Symphony 1 / Academic Festival Overture

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Stanislaw Skrowaczewski is one of the finest conductors alive today, and his recorded legacy, though spread over many labels, is second to none in its sustained level of quality. It was to be expected, then, that his Brahms would be good, but no one thought it would be this good. He has his orchestra playing with amazing sensitivity and style, leading a performance of exemplary taste and, in the outer movements, real drama, all contained within a careful and fairly literal reading of the score. Great music-making, pure and simple. --David Hurwitz

Symphony 1 / Academic Festival Overture, Music, Brahms, Skrowaczewski, Halle Orchestra, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral & Symphonic
Brahms: Symphony No. 1; Academic Festival Overture; Tragic Overture
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • *Yawn*
  • Bravo, a woman gets to record the Brahms First, but...
  • I wish I could get excited over this CD
  • An average performance quite distant from greatness
  • Good, but...
Brahms: Symphony No. 1; Academic Festival Overture; Tragic Overture

Manufacturer: Naxos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Brahms: Symphony No. 2 - Hungarian Dances
  2. Brahms: Symphony 3
  3. Barber: School for Scandal/Symphonies 1 & 2
  4. Double Violin Concerto
  5. Kurt Weill: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2; Lady in the Dark - Symphonic Nocturne

ASIN: B0007ACVIC
Release Date: 2005-02-22

Tracks:

  1. Un Poco Sostenuto-Allegro
  2. Andante Sostenuto
  3. Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso
  4. Adagio-Allegro Non Troppo, Ma Con Brio
  5. Tragic Overture, Op.81
  6. Academic Festival Overture, Op.80

Amazon.com

Naxos is obviously excited about this recording, publicizing it widely and issuing it in three different formats (this plain CD, as well as SACD and DVD Audio). You can understand the excitement immediately, as the Symphony opens with tremendous power, fortified by uncommon energy in the kettledrums, signifying that there's going to be no routine playing here. But Alsop is not all aggression; her Andante sostenuto is very tender and affecting. Detail work is just wonderful--listen, for example, to the gorgeous flute solo in the fourth movement introduction--and Brahms's syncopations, always a major aspect of his style, get their full due in this rhythmically alert performance. Both Overtures are vividly characterized, and the Academic Festival retains its humor more than usual. At this point there are so many Brahms recordings that no single one is going to satisfy all of our needs, but this recording is competitive with the best in artistic and sonic aspects. In price, it mops the floor with the competition. --Leslie Gerber

Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars *Yawn*.......2007-05-06

There's far too much hype surrounding Alsop's Brahms. Maestra Alsop has supposedly spent incalculable hours studying Brahms' scores to find those precious new nuggets that have somehow escaped other conductors. With all that, I expected to hear new interpretive insights ... but there were none. With so many important recordings of the Symphony No. 1 already out there -- Wand, Tennstedt, Dorati, Stokowski and Toscanini to name just a few -- this recording becomes completely unnecessary.

3 out of 5 stars Bravo, a woman gets to record the Brahms First, but..........2006-07-01

It's great news that after generations of discrimination, a woman conductor is allowed to record the Brahms First. It's not so great that Marin Alsop is only middling good at it. This is not to write her off--Leonard Slatkin and Greard Schwarz are only middling good, too, and they are among the most recorded American conductors. In fact, if we put Alsop up against Americans who have given us Brahms Firsts, she looks pretty good, being exceeded only by Bernstein and Levine. Not bad.

The London Phil. plays vrey well, and Naxos gives us premium-price sonics for a bargain release. As to the interpretation, Alsop suffers from having no overarching conception. The first movement begins with an aggressively thumping timpani, preparing us for a driving interpretation, but a few bars later the rhythm slackens off, only to pick up and back off several more times. The easiest movement in the symphony is the second, which requires only a passionate, sustained line. Alsop doesn't seem to know how to set one; again you feel that she's pushing and pulling without much purpose.

The Scherzo is gently conceived, an unusual approach but not a bad idea given the sturdiness of the other movements. But Alsop has a hard time getting the music to build as gloriously as it should. The finale is a difficult movement for conductors to judge. My preference is for it to sound titanic and triumphant. Alsop doesn't go that way. Her opening Adagio is remakrably slack. As for the body of the movement with its famous tune, she strings one bar after another without any structural build.

In all, a Brhams First that earns the faint praise of being pleasant. One has to quesiton the staying power of Alsop as an artist who is ready to lead the world's great orchestras. But as a pioneer she deserves only praise.

2 out of 5 stars I wish I could get excited over this CD.......2005-09-18

Alsop has recently been appointed music director of the Baltimore Symphony. A lot has been made of this because she is a she. I think she is a good conductor and quite capable. But, I feel there is little "magic" in what she does. This Brahms 1st is clean and well played but there is none of the drama and individuality that you find in versions by Karajan or Walter.I hope that Alsop will be judged based on her music making and not her gender. I also hope she is successful in Baltimore. And, yet, as evidenced by this recording and others of her's I have heard, I think the jury is still out.

3 out of 5 stars An average performance quite distant from greatness.......2005-09-13

Marin Alsop is now probably the most-recorded woman conductor ever, having churned out regular CDs and having had her photo appear on the cover of most high circulation classical music magazines. For all the buzz about her, she demonstrates no individual trait that separates her from the crowd other than being the most well known female conductor in a man's profession.

Here she is equipped with one of the world's 10 best orchestras and takes on repertoire that puts her in direct competition with every conductor in history including the great, near great and mediocre conductors of the recording era. Based on the evidence presented on this CD, I do not believe she is up to that task.

