERBERT von KARAJAN (1886-1954)

Born in 1908 into an aristocratic Austrian dynasty of musically gifted doctors and academics, Herbert von Karajan had breeding and an embarrassment of talent. In his native Salzburg, in Ulm and Aachen in the 1930s, this was supplemented by an apprenticeship in the art of conducting with exemplary role models, as rigorous, wide-ranging and replete as any aspiring Kapellmeister could wish for. However, the times were out of joint: after the war he would be obliged to rebuild his career afresh. In 1948 he began a close collaboration with Walter Legge's newly formed Philharmonia Orchestra, a highly fruitful relationship that lasted for the better part of a decade. From 1957 to 1964 he served as artistic director of the Vienna State Opera and worked closely with La Scala, Milan. However, the most important collaboration of Karajan's career - indeed one of the great musical partnerships of the 20th century - was with the Berlin Philharmonic; a partnership that began in 1955, when he succeeded Furtwängler as music director, and ended shortly before Karajan's death in 1989.
THE RECORDINGS
The live Italian Radio recording of Walton's First Symphony is the most exciting addition to Karajan's discography since the conductor's death in 1989. Taken from acetates supplied by RAI, the performance reveals the affinity Karajan felt for the music of Walton, whose Belshazzar's Feast he had conducted in Vienna in 1947: 'the best choral music that's been written in the last 50 years'. The later recordings come from Karajan's hugely successful period with Walter Legge's Philharmonia Orchestra and include a number of fine recordings which, after a number of years, are being revived here (in new remasterings) and which demonstrate the special relationship Karajan developed with the orchestra. The composer himself greatly admired this 1953 recording of Sibelius's Fourth Symphony, and the Mussorgsky/Ravel Pictures at an Exhibition is both thrillingly played and spectacularly recorded. The most recent recording featured in this compilation is of Karajan and his Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra in the Liebestod from the 1971 complete recording of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde. Like Beecham, Karajan had a great fondness for high quality 'light' music and a number of fine examples have been included in this set.

 

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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.35 - Toscanini

CD1 [74:51]

Berlioz: Grand Overture 'Les Francs Juges'
April 1941

Brahms: Symphony No.4
November 1948

Dvorák: Symphonic Variations
December 1948

Puccini: Intermezzo ('Manon Lescaut', Act III)
July 1944 Live recordings: NBC Studio 8H, New York
NBC Symphony Orchestra


CD2 [78:22]

Wagner: Overture 'Rienzi'
Live recording: NBC Studio 8H, New York, December 1938
NBC Symphony Orchestra

Beethoven: Symphony No.6 'Pastoral'
Queen's Hall, London, October 1937
BBC Symphony Orchestra


Wagner: Brünnhilde's Immolation ('Götterdämmerung') (with Helen Traubel)
Live recording: Carnegie Hall, New York, February 1941
NBC Symphony Orchestra


Bellini: Introduction, Chorus & Cavatina ('Norma')
(with Nicola Moscona)
Live recording: Carnegie Hall, New York, December 1945
Boys' Choir & Peter Wilhovsky Chorus
NBC Symphony Orchestra



THE BIOGRAPHY - ARTURO TOSCANINI (1867-1957)

The Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini (1867-1957), who would become a phenomenon in the world of musical performance in the 20th century and an abiding influence as an interpreter (particularly of the music of Beethoven, Wagner & Verdi), was born, the son of a tailor, in Parma in 1867. His musical gifts were such that he was enrolled at the city's Conservatory by the age of nine. Starting his career as an orchestral cellist, he rapidly moved to conducting and served a ten-year 'apprenticeship' in Italian opera houses, before being appointed artistic director of La Scala, Milan, in 1898, aged 31. So it was that the first part of Toscanini's unprecedented 68-year-long career (1886-1954) would be spent in the theatre (15 years at La Scala and 7 years at the Metropolitan in New York), where he pursued his ideal of opera as a totally integrated dramatic art. Once he had achieved that, his career moved from the pit almost exclusively to the podium and the centre of his musical activities became New York, where he was principal conductor of the Philharmonic (1928-36) and then, even more famously and for very nearly the rest of his life, the director of a radio orchestra, the NBC Symphony, created specially for him. He stayed with the orchestra for 17 years and made most of his recordings with it. He died in 1957, two months before his 90th birthday.
THE RECORDINGS
The importance of the material on these two CDs lies not only in the rarity of the live recordings, which have not been available before, but also in the rarity of some of these works in Toscanini's own repertoire. The performance of Beethoven's 'Pastoral' Symphony was given in London with the BBC Symphony Orchestra in 1937 and is widely considered to be Toscanini's finest recording of the work, with the conductor at his most expressive and persuasive. The live recordings of the Brahms Symphony (from 1948) and of Brünnhilde's Immolation from Wagner's Götterdämmerung (from 1941) are new to the catalogue and demonstrate the extra intensity Toscanini achieved when performing in front of an audience. The other broadcasts feature works that Toscanini rarely performed in the United States (or, in the case of the Wagner and Berlioz overtures, anywhere else). Furthermore, the extracts from Bellini's Norma, from the two Wagner operas and from Puccini's Manon Lescaut remind us of Toscanini's devotion to the world of opera in the earlier part of his career.


