Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Highlights 1956-1985
Live Recordings 1956-1985 | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde and Symphonies Nos. 9 & 10
Kurt Sanderling would have been 100 years old on September 19, 2012. He very nearly reached that age, for he died last year just one day before his 99th birthday. This great conductor’s biography is packed with the events of a turbulent century. He began his career as a rehearsal pianist in Berlin in the early Thirties, before being stripped of his citizenship as a Jew. He emigrated to Moscow in 1936 to join his uncle and after a period in Kharkov was appointed to the Leningrad Philharmonic at the age of only 29, serving as second principal conductor under Yevgeny Mravinsky until 1960. He then returned to East Berlin and assumed the direction of the Berlin Symphony Orchestra until 1977. From 1964 to 1967, he also conducted the Staatskapelle of Dresden. Apart from Dmitry Shostakovich, a lifelong friend whose works Sanderling championed before and after his death in 1975, Gustav Mahler was the composer closest to his heart. A score of Mahler’s "Song of the Earth” accompanied him into exile, and he gave the Deryck Cooke completion of Mahler's Tenth Symphony its first performance in East Germany in 1978, soon after the conducting score had been published. When Sanderling took over the BSO in 1960, Mahler was still “off the radar" in East and West alike. Yet he featured his works from the very start. The Fourth was joined in his programming by Mahler's late works, which move on from the sweeping affirmatives of the Eighth to deal with life and farewell in many different ways – with none of the three works ending in triumphant full orchestra. Only after months or years of concert performance did Kurt Sanderling assemble his BSO before the microphones in the late Seventies and early Eighties, in order to capture this deeply moving music on gramophone records. To mark his centenary, those recordings of Gustav Mahler's last three symphonic works are now brought together in an informative and well presented special edition. | 
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Re-release from the Complete Mozart Edition (Vol. 32), 1991: • Complete, unabridged performance • Excellent booklet, including new liner notes from Dieter Kroll, three-language synopses and photographs of the singers • Libretto and translations available as download (Italian with English and German) “Leopold Hager ... paces the arias admirably and draws clean, euphonious playing from the Mozarteum Orchestra. … The cast could scarcely be bettered, as the presence of singers like Helen Donath and Edith Mathis in the secondary roles implies” Gramophone Magazine | 
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| |  | Festliche Weihnachten in Dresden
CD 1: Peter Schreier singt Weihnachtslieder CD 2: Fröhlich soll mein Herze springen - Weihnachten mit Ludwig Güttler CD 3: Christvesper des Dresdner Kreuzchores
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René Kollo (Cola Rienzi), Siv Wennberg (Irene), Nikolaus Hillebrand (Steffano Colonna), Janis Martin (Adriano Colonna), Theo Adam (Paolo Orsini), Siegfried Vogel (Raimondo), Ingeborg Springer (Ein Friedensbote), Peter Schreier (Baroncelli) & Günther Leib (Cecco del Vecchio) Leipziger Rundfunkchor, Chor der Staatsoper Dresden & Staatskapelle Dresden, Heinrich Hollreiser “The principal credit for the recording's success…is due to the conductor Heinrich Hollreiser. He prevents the more routine material from sounding merely mechanical, and ensures that the whole work has a sweep and a conviction that persuades me, for one, that there is no reason for its continued exclusion from the Bayreuth canon.” Gramophone Magazine | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Handel: The Great Choral Workssung in German
Handel: | Messiah (highlights) Regina Werner (soprano), Heidi Rieß (alto), Peter Schreier (tenor), Theo Adam (bass), Dietrich Knothe (harpsichord) Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, Rundfunkchör Berlin, Helmut Koch Belshazzar: highlights Peter Schreier (Belshazzar), Renate Frank-Reinecke (Nitocris), Gisela Pohl (Daniel), Roland Munch (harpsichord) Berliner Singakademie, Kammerorchester Berlin, Dietrich Knothe Solomon: highlights Marga Schiml (Solomon) Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, Rundfunkchör Berlin, Heinz Rögner Judas Maccabaeus, HWV 63: highlights Ernst Haefliger (Judas), Theo Adam (Simon), Gundula Janowitz (First Israelite Woman), Hertha Töpper (Second Israelite Woman), Peter Schreier (Israelite Man), Robert Köbler (harpsichord) Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, Solistenvereinigung und Grosser Chor des Berliner Rundfunks, Helmut Koch Israel in Egypt, HWV54: highlights Carola Nossek (soprano), Rosemarie Lang (alto), Christian Vogel (tenor), Gert Loth (organ I), Walter Heinz Bernstein (organ II/harpsichord) Rundfunk-Sinfonie-Orchester Leipzig, Rundfunkchor Leipzig, Wolf-Dieter Hauschild |
This collection includes highlights of a number of Handel’s great works. The soloists include Peter Schreier and the conductors are Helmut Koch, Heinz Rögner, Dietrich Knothe, Wolf-Dieter Hauschild. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler - Highlights