Her performance of the Symphony No. 1 starts well with timpani supporting the downstrokes in the opening theme, making a clear statement about the serious message to come. However, things soon go awry as a too big timpani stroke clouds the picture during a bad changeover to the exposition.

Alsop next uses an ineffective contrivance that she repeats throughout this recording. She takes the quieter music much more slowly than the louder music, as if to say quiet equals slow and loud equals fast. She does this over and over throuhgout the symphony.

While this can enhance the music when handled like light and shade, Alsop's approach is more like black and white. It lacks subtlety and leads to more of a stop and go approach. Instead of enhancing the experience, it gets in the way. For me, this constant tinkering with pulse and motion is an annoyance.

Alsop fruitlessly takes the exposition repeat in the first movement, saying nothing more than, "Here is the music again." While composers add repeats to elongate their music and follow structural design, recreators are required to interpret repeats differently, to say something different with the same music when doing it a second time. Alsop does nothing more than repeat the music at the same speed and with the same accents. What's the point?

In addition, the playing of the London Philharmonic is not uniformly the best I've heard from that group during the dramatic first movement. There is little that is excellent in the second movement, as the wonderful clarinet interplay is -- like the rest of this performance -- good but not great. The violin and horn solos and duo are better at the end, although the violin is probably too meaty for this gentle music.

Alsop overinterprets the second movement "Andante Sostenuto", which translates to "at a sustained walking pace." Like most conductors, she takes the second movement as an adagio. The marking is more akin to what goes on at the beginning of the third movement, where Alsop leads an inspired reading and does her best work in the symphony.

The dramatic closing movement begins without ornaments from the strings, a mistake in my opinion. The following pizzicato is almost silent, a contrast in keeping with Alsop's differential speeds in the opening movement. There is frankly too much contrast here for the whole to be effective. In addition, there is more poor playing as the timpani doesn't quite match the orchestral downstrokes as it did in the first movement.

Alsop again fidgets with tempo in the quieter sections of the closing movement, then doesn't slow down for the descending scales at about 11 minutes, where a slower tempo would indeed be effective. She hustles right through this section as she does all the louder moments. A nice finish is not enough to save this performance from all its prior shortcomings.

The "Tragic" overture that follows has all the fingerprints of her work in the symphony. Alsop leads a highly nuanced and extremely well played version of the "Academic Festival" overture to close the CD. So this CD begins and ends well but, unfortunately, the 60 minutes in between is not performed at such a high level.

Even with modern DDD recording at Naxos's very inexpensive price, this is not an essential purchase for anyone other than fans of the conductor. You can pay about the same money on this Web site and get much better performances by Walter and Karajan (to name only two) that will give more lasting pleasure over a long term.

My favorite recording of this music continues to be the 1962 recording by Karel Ancerl and the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, last seen linked to a bad mono performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 1. I highly recommend that performance to anyone that wants to hear a dramatic realization of the Brahms Symphony No. 1.

3 out of 5 stars Good, but..........2005-04-28

The benchmark recordings of Brahms' first symphony for me are: Furtwangler's 1952 BPO live (DG), Karl Bohm's 1959 recording with BPO(DG), Bruno Walter's 1952 NYPO account (Sony), Christoph von Dohnanyi's Cleveland recording(Teldec), and Takashi Asahina's 2000 live with New Japan Philharmonic(Fontec). Alsop's un poco sostenuto beginning is appropriately grand with powerful strokes of timpani adding to the impact. The tempo shift as the movement enters the allegro proper is nicely executed. Perhaps the movement lacks the kind of urgent tension that marks Karl Bohm's account but Alsop scores by keeping the exposition repeat intact, which I think is essential in this symphony to maintain the overall proportion and impact. The middle movements are also nicely done. My only complaint is that the tension slightly slackens in the last movement as if the conductor and orchestra were struggling to keep the music afloat. The lead-in to the alphorn theme sounds a bit pedestrian while the famous "big theme" is played rather too slowly, thus robbing the music of its forward momentum. Too bad when the preceding movements are so well played. But the closing pages are unerringly executed as the famous brass chorale sings out its victorious joy. The recorded sound is very good if not top-notch. In sum, this latest offering is in no way bad and almost as good as the Kertesz/VPO but clearly falls behind the benchmark recordings mentioned above.
Johannes Brahms: The Symphonies
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Good but not memorable for me
  • Brahms symphonies
  • sloppy
  • One of Solti's better recordings in Chicago
  • Very good
Johannes Brahms: The Symphonies

Manufacturer: Decca
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Binding: Audio CD

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  5. Schumann: The 4 Symphonies

ASIN: B0000041Z5
Release Date: 1992-02-11

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: I. Un poco sostenuto - Allegro
  2. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: II. Adante sostenuto
  3. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: III. Un poco allegretto e grazioso
  4. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: IV. Adagio - Piu adante - Allegro non troppo ma con brio

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: I. Allegro non troppo
  2. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: II. Adagio non troppo
  3. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: III. Allegretto grazioso (Quasi andantino) - Presto ma non assai
  4. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: IV. Allegro con Spirito
  5. Tragic Overture, Op. 81

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: I. Allegro con brio - Johannes Brahms
  2. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: II. Andante - Johannes Brahms
  3. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: III. Poco allegretto - Johannes Brahms
  4. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: IV. Allegro - Johannes Brahms
  5. Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80 - Johannes Brahms

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: I. Allegro non troppo
  2. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: II. Andante moderato
  3. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: III. Allegro giocoso
  4. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: IV. Allegro energico e passionato

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Good but not memorable for me.......2007-05-17

I purchased this cycle with eager anticipation but was frankly disappointed when I opened up the set and popped it in my stereo. I love the CSO/Solti sound (esp the brass section) as much as anybody but I am disappointed with the energy, balance, and precision of entrances and note lengths. If you want a great set, buy the HSO/Eschenbach!