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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.34 - Weingartner

CD1 [78.04]

Beethoven: Overture ‘The Creatures of Prometheus’
Musikverein, Vienna, February 1936
Wiener Philharmoniker


Beethoven: Symphony No.2
Abbey Road Studios, London, March 1938
London Symphony Orchestra


Berlioz: Marche troyenne (‘Les Troyens’)
Théâtre Pigalle, Paris, July 1939
Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire


Weber: Invitation to the Dance (orchestrated: Weingartner/revised: Woodhouse)
Brahms: Symphony No.3

Abbey Road Studios, October 1938
London Philharmonic Orchestra


CD2 [76.23]

Mozart: Symphony No.39
Kingsway Hall, London, February 1940
London Philharmonic Orchestra


Wagner: Overture ‘Rienzi’
Théâtre Pigalle, July 1939
Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire


Wagner: Siegfried-Idyll
Abbey Road Studios, October 1938
London Philharmonic Orchestra

Liszt: Les Préludes & Mephisto Waltz No.1
Kingsway Hall, February 1940
London Symphony Orchestra



THE BIOGRAPHY

The Austrian conductor Felix Weingartner was born in Dalmatia (now Croatia) and studied in Graz and Leipzig. His first appointment was in Königsberg in 1884, followed by posts in Danzig, Hamburg and Mannheim. His breakthrough came when he was appointed Kapellmeister at the Berlin Royal Opera in 1891, a post he held until 1898, when he moved to Munich as conductor of the Kaim Orchestra (1898-1903). He succeeded Mahler as Director of the Vienna Court Opera (1908-1911) and at the same time became conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic (1908-1927). During this period he also held posts in Hamburg, Darmstadt and at the Vienna Volksoper, and travelled widely, establishing a reputation across Europe and in North and South America. From 1927, he conducted in Basle and was Director of the Conservatoire, where he taught conducting. He returned to the Vienna State Opera in 1935 but left after eighteen months. He then based himself in Switzerland, working as a guest conductor throughout non-Nazi Europe until his death in Winterthur in 1942. Weingartner wrote several seminal books on conducting and on the performance of the Beethoven Symphonies and is remembered as a pre-eminent conductor of the classical repertoire.

THE RECORDINGS

The set offers an excellent cross-section of Weingartner’s interpretations in Beethoven, Brahms, Mozart, Berlioz, Liszt and Wagner in newly remastered recordings, taken wherever possible from EMI’s original metal parts. The 1938 performance of Beethoven’s Second Symphony has been available before only on LP and the Prometheus Overture from 1936 has never been issued outside Japan. Brahms’s Symphony No.3 from 1938, Berlioz’s Marche troyenne from 1939, and Liszt’s Les Préludes and Mephisto Waltz No.1 from 1940, represent Weingartner’s life-long championship of these three composers, notably Brahms and Liszt whom he knew well. The compilation is completed by one of Weingartner’s rare Mozart recordings (from 1940) and some Wagner (from 1938-9), all in new transfers.

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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.33 - Szell

CD1 (72.55)

Auber: Overture ‘Fra Diavolo’
Cleveland Orchestra; Masonic Auditorium, Cleveland, November 1957

Dvorák: Symphony No.8
Cleveland Orchestra; Severance Hall, Cleveland, April 1970

Debussy: La Mer
Live studio recording; WDR Symphonieorchester Köln;
Klaus-von-Bismarck-Saal, WDR, Cologne, November 1962


Delius: Irmelin Prelude
Cleveland Orchestra; Masonic Auditorium, Cleveland, October 1956

CD2 (72.36)

Rossini: Overture ‘L’Italiana in Algeri’
Cleveland Orchestra; Severance Hall, Cleveland, May 1967

Tchaikovsky: Symphony No.5
Live studio recording; WDR Symphonieorchester Köln;
Klaus-von-Bismarck-Saal, WDR, Cologne, June 1966


Wagner: Overture ‘Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg’
New York Philharmonic; Carnegie Hall, New York, January 1954

Josef Strauss: Delirien – Waltz
Cleveland Orchestra; Severance Hall, Cleveland, January 1962




THE BIOGRAPHY - George Szell (1897-1970)

Born in Budapest in 1897, George Szell showed a prodigious musical talent. He made his debut as a pianist at the age of 10 with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra and at 17 appeared with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra as both composer and pianist. He was then taken under the wing of Richard Strauss, working as his assistant at the Royal Opera in Berlin (1915-17). Subsequently, he worked in opera houses in Strasbourg, Prague, Darmstadt and Düsseldorf before being appointed first conductor at the Staatsoper in Berlin (1924-29). He returned to Prague as musical director of the Neues Deutsches Theater and as a regular guest conductor with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra (1929-37). Just before the outbreak of World War II, he escaped the threat of Nazism by taking up appointments with the Scottish Orchestra in Glasgow and with the Residentie-Orkest in The Hague. In 1939, after a short period in Australia, he settled in the USA, where he became a conductor at the New York Metropolitan Opera (1942-6) and then music director of the Cleveland Orchestra, a position he held until his death in 1970. He also enjoyed close relationships with the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra and the New York Philharmonic. Under his leadership the Clevelanders became one of the greatest orchestras in the world and Szell himself established a reputation as one of the most remarkable conductors of his time.

