If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Kopatchinskja, Orchestra des Champs-Elysees, Herreweghe
Given the reviewer is Roy Goodman, I hope he might consider this recent period recording which is another to include the 'timpani' cadenza mentioned above transcribed from piano for the soloist. I've only heard it once, but found it an absolutely winning performance.
Of the several recordings I appear to have, for sheer pleasure I reach most often for Campoli with RPO/Pritchard.
Not available I guess.
It is available as a high resolution download (or various discs) sourced from an EMI commercial reel-to-reel tape from HDTT.
I bought it on the DVD - sounds like the cleanest LP played on excellent equipment - having previously suggested to EMI it be released for Campoli's centenary.
One of the reviewers... It's a two-hander BAL with AMcG...
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
I've got quite a few LP versions that arent on your list, though of course, it may be that they never made it to CD, or are unavailable:
Francescatti/Walter/Columbia SO
stereo CBS (UK) SBRG 72006 (USA Columbia MS 6263)
Francescatti/Ormandy/ Columbia SO
mono Columbia 33CX 1011
Ferras/Karajan/BPO
stereo DG SLPM 139 021
Schneiderhan/Jochum/BPO
stereo DG SLPM 138 999
Schneiderhan/van Kempen/BPO
mono DG LPM 18099
Suk/Boult/New Philharmonia
stereo HMV ASD 2667
David Oistrakh/Gauk/USSR State O.
stereo Vox STPL 516.160
Menuhin/Silvestri/VPO
stereo HMV ASD 377
Igor Oistrakh/Schuchter/Pro Arte O.
mono Columbia 33CX 1514
Since I've also got quite a few of the ones that are on your list I think I might give this BAL a miss, I've really got enough versions of Beetoven's violin concerto!
Thanks for the additions, umslopogaas. I've added the Suk and David Oistrakh to the list. Some of your collection are already on the list, but others are either deleted or never made it to CD.
I am somewhat embarrassed to find that I have seventeen performances of the concerto in my collection (all CDs as I got rid of LPs for space reasons (!!) many years ago.) But I have managed not to have an Oistrakh version, though over the years I have heard several of them. My memory of them is too vague to recall orchestras, companies, etc.
Which Oistrakh version would members advise? I should prefer stereo, though good mono is not discounted. (Please, no dreadful Russian engineering of the old style such as is beloved of Rob Cowan.)
Hello Alf-Prufrock (msg 24)
Nothing embarrassing about 17 performances of this! In fact a great achievement - something to cherish, I'd say.... I think I have 2 or 3 Oistrakhs - and Kogan with Silvestri (EMI) is a sure-fire all guns blazing tour de force... but I have I have Szeryng, Krebbers, Schneiderhahn, etc - also a version from Berlin in 1943, I think with Furtwangler, which is quite brilliant, but sadly the thoughts of what was going on a few kilometres to the east, and also who may have been attending the concert, somewhat overshadow my enjoyment, to say the least.
Hello Alf-Prufrock (msg 24)
Nothing embarrassing about 17 performances of this! In fact a great achievement - something to cherish, I'd say.... I think I have 2 or 3 Oistrakhs - and Kogan with Silvestri (EMI) is a sure-fire all guns blazing tour de force... but I have I have Szeryng, Krebbers, Schneiderhahn, etc - also a version from Berlin in 1943, I think with Furtwangler, which is quite brilliant, but sadly the thoughts of what was going on a few kilometres to the east, and also who may have been attending the concert, somewhat overshadow my enjoyment, to say the least.
The Furtwangler is on Alpen's list at message 1. The violin soloist is Erich Rohn and the concert took place on January 12 1944 and was, in fact, part of the final concert that took place in the Alte Philharmonie before its destruction on the night of January 29/30 1944. Agree entirely about the quality of the performance the praises of which I sang on the old BBC boards a while back.
"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
There's also a Menuhin version that appeared about 5 years of him playing and directing the Menuhin Chamber Orchestra on EMI. It was never issued during his lifetime and was available a couple of years in the HMV sale for a pound!!
May I mention Accardo with Guilini on Sony? A good if not perhaps great recording.
PG: Do I recall you once mentioning that you had 49 versions of the Beethoven VC? Your opinion of one for the library would carry some weight, I think.
"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
Comment