Originally posted by pastoralguy
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David Oistrakh - was there ever a more reliable solo violinist?
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rkyburz
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostListening tonight to his recording of the Tchaikovsky concerto with Ormandy I was left in wonderment .
... the only recording of his I find a bit tiring is his Brahms Concerto with Szell on HMV but that is clearly the fault of the recording not him .
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post.....but MDT are still listing the set:
http://www.mdt.co.uk/oistrakh-david-...diya-5cds.html
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Richard Tarleton
There are some moving insights into Oistrach's life in the Soviet Union in one of the last chapters of Rostislav Dubinsky's "Stormy Applause". Things went badly for him after he refused to sign a letter from the Soviet Union in 1968 to the Israeli government following its call for all Jews to unite in their historic homeland. The authorities called at his house and removed his entire archive - awards, programmes, records, tapes, books, a letter from Einstein, the key to Jerusalem, the copy of City Lights that Chaplin had given him, the lot. Neighbours assumed he was moving, and helped the KGB agents with the trunks...he behaved with complete stoicism.
I had a ticket to hear him play the Tchaikovsky in 1971 in the RFH. This was cancelled after the expulsion of the 101 Soviet "diplomats" by the Heath govt. (we got Ida Haendel instead) I saw him twice the following year, when he played Prokoviev 1 and Shostakovich 2 on successive nights (the second night being the western premiere of Shosta 15, cond. Maxim with DSCH present).
A monument was erected on his grave in 1976. As Dubinsky says, "Many people gathered for the ceremony. Tamara [his wife] was calm. That evening, at home alone, she put on the dress Oistrach liked best, sat in a chair, and, one by one, swallowed a bottle of sleeping pills".
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostYou are so lucky. It must have been a most magical evening.
I don't think comparison between soloists is ever useful - they all have their own special moments. Even to compare David with his son Igor is pointless. Styles change; even across a single generation and artists of today cannot be compared with those of past years, because their whole environment has changed with audiences, instruments and means of audio reproduction having a big influence. As a founder member of the Ida Haendel fan club, I would say that she still managed to keep her 1930s style well into the postwar years, but should we draw comparisons between her and James Ennes or Maxim Vengerov or Gil Shaham?
Writing as a horn player; would Dennis Brain be occupying a first horn chair in one of our present London Orchestras? His father Aubrey would have described the horn sections of today as a bunch of euphonium players; but what fantastic techniques they have; compared with my days.
HS
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostThe magic of David Oistrakh's playing is that one always felt that whatever the piece, it had been written especially for him.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThere are some moving insights into Oistrach's life in the Soviet Union in one of the last chapters of Rostislav Dubinsky's "Stormy Applause". Things went badly for him after he refused to sign a letter from the Soviet Union in 1968 to the Israeli government following its call for all Jews to unite in their historic homeland. The authorities called at his house and removed his entire archive - awards, programmes, records, tapes, books, a letter from Einstein, the key to Jerusalem, the copy of City Lights that Chaplin had given him, the lot. Neighbours assumed he was moving, and helped the KGB agents with the trunks...he behaved with complete stoicism.
I had a ticket to hear him play the Tchaikovsky in 1971 in the RFH. This was cancelled after the expulsion of the 101 Soviet "diplomats" by the Heath govt. (we got Ida Haendel instead) I saw him twice the following year, when he played Prokoviev 1 and Shostakovich 2 on successive nights (the second night being the western premiere of Shosta 15, cond. Maxim with DSCH present).
A monument was erected on his grave in 1976. As Dubinsky says, "Many people gathered for the ceremony. Tamara [his wife] was calm. That evening, at home alone, she put on the dress Oistrach liked best, sat in a chair, and, one by one, swallowed a bottle of sleeping pills".
Is the author of that book the former first violinist of the Borodin Quartet?
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Richard Tarleton
Yes - and it's a remarkable tale.
copies still available via Abebooks http://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/Se...tormy+applause
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I am reminded by LMP on another thread of his Hindemith Violin Concerto recording with the composer- it truly is in a class of its own . It is a concerto seldom heard but I have never heard a recording or performance that has come within a country mile .Last edited by Barbirollians; 20-09-12, 21:24.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI am reminded by LMP on another thread of his Hindemith Violin Concerto recording with the composer- it truly is in a class of its own . It is a concerto seldom heard but I have never heard a recording or performance that has come within a country mile .
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One of my favourite recordings of Oistrakh is the one he made with his brother and Vladimir Yampolsky of Handel's trio sonata in G minor op 2 no 6 and in particular the beautiful arioso with its interweaving violin lines. No-one would play Handel in this way today but it is a very moving performance.
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I had not until last week owned his 1950s and early 1960s DG recordings .
The Brahms and Tchaikovsky with Konwitschny are marvellously individual but as others said above so musical and successful in putting across the composer's contentions . The mono recording occasionally becomes congested in forte . Both are outstanding .
The Bach including the double with Igor O is very stylish for 1962 and holds its own now . The Beethoven Romances are played for all they are worth. Well worth getting this 2CD set.
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