5 out of 5 stars Brahms symphonies.......2006-11-07

I'll make this simple. If your interested in a great set of the four Brahms symphonies pick this up immediately. Great sound(late analogue warmth), terrific performances(Solti and Chicago are sturdy as always), and an extremely low price.

This set has several distinct advantages over some of the others out there. For starters each symphony occupies its own cd. Sounds simple enough but I'm quickly tiring of sets that split up symphonies under 80 minutes long just to pack each cd to the brink. Nothing's worse than having a complete symphony and half of another on one cd and the other half of the second symphony on disc number 2. No sense switching discs to listen to one work unless that work is over 80 mintues long(ie- Mahler). I'm also getting sick of sets that couple insequential symphonies together to fill up discs(ie- symphonies number 1 and 4 on one disc). I like to listen in sequential order.

This set allows that. One symphony per disc. Discs two and three each have an overture to fill up some time and that's fine since both are after the symphony. How about Abbado and others putting these overtures and other 'bonus' works _before_ the main attraction? What's that about?

I mentioned it early but the price issue is also huge. Sure, you could buy Abbado's Berlin set which is great but be ready to shell out over $120(!) on Amazon. You'll get a couple of additional short works with that set but come on. Is it worth another $100 or so? Your call but I'd say no way.
Pick this up for around $20 and be assured that your getting quality Brahms at a great price.

1 out of 5 stars sloppy.......2006-02-28

It's sloppy. Interpretation not well thought through. Solti is a well known name, but I wasn't impressed. It sounds uninspired. Check out a different set of the Brahms' symphonies.

5 out of 5 stars One of Solti's better recordings in Chicago.......2005-10-14

This Brahms Symphonies set with Sir Georg Solti/Chicago Symphony is one of Solti's better recordings in Chicago. Recorded in 1979, just before the Digital age and technology took over, these are beautiful, smooth and creamy recordings with rich bass and nice mid range. Solti is intense but never driven, and he knows just how much intensity to put into Brahms without over-driving him and making the music become melodramatic or vulgar. The sound London's engineers got in these recordings is better than for the Solti/Chicago Beethoven Symphonies recorded earlier that decade, 1972-74.

The Chicago Symphony under Solti was "HOT" in recording sales during the 1970s. I was in college from 1977-81, and all the brass and woodwind players raved about Chicago's recordings of Strauss, Mahler, and other composers which were currently being released. I especially recall a flute player who was estatic because she received three Solti/Chicago LPs for Christmas gifts one year. The brass and woodwinds are often emphasized in many Solti/Chicago recordings, with the strings less prominent than some orchestras; but here the balance is very equal where needed, and the brass do yeoman service in the passages most needed, such as the running figures at the end of Symphony 2:IV.

Solti does take alot of repeats, especially in Symphony 2:I, which makes this movement several minutes longer than most recordings. And he isn't afraid to take his time - tempos aren't too fast, and never feel driven: not always the case in a Solti recording. I of Symphony 1 and Symphony 3 also have repeats, thus making these movements longer than in recordings of Bruno Walter or George Szell.

The companion works, Academic Festival Overture and Tragic Overture are also excellent in every way, recalling Bruno Walter/Columbia Symphony (Sony), who recorded these works in stereo 20 years before Solti/Chicago.

5 out of 5 stars Very good.......2005-03-18

This is the Brahms Symphonies set to get. Every performance is great, and the sound is pretty high quality. I do not notice any problems with the acoustics. Highly recommended.
Brahms: Symphony No. 1; Tragic Overture; Academic Festival Overture [Hybrid SACD]
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • *Yawn*
  • Auspicious start to the Marin Alsop Brahms Cycle ... BUT
  • Marin Alsop Begins Her Brahms Series
Brahms: Symphony No. 1; Tragic Overture; Academic Festival Overture [Hybrid SACD]

Manufacturer: Naxos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  5. Saint-Saëns: Symphony No. 3; Poulenc: Organ Concerto; Barber: Toccata Festiva

ASIN: B0007ACVD2
Release Date: 2005-02-22

Amazon.com

Naxos is obviously excited about this recording, publicizing it widely and issuing it in three different formats (this SACD, as well as plain CD and DVD Audio). You can understand the excitement immediately, as the Symphony opens with tremendous power, fortified by uncommon energy in the kettledrums, signifying that there's going to be no routine playing here. But Alsop is not all aggression; her Andante sostenuto is very tender and affecting. Detail work is just wonderful--listen, for example, to the gorgeous flute solo in the fourth movement introduction--and Brahms's syncopations, always a major aspect of his style, get their full due in this rhythmically alert performance. Both Overtures are vividly characterized, and the Academic Festival retains its humor more than usual. At this point there are so many Brahms recordings that no single one is going to satisfy all of our needs, but this recording is competitive with the best in artistic and sonic aspects. In price, it mops the floor with the competition. --Leslie Gerber

Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars *Yawn*.......2007-06-29

There's far too much hype surrounding Alsop's Brahms. Maestra Alsop has supposedly spent incalculable hours studying Brahms' scores to find those precious new nuggets that have somehow escaped other conductors. With all that, I expected to hear new interpretive insights ... but there were none. With so many important recordings of the Symphony No. 1 already out there -- Wand, Tennstedt, Dorati, Stokowski, Jarvi and Toscanini to name just a few -- this recording becomes completely unnecessary.

5 out of 5 stars Auspicious start to the Marin Alsop Brahms Cycle ... BUT.......2005-05-07

I have been listening to this new hybrid CD/SACD disc of the first Brahms symphony for a while now, and I am very, very, very frustrated. I am a Marin Alsop fan, and I can also support the level of thoughtfulness that typically goes into at least some of the Naxos releases. My nomination for singular glory of the Naxos catalogue by the way is the superb recording of the sadly neglected Dvorak Piano Concerto by Jeno Jando, Antoni Wit, & the Polish Radio. Just a perfect gem, that actually makes a tremendous case for the Dvorak being as great as the Schumann.

But back to Ms. Alsop and the London Philharmonic in this disc of Brahms. I have to say that Ms. Alsop is finding her own approach to playing Brahms, and although she infuses plenty of romantic fire and drama into the maestoso opening, overall she rather reveals Brahms the humanist to us instead of Brahms the gruff, shy, painfully reserved composer of say, works like the Alto Rhapsody. The London Philharmonic have a great, long Brahms tradition, and they are backing Ms. Alsop every step of the way so far as I can tell. So far so good.

But the dreadful and frustrating thing to me is that the venue largely sabotages all the insight and musical effort. The Watford Colosseum is just a horrid, circular sounding open space that gathers the music up into a cotton candy pillar of Elvis-fan pink hair, and then keeps it spinning round. The bass frequencies are accentuated, and the rest of the frequency spectrum is rendered faint by de-emphasis. The directional cues which would ordinarily place woodwinds and brass and strings in a coherent acoustic are simply almost completely garbled here by the Watford mess. A listener could actually be forgiven for thinking that this album has been multitracked, particularly in multi-channel SuperAudio resolution, with different sections of the orchestra being recorded at different times in different venues, so egregious is the damage that this awful acoustic does. Strings could have been recorded in site A, on Monday; woodwinds and soft to mezzoforte brass at site B on Tuesday; then of course when woodwinds or brass play louder, that sounds like it was recorded at site C on Wednesday; and on it goes.

Now please understand me. The artifice and imbalance of this awful venue are perfectly listenable in a generic, elevator music sort of way.

But this performance is actually so interesting, as it seems to be trying to give us a slightly different view of Brahms that would be really nice if you could hear it as it was probably intended. The moment you listen closely to this disc, trying to grasp the overall concept, you hear the many subtle ways in which this particular venue simply lets all go loopy and blends, blends, blends, except when it comes to making the orchestra sections seem like they are playing in the same acoustic; and then goes on to distort the frequency spectrum consistently, highlighting the lack of locating acoustic in the first place.

If Brahms were simply a chord-based classical pop composer this probably would little matter, but the fact is that part of Brahms' genius was his uncanny ability to write music that at first hearing sounds like chordal harmony and only later reveals its polyphonic depth and subtlety with close listening and greater familiarity. Having to suffer through all this mess in the high resolution of multi-channel Super Audio only adds insult to the embarrassment of putting a performance like this in the Watford Colosseum.

I am so upset for Ms. Alsop, the London Philharmonic, and even for Naxos. Surely somebody really dropped the ball on planning insofar as they settled for the Watford Colosseum as the recording studio. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it. Hate it.

Still, five starts for Ms. Alsop, the London Philharmonic, and of course for Brahms.

Message to Naxos, now: Fire the ninny who booked Watford, and get into a real music hall for the remaining three symphonies. Otherwise we can surely expect that continued use of the Watford Colosseum will simply continue to Cuisinart those performances, too. Why or why did the folks at Naxos trip over their own feet like this? They have made enough good to outstanding recordings over the years, in a variety of venues; and they simply should have known better.

5 out of 5 stars Marin Alsop Begins Her Brahms Series.......2005-02-23

[I have compared the SACD and plain CD versions of this disc and can say that the issue on SACD is in much more brilliant and lifelike sound, as seems to be the case generally for SACD issues. Being a hybrid SACD, this issue can be played on either a regular CD player or a newer SACD player. Many classical music lovers who haven't yet bought an SACD player are nonetheless acquiring discs like this one in order to have them when they DO buy a newer machine. In my case, I do not own an SACD player and made my comparisons of the two versions of the disc using a friend's equipment. And I'm inching toward buying an SACD player for myself.]

Marin Alsop, who is surely a rising star among American conductors, has made a lot of recordings in recent years, but they are mostly of American music and slightly outside the core repertoire­--Rouse, Bernstein, Barber, Torke, Edgar Meyer and Mark O'Connor, Libby Larsen, Joan Tower, Edward Joseph Collins and with her own Concordia Orchestra, the music of stride-master James P. Johnson. Now apparently she's thought to be good enough by her main record label, Naxos, to begin recording things in the center of the classical music repertoire­--the Brahms symphonies and overtures. This CD is the first in that series. And she is given one of the world's great orchestras to record with, the London Philharmonic. The question, of course, is how will she do in these hugely over-recorded works? On the basis of this first disc I'd have to say that she will be able to hold her own with the big boys. Her effort here is abetted by absolutely exquisite playing by the LPO.