and movements from Symphonies 1-6 and 9
The openness with which Mahler wanted to “create a world from the trivial” made him one of the last Romantic composers and a forerunner of modern music at the same time. This selection brings home how his songs, with or without words, found their way into his symphonies. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Haydn - Highlights
This 3 CD set in the Berlin Classics “Basics” series gives an overview of Haydn’s works including the Surprise Symphony, Piano concerto in D Major, The Emperor String Quartet and highlights from the Creation. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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“Böhm's recording is a live Bayreuth performance of distinction, for on stage are the most admired Tristan and Isolde of their time, and in the pit the 72-year-old conductor directs a performance which is unflagging in its passion and energy. He has a striking way in the Prelude and Liebestod of making the swell of passion seem like the movement of a great sea, sometimes with gentle motion, sometimes with the breaking of the mightiest of waves. Nilsson characterises strongly, and her voice with its cleavingpower can also soften beautifully. Windgassen's heroic performance in Act 3 is in some ways the crown of his achievements on record, even though the voice has dried and aged a little. Christa Ludwig is the ideal Brangäne, Waechter a suitably forthright Kurwenal and Talvela an expressive, noble-voiced Marke. Orchestra and chorus are at their finest. Over several seasons of conducting the work at Bayreuth, Barenboim has thoroughly mastered the pacing and shaping of the score as a unified entity. Even more important, he has peered into the depths of both its construction and meaning, emerging with answers that satisfy on almost all counts, most tellingly so in the melancholic adumbration of Isolde's thoughts during her narration, in the sadly eloquent counterpoint ofbass clarinet, lower strings and cor anglais underpinning King Marke's lament, and in the searingly tense support to Tristan's second hallucination. These are but the most salient moments in a reading that thoughtfully and unerringly reveals the inner parts of this astounding score. The obverse of this caring manner is a certain want of spontaneity, and a tendency to become a shade self-regarding. You occasionally miss the overwhelming force of Furtwängler's metaphysical account or the immediacy and excitement of Böhm's famous live Bayreuth reading. But the very mention of those conductors suggests that Barenboim can live in their world and survive the comparisons with his own perfectly valid interpretation. Besides, he has the most gloriously spacious yet well-focused recording so far of this opera, and an orchestra not only familiar with his ways but ready to execute them in a disciplined and sensitive manner. The recording also takes account of spatial questions, in particular the placing of the horns offstage at the start of Act 2. Salminen delivers a classic account of Marke's anguished reproaches to Tristan, his singing at once sonorous, dignified and reaching to the heart, a reading on a par with that of his fellow countryman Talvela for Böhm. Meier's Isolde is a vitally wrought, verbally alert reading, which catches much of the venom of Act 1, the visceral excitement of Act 2, the lambent utterance of the Liebestod. Nothing she does is unmusical; everything is keenly intelligent, yet possibly her tone is too narrow for the role. Lipovšek's Brangäne tends to slide and swim in an ungainly fashion, sounding at times definitely overparted. Listening to Ludwig (Böhm) only serves to emphasise Lipovšek's deficiencies. Then it's often hard on the newer set to tell Isolde and Brangäne apart, so alike can be their timbre. As with his partner, Jerusalem sings his role with immaculate musicality; indeed, he may be the most accurate Tristan on disc where note values are concerned, one also consistently attentive to dynamics and long-breathed phrasing. On the other hand, although he puts a deal of feeling into his interpretation, he hasn't quite the intensity of utterance of either Windgassen (Böhm) or, even more, Suthaus (Furtwängler). His timbre is dry and occasionally rasping: in vocal terms alone Suthaus is in a class of his own. Yet, even with reservations about the Isolde and Tristan, this is a version that will undoubtedly hold a high place in any survey of this work, for which one performance can never hope to tell the whole story.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “...the performance glowes with intensity from beginning to end, carried through in the longest spans. Birgit Nilsson sings the Liebestod at the end of the long evening as though she was starting out afresh, radiant and with not a hint of tiredness, rising to an orgasmic climax and bringing a heavenly pianissimo on the final rising octave” Penguin Guide, 2010 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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