All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Strauss - Symphonia Domestica
Staatskapelle Weimar, Antoni Wit Richard Strauss’s orchestral music includes several works with autobiographical significance, including Ein Heldenleben (Naxos 8554417). Scored for large symphony orchestra, the Symphonia domestica depicts the delights and vicissitudes of married life with Strauss, his wife, child and other family members deftly portrayed in a variety of situations, including a ‘cheerful quarrel’ in which the father has the last word! In contrast, Metamorphosen for 23 solo strings is Strauss’s heartbreaking meditation on the destruction of German culture during World War II. “…Wit's account of the Symphonia domestica is richly spacious to match the recording although in no way lacking in forward momentum. …the tender writing for the child's "Wiegenlied" in the third section is especially touching, and the "Liebesszene" of the Adagio has all the Straussian erotic passion one could wish for. The Metamorphosen too is well played, with much refinement of texture and no lack of feeling...” Gramophone Magazine, January 2010 | 
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| |  | Strauss - The Last Concerts
The festival of Richard Strauss’s music held in London during October 1947 was the result of a joint initiative by Sir Thomas Beecham and Ernst Roth, Richard Strauss’s publisher at Boosey & Hawkes. A vital part of this initiative was the presence of the composer himself. Strauss and his wife were then living as impoverished exiles in Switzerland: UK performance royalties on the composer’s work had been frozen during the war, but if he came to England he could collect those royalties and gather new payments for performances of his music – and he could also earn a good fee if he conducted. The festival opened with two concerts at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, given by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Beecham, in the presence of an approving Strauss. Beecham also conducted two concert performances of the opera Elektra at the BBC’s Maida Vale studios, again with a very satisfied composer in attendance. Important events these may have been, but the highlight of the festival was a concert at the Royal Albert Hall on the Sunday evening of 19 October, in which Strauss himself conducted the Philharmonia Orchestra in a programme of three works, Don Juan, the Burleske for piano and orchestra and the Sinfonia domestica, with a new symphonic arrangement of the waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier as an encore. It is said that Strauss wanted to conduct his Alpine Symphony, and that the huge instrumental forces required in this work made it economically impossible, but he would have been content with the choice of the Sinfonia domestica, since its homespun subject matter made it a favourite among his own works. This too needed a large orchestra, and well-known extra players from other London orchestras were recruited for the occasion, including the Royal Philharmonic’s clarinettist, Jack Brymer. For the Burleske Strauss chose the little-known pianist Alfred Blumen as soloist. Blumen had worked with Strauss on several occasions over a period of many years, notably in a long tour of South America with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in 1923, during which they gave performances of Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto in addition to the Burleske. Now living in Britain, Blumen had also fallen on hard times, and Strauss wanted his old colleague to earn a concert fee. Extract from the note Alan Sanders, 2008 “…for a man of 83 to conduct a concert of this length at this pitch of intensity… is astonishing. In the opening of Don Juan he yields to no one, not even Toscanini, in the brilliance of his attack, yet in the lyric sections there is a yearning loveliness... What is true of Don Juan is doubly true of this startlingly wonderful performance of Symphonia domestica... this London account communicates... fervently his tender and passionate belief in the piece.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2009 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Strauss, R: | Don Juan, Op. 20 Live recording: Berlin, 15.02.1942 Sinfonia Domestica, Op. 53 Live recording: Berlin, 09.01.1944 Erich Röch (violin) |
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, Wilhelm Furtwängler | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Lorin Maazel | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Strauss, R - Orchestral Works
Berlin Philharmonic & Hamburg Philharmonic, Wilhelm Furtwängler Mono recordings | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladimir Ashkenazy | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | Strauss, R: | Don Quixote, Op. 35 (Recorded I.1975, Philharmonie, Berlin) (with Mstislav Rostropovich, Ulrich Koch) Sinfonia Domestica, Op. 53 (Recorded VI.1973, Salle Wagram, Paris) Ein Heldenleben, Op. 40 (Recorded V. & IX.1974, Philharmonie, Berlin) (with Michél Schwalbé) |
Berliner Philharmoniker, Herbert Von Karajan | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Strauss: Sinfonia Domestica
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Gerard Schwarz The re-launch of the RLPO label in conjunction with Avie Records included this two-CD set of works by the titan of late Romanticism, Richard Strauss. Music Director Gerard Schwarz excels in this repertoire, conducting two personal, programmatic tone poems – An Alpine Symphony exploring the composer’s mountainous adventures, and the Sinfonia Domestica which evokes his family life. By contrast, two late works for winds feature RLPO principals Jonathan Small in Strauss’s late Oboe Concerto, and clarinettist Nicholas Cox and bassoonist Alan Pendlebury in the Duet Concertino. While An Alpine Symphony was previous available, the other three works are new to the RLPO discography. “Sheer heaven...remarkable performance” BBC Music Magazine | | Avie - AV2071 (CD - 2 discs) Normally: $19.99 Special: $15.99 |
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| |  | Richard Strauss - Symphonic Poems Volume 2
Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Järvi | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Clemens Krauss | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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