The Brahms First is the favorite of many people (not me, no doubt a personal idiosyncrasy) and thus is a tough one to start the series with (aside from that being chronologically appropriate). This is, by and large, a mainstream reading. Tempi, with one small exception, are well-judged. Balances are superb. Phrasing is sensitive, transitions, with the same exception, are smooth and natural-sounding. The LPO play like angels. How does Alsop's conception compare with other conductors' versions. Well, much to my surprise the performance this most reminds me of is my own personal favorite of all the Brahms Firsts that I know, that of Kurt Sanderling conducting the Dresden Staatskapelle, recorded in 1971. Perhaps there is less cholesterol in the string playing than in the wonderful Walter/Columbia Symphony recording, but the LPO strings are actually somewhat lusher than those in the Sanderling. There are many other wonderful performances, of course, including Haitink/Concertgebouw, Furtwängler/VPO, Karajan/BPO, and many others. But this one can stand with them. My only quibble, alluded to above, is the handling of the crucial tempo change in Movement IV at the statement of the Big Tune. The score calls for an Allegro non troppo ma con brio tempo for the initial statement of that theme, but Alsop takes an Andante con not much moto at the beginning (and it DOES sound lush and beautiful, I'll give it that) but the lead up to the animato section at mm. 94 and following, seems to rush awkwardly to get up to the tempo she wants for the animato. That aside, though, this is a lovely reading and one that easily deserves a recommendation. Add to that good performances of both the Tragic and Academic Festival Overtures, and you have a winner.

Naxos helps us out with their budget pricing. How can you lose?

TT=72:42

Scott Morrison
The Story Of Brahms
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • great series
The Story Of Brahms

Manufacturer: Vox (Classical)
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. The Story of Tchaikovsky
  2. Story Of Chopin In Words And Music
  3. The Story Of Handel
  4. The Story of Beethoven
  5. The Story of Bach

ASIN: B000001KDB
Release Date: 1995-04-16

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: Allegro con brio
  2. Piano Concerto No. 2 In B-Flat Major, Op. 83: Allegro appassionato
  3. Quintet in E-flat Major, Op. 83: Rondo
  4. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Adagio non troppo
  5. Serenade, Op. 106: No. 1
  6. Violin Concerto in D Major. Op. 77: Allegro giocoso, ma non troppo vivace
  7. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Allegro con spirito
  8. Capriccio in B Minor, Op. 76: No. 2
  9. Hungarian Dance No. 6 in D-flat Major
  10. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: Andante sostenuto
  11. Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Minor, Op. 15: Maestoso
  12. Lullaby, Op. 49: No. 4
  13. Hungarian Dance No. 1 in G Minor
  14. Variations On A Theme By Paganini, Op. 35: Book II
  15. Rinaldo, Op. 50
  16. Waltz in A-flat Major, Op. 39: No. 15
  17. Love Song Waltzes, Op. 52: No. 1
  18. Hungarian Dance No. 5 in F-sharp Major
  19. Variations on a Theme by Haydn: Op. 56a
  20. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: Excerpts
  21. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Allegro non troppo
  22. Violin Concerto In D Major, Op. 77: Op. 77
  23. Academic Festival Overture: Op. 80
  24. Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat Major: Allegro non troppo
  25. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: Allegro
  26. Clarinet Quintet In B Minor, Op. 115: Allegro
  27. Tragic Overture: Op. 81
  28. Academic Festival Overture: Op. 80
  29. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 1 in G Minor
  30. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 2 in F Major
  31. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 10 in E Major
  32. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 5 in F-sharp Major
  33. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 6 in D-flat Major
  34. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 7 in A Major
  35. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 17 in F-sharp Minor
  36. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 19 in B Minor
  37. 9 Hungarian Dances: No. 21 in E Minor

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars great series.......2007-01-10

This CD along with the others in the series is very good. So far we have collected about ten different ones. They are thorough and interesting. I homeschool and it has been a great additon to our teaching materials and tools. The narrarated history format interspersed with the composer's music is key to keeping the interest of the children. A must-have for introducing classical music with historical background to your kids and at a great price on Amazon!
Famous Overtures
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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  • Excellent
  • The best Overture Album !
Famous Overtures

Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. William Tell & Other Favorite Overtures
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  3. Opera Overtures & Incidental Music
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  5. Suppe: Overtures

ASIN: B00002MXN4
Release Date: 1999-11-09

Tracks:

  1. Light Cavalry - Suppe
  2. Ruslan and Lyudmila - Glinka
  3. La Traviata - Prelude, Act I - Verdi
  4. Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg - Prelude, ACt I - Wagner
  5. Les Francs-Juges - Berlioz
  6. Le nozze di Figaro - Mozart
  7. Egmont - Beethoven
  8. Oberon - Weber
  9. Academic Festival Overture - Brahms
  10. Pique Dame - Suppe

Tracks:

  1. Morning, Noon and Night in Vienna - Suppe
  2. Il barbiere di Siviglia - Rossini
  3. Prince Igor - Borodin
  4. Carmen - Prelude, Act I - Bizet
  5. Der fliegende Hollander - Wagner
  6. Leonore No 3 - Beethoven
  7. Hansel und Gretel - Humperdinck
  8. Khovanshchina - Mussorgsky
  9. Poet and Peasant - Suppe

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Fantastic.......2006-06-30

First of all anything with Sir Solti's name on is worth purchasing. Solti has such a way with interpreting music! If you like overtures this CD is for you. It has the best overtures here in one collection. With orchestras like chicago, london, and the vienna you cannot argue with the performances. There are a few "weaker" ensembles, but when compared with the other ensembles there are few that will not sound weak. Again any work Solti has done is worth purchasing!