THE RECORDINGS

This compilation is a mix of live performances and unusual commercial recordings, previously unissued on CD. The current catalogue covers Szell’s work in mainstream repertoire – Beethoven, Brahms, Haydn, Mahler, Mozart and Schumann – so these two CDs focus on composers who are less well represented in the conductor’s discography. The Cologne radio recordings of La Mer (from 1962) and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No.5 (from 1966) are examples of Szell working live and with musicians back in Central Europe. The shorter pieces – Auber’s Fra Diavolo Overture, Delius’s Irmelin Prelude and Strauss’s Delirien Waltz – show Szell’s mastery of lighter musical fare. A real rarity is the 1954 recording of the overture to Wagner’s Meistersinger featuring Szell and the New York Philharmonic. Dvorák’s Symphony No.8, recorded by EMI in Cleveland in 1970, is Szell’s third and final recording of the work and boasts a sound superior to that of the earlier versions.

http://www.filesonic.com/file/871025874/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 33- George Szell.part1.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/871025904/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 33- George Szell.part2.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/871025964/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 33- George Szell.part3.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/871028534/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 33- George Szell.part4.rar
 


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Great conductors of the 20TH century EMI VOL.32 - Scherchen

CD1 [78.26]

Beethoven: Overture ‘Coriolan’
Mozart-Saal, Konzerthaus, Vienna, June 1954
Wiener Staatsopernorchester


Beethoven: Symphony No.8
Stravinsky: ‘The Firebird’ – Suite (1919)

Walthamstow Town Hall, London, September 1954
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra

Schoenberg: Suite in the Old Style for string orchestra
Live studio recording: Lankwitz Studio, Berlin, September 1959
Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin

Orff: Entrata
Mozart-Saal, Konzerthaus, November 1960
Wiener Staatsopernorchester


CD2 [73.23]

Reznicek: Overture ‘Donna Diana’ June 1957
Haydn: Symphony No.100 ‘Military’ July 1958
Brahms: Symphony No.1 October 1952

Mozart-Saal, Konzerthaus
Wiener Staatsopernorchester



THE BIOGRAPHY

Hermann Scherchen was born in Berlin. Self-taught as a musician, he soon began playing the viola in orchestras and in 1912 made his debut as a conductor in Schoenberg’s Pierrot lunaire, which he studied with the composer. After being interned in Russia during World War 1, he returned to Berlin and formed the Society for New Music in 1918. From 1922 to 1950, he was associated with the Winterthur Musikkollegium and started giving master classes in conducting. In 1922, he succeeded Furtwängler in Frankfurt but left Germany in 1933 and settled in Switzerland becoming Music Director of the Swiss Radio in Zürich (1945-50) before returning to Germany. He continued an active international career in Europe and South America and gave world premieres of works by Schoenberg, Berg, Webern, Nono and Dallapiccola. He was guest conductor at La Scala (1963-4) and made his US debut in 1964. Scherchen is particularly remembered as a musical pioneer; devoted to furthering the cause of contemporary music and of new means of musical expression.


THE RECORDINGS

The set brings together Scherchen’s acclaimed performances of Haydn and Beethoven and also his authoritative interpretations of three contemporary composers – Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Orff – with whom Scherchen worked during his career. With the exception of the Schoenberg, the recordings originate from the Westminster catalogue and have been available on CD only in Japan. Scherchen’s performance of Beethoven’s Symphony No.8, in which the conductor scrupulously observes Beethoven’s metronome marks, caused a sensation when it was first issued in 1954 and the Haydn, from 1958, was also a famous recording of its time. The compilation also includes two important recordings new to the catalogue: Orff’s Entrata (based on William Byrd’s keyboard work ‘The Bells’) and Schoenberg’s Suite for String Orchestra, recorded live in 1959. The recording of Brahms’s First Symphony from 1952 is a rare opportunity to hear Scherchen in the work of a composer he rarely conducted. All the recordings have been newly remastered using state of the art 


http://www.filesonic.com/file/871019314/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 32- Hermann Scherchen.part1.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/871022664/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 32- Hermann Scherchen.part2.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/871022734/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 32- Hermann Scherchen.part3.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/871054794/Great Conductors of The 20th Century Vol 32- Hermann Scherchen.part4.rar
 


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