2 out of 5 stars Famous Overtures.......2005-08-16

Did not like the way these musical pieces were "interpretted".
Did not like the tempo and in one piece one of the instruments played a portion which I would say they played a flat instead of a natural note. This is based on hearing the same pieces played by someone else, it's just my opinion.

5 out of 5 stars Spectacular.......2003-09-25

Not only does it include some of the most famous overtures, but they are played in such an exciting style, full of life and passion. The Suppe overtures are superior and the Wagner overtures are wonderful as well. There is not a bad point to this recording - highly recommended!

5 out of 5 stars Excellent.......2002-06-11

This is an excellent collection of overtures, especially of Von Suppe's overtures. Solti truly brings out life in these pieces.

5 out of 5 stars The best Overture Album !.......2000-02-28

If you like overtures, here is the album. Never have these been performed so musically and with such excitement. The orchestras involved vary in their abilities, yet the Chicago, Vienna, and London Symphony perfom with style. Solti loves this music and it shows.
EMI Great Recordings of Century - Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4/Klemperer
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • no kidding
  • Not sure what all the fuss is about.
  • Five stars +
  • Karajan or Klemperer in Brahms?
  • My deserted island pick
EMI Great Recordings of Century - Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4/Klemperer
Johannes Brahms , Philharmonia Orchestra , Christa Ludwig , Philharmonia Chorus , and Otto Klemperer
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Beethoven: The Complete Symphonies and Piano Concertos
  2. Furtwangler Conducts Brahms - Complete Symphonies, etc / North German RSO, Berlin PO
  3. Great Recordings Of The Century - Schubert: Symphonies nos. 3, 5, & 6 / Beecham, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
  4. Wagner: Orchestral Music
  5. Furtwangler Conducts Beethoven - Beethoven: symphonies no 3,4,5, & 9, Leonore

ASIN: B0001O3Y8A
Release Date: 2004-04-06

Tracks:

  1. Thema: Chorale St. Antoni
  2. Variation I (Poco Piu Animato)
  3. Variation II (Piu Vivace)
  4. Variation III (Con Moto)
  5. Variation IV (Andante Con Moto)
  6. Variation V (Vivace)
  7. Variation VI (Vivace)
  8. Variation VII ( Grazioso)
  9. Variation VIII (Presto Non Troppo)
  10. Finale (Andante)
  11. I: Un Poco Sostenuto - Allegro
  12. II: Andante Sostenuto
  13. III: Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso
  14. IV: Adagio - Piu Andante - Allegro Non Troppo Ma Con Brio

Tracks:

  1. I: Allegro Non Troppo
  2. II: Adagio Non Troppo
  3. III: Allegretto Grazioso (Quasi Andantino) - Presto Ma Non Assai
  4. IV: Allegro Con Spirito
  5. I: Allegro Con Brio - Un Poco Sostenuto
  6. II: Andante
  7. III: Poco Allegretto
  8. IV: Allegro - Un Poco Sostenuto

Tracks:

  1. Academic Festival Overture Op. 80
  2. Tragic Overture Op. 81
  3. Alto Rhapsody Op. 53
  4. I: Allegro Non Troppo
  5. II: Andante Moderato
  6. III: Allegro Giocoso - Poco Meno Presto
  7. IV: Allegro Energico E Passionato - Piu Allegro

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars no kidding.......2007-07-06

this IS the best brahms set in the market. honesly, as much as i love klemperer, i was pretty surprised by the amount of tension he managed to retain throughout this studio recording - something the greatest conductors often couldn't do.
To me, and i do not seem to be alone in this regard, the gem of the set is the fourth symphony. It is here that Klemperer simply out does Celibidache, Toscanini, and Furtwangler. The passacaglia is imbued with a sense of inevitability - i was completely taken aback by the impact of the climax. The relationship between the variations was so perfectly thought out that after this recording every other passacaglia seems inconsequential. Furtwangler might have imbued each passage with more fire, but even his profound insight is cursory compared to what Klemperer manages to convey.
Klemperer's supreme sense of architecture and drama also churns out an inimitable Academic Overture, which is also simply the most stunning and satisfying account I have ever heard. While in the beginning the orchestra might not seem completely synchronized, such misgivings are done away with by the time the last theme, the climax, is performed.
the rest are also similarly great, although owing the Furtwangler, Klemperer's first symphony doesn't top the rest of the competition like the other symphonies do.
there are a few records out there that i would call definitive - but this brahms set is the closest ever.

3 out of 5 stars Not sure what all the fuss is about........2006-09-15

For me this set of Brahms is ho-hum. It is average, but nothing special. I feel the same way about Herbert von Kajaran's interpretation of Brahms. Brahms is without a doubt my favorite composer and I have heard many versions of his symphonies. For my tastes, the London Philharmonic's sound has always been too thin for Brahms. The only time I liked the London Philharmonic performing Brahms was Antal Dorati's set on Mercury Living Presence.
I prefer the rich and warm sound of the Berlin Philharmonic. The set of symphonies that Claudio Abbado released on DG in the 1990's has taken top honors for me. Most of the previous traversals with the Berliners (i.e. von Karajan) have taken the tempos too slow for my tastes.
As far as I'm concerned you can do much better elsewhere: Abbado, Szell, and Dorati - heck even Bruno Walter's set with the Columbia Symphony Orchestra is better than this presentation.

5 out of 5 stars Five stars +.......2005-11-14

Klemperer is one of my favourites, probably because I got to know Mahler through him. For me this is the best Brahms symphonies cycle yet. The tempos are well judged as always and the Philharmonia at top form as always under Klemperer. I feel that the 4th is the gem of this cycle unsurpassed in every aspect. Along with the German Requiem again with Klempeper and the Philharmonia I find these CDs the best Brahms orchestral music on the market.

5 out of 5 stars Karajan or Klemperer in Brahms?.......2005-09-29

Otto Klempeerer owes his late career in London and on EMI records to von Karajan. Since its founding in 1949, the Philharmonia Orch. was closely allied with Karajan, who built it up as his own career took off after the war. But when Furtwangler died in 1954 and his arch-rvial Karajan took over the Berlin Phil., the impressario of the Philharmonia, Walter Legge, knew that he neeeded a new stellar conductor or his orchestra would fail. He chose Klemperer, then almost forgotten and already past 65 when he made his initial appearances in London in 1951.

Legge's gamble paid off. Klemperer became the darling of London critics and audiences, and his performance style--measured, serious, with impeccable integrity--became the standard in Mozart, Beethoven, Wagner, and Brahms. He cared little for beauty of osund, smooth phrasing, or stylistic refinement. Words like "granitic" and "primordial" were used regularly.

Is he the antithesis of Karajan, who valued everything that Klemperer disdained? Listening to these Brahms symphony recordings in improved sound, I think the Klemperer vs. Karajan debate isn't all that valid. These four symphonies aren't granitic or primordial, nor are they particularly slow. In fact, the first movement of the Second moves lightly, as does the finale of the Fourth. If anything, Karajan's presentation is more massive and imposing in every symphony. The main difference begins with Klemperer's steady pace, which he tends to hold without allowing the phrase to be molded as flexibly as Karajan.

Karajan made two complete Brahms cycles for DG, the latter in digital sound. He was undoubtedly a great Brahms conductor, but so was Klemperer. Here the Philharmonia sounds sharp and alert and not very big in number, while Karajan's Berlin forces sound sumptuous and huge.

These two giants had no peer in Brahms from the death of Toscanini to the present day, excepting occasional recordings by Giulini, Bernstein, and perhaps in today's market, Harnoncourt. Some would also rank bruno Walter's two Brahms cycles at this exalted level, but for me only the mono one with the NY Phil., now available on a Sony import, qualifies, and besides the inadequate sonics, the orchestra does not play as beautifully as what we hear in this set. It's great to have Klemperer's classic set, which is totally free of eccentricity, back in such good sound. Five stars without a doubt.

5 out of 5 stars My deserted island pick.......2005-06-20

If I had to go to that deserted island, I would be in doubt of which of these 3 CDs to take with me. I have perhaps 500 classical CDs, but this box stands out. I am not going to write very much, however: Brahms is my favourite composer. Brahms was Klemperer's favourite composer. His conducting is perfect all the way. These are so-called slow interpretations, i.e. compared to Toscanini and Walter, but not slow compared to, say Abbado; I think these tempos are perfectly suited to bring out the richness of the texture. The result I will describe as civilized, human, warm, even hot, dramatic, strictly to the point, even sharp, although there are sharper interpretations out there, but they don't got the same lyrical intensity as Klemperer's.
Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A jewel in my collection
  • Great Brahms Cycle From An Unexpected Place
  • The best Brahms for the best price!
Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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OverturesOvertures | Theatrical, Incidental & Program Music | Forms & Genres | Classical | Styles | Music
Eschenbach, ChristophEschenbach, Christoph | ( E ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
Houston Symphony OrchestraHouston Symphony Orchestra | ( H ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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  5. Beethoven: The Complete Symphonies and Piano Concertos

ASIN: B00005TNML
Release Date: 2002-05-07

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No.1 In C Minor, Op.68: I. Un Poco Sostenuto - Allegro
  2. Symphony No.1 In C Minor, Op.68: II. Andante Sostenuto
  3. Symphony No.1 In C Minor, Op.68: III. Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso
  4. Symphony No.1 In C Minor, Op.68: IV. Adagio - Piu Andante - Allegro Non Troppo, Ma Con Brio
  5. Academic Festival Overture, Op.80

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No.2 In D Major, Op.73: I. Allegro Non Troppo
  2. Symphony No.2 In D Major, Op.73: II. Adagio Non Troppo
  3. Symphony No.2 In D Major, Op.73: III. Allegretto Grazioso (Quasi Andantino) - Presto Ma Non Troppo
  4. Symphony No.2 In D Major, Op.73: IV. Allegro Con Spirito
  5. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: Chorale (St. Antoni)
  6. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: I. Poco Piu Animato
  7. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: II. Piu Vivace
  8. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: III. Con Moto
  9. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: IV. Andante Con Moto
  10. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: V. Vivace
  11. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: VI. Vivace
  12. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: VII. Grazioso
  13. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: VIII. Presto Non Troppo
  14. Variations On A Theme By Haydn, Op.56a: Finale

Tracks:

  1. Symphonie No.3 In F Major, Op.90: I. Allegro Non Troppo
  2. Symphonie No.3 In F Major, Op.90: II. Andante Moderato
  3. Symphonie No.3 In F Major, Op.90: III. Allegro Giocoso
  4. Symphonie No.3 In F Major, Op.90: IV. Allegro Energico E Passionato
  5. Alto Rhapsody, Op.53 - Dunja Vejzovic

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No.4 In E Minor, Op.98: I. Allegro Non Troppo
  2. Symphony No.4 In E Minor, Op.98: II. Andante Moderato
  3. Symphony No.4 In E Minor, Op.98: III. Allegro Giocoso
  4. Symphony No.4 In E Minor, Op.98: IV. Allegro Energico E Passionato
  5. Tragic Overture, Op.81

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A jewel in my collection.......2005-11-15

Brahms was the torchbearer of the First Viennese School, holding down tradition's fort in the face of the Liszt/Wagner music of the future. Despite his preference for Classical forms and structure, his temperament was unquestionably Romantic. Brahms resolved these seemingly opposite forces in his music, but realizing Brahms' vision in performance can be elusive. Among the symphony cycles, rarely has Brahms sounded so fully Classical and fully Romantic simultaneously than in this set.

The critical element in Eschenbach's readings is that they are somewhat slower than most, with tempi similar to those of Furtwangler's. This approach allows the thick orchestration to breathe, making it easier to appreciate Brahms' unrivaled mastery of musical architecture. Furthermore, it highlights his imagination while remaining within the confines of the traditional symphonic forms. For the slow movements, it fully showcases Brahms' lyricism that a faster tempo would have glossed over.

I did find the first movement of the Fourth to be a little slow, but it was still within the realm of reasonable interpretation. I'm sure it will grow on me as I listen more.

The inclusion of four add-ons is a nice bonus--most Brahms sets include only the Academic Festival and Tragic Overtures. No revelations here, but they are well performed.

Overall, an unbeatable value.

5 out of 5 stars Great Brahms Cycle From An Unexpected Place.......2003-08-29

It's not all the time that it happens, but every once in a while, a symphonic cycle box set made by an orchestra that is not universally seen as a world-class outfit makes an impact. Such is the case here with this cycle of Brahms' four symphonies and various other works performed here by the Houston Symphony Orchestra under the leadership of Christoph Eschenbach, who served as Music Director from 1989 to 2001.

This Brahms cycle was made during the early 90s, and shows both Eschenbach and the Houston Symphony in top form. Eschenbach observes the first-movement exposition repeats of the first three symphonies, thus making their running times longer (the opening of No. 1 is almost nineteen minutes; that of No. 2 nearly twenty-two; and that of No. 3 over thirteen and a half), but the quality is never sacrificed. Dunja Vejzovic and the male voices of the Houston Symphony Chorus are excellent on the recording of Brahms' early choral work Alto Rhapsody; and the orchestra does good work on the Haydn Variations, the Academic Festival Overture, and the highly charged Tragic Overture.

Given all of this, it is bewildering that it has only been in recent times that the Houston Symphony has achieved the respect it has long deserved. After all, many big names had stood on the podium before Eschenbach: Beecham, Stokowski, Barbirolli, and Previn. But Eschenbach seemed to break through the orchestra board's long-time ultra-conservative musical mentality, and thus he elevated the Houston Symphony to world-class status. The proof can be found in this superbly recorded and superbly priced Brahms set, which is well worth seeking out.

5 out of 5 stars The best Brahms for the best price!.......2002-09-23

When I saw this inexpensive 4cd box set, I knew that I had to get it, especially after hearing Eschenbach's recording of Bruckner's 6th w/Houston SO (the best ever btw). Some conductors (eg. Karajan) try to take you into different worlds in the different symphonies. However Eschenbach takes you to different places withnin the same world, giving the listener a more organic-whole musical listening experience. The rhythms are sharp, the readings are dark (Brahms was a hard-core loner) and intense. The opening of the first sym. reminds me of Klemperer, so deep and powerful. The stings are flawless and full of support. When one looks at set prices like Abbado's...the eschenbach set is one of the best Brahms bargain sets of all time. The filler pieces are equally strong, as are the singers in the alto rhap. A must have for all Brahmsians!!
Leonard Bernstein Conducts Brahms (Collectors Edition)
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Brahms Symphony No. 3
  • Great Performances, Okay Sound, Great Selections!
  • Bernstein's Riveting Brahms Symphonies and more with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Leonard Bernstein Conducts Brahms (Collectors Edition)

Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

All Works by BrahmsAll Works by Brahms | Brahms, Johannes | ( B ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
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Similar Items:
  1. Beethoven: The 9 Symphonies (Collectors Edition)
  2. Leonard Bernstein Conducts Haydn (Collectors Edition)
  3. Leonard Bernstein Conducts Sibelius (Collectors Edition)
  4. Tchaikovsky: The Complete Symphonies
  5. Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann: Complete Recordings on Deutsche Grammophon

ASIN: B0001WGDXA
Release Date: 2004-05-11

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Brahms Symphony No. 3.......2007-07-23

I just heard the third movement on Internet radio and it is just about perfect. No tempo issues, lines flowing smoothly from instrument to instrument. It's the most expressive I've ever heard. Just heartbreakingly beautiful.

I'm buying it today. This is the Brahms interpretation I want my kids to grow up listening to.

5 out of 5 stars Great Performances, Okay Sound, Great Selections!.......2006-07-28

Brahms has always been one of my favourite composers and Bernstein and the Vienna PO have done an excellent interpretation of all his Symphonies and especially of the Violin and Double Concerti. The sound quality for a live recording is also quite okay and this is especially so of the last disc which contains the Concerti.

The packaging of a cardboard box which holds the paper sleeves which house the 5 discs is also nice to behold. You also get a nice 16-page booklet with an essay on Brahms written by Bernstein himself.

I was amused to also discover that when it comes to Brahms' symphonies, it appears the 3rd movements are charms when it comes to "borrowing" the melodies for pop/rock tunes too. The progressive rock band, Yes, have openly used the 3rd movement of the 4th one as one of the tracks on their wildly successful album, "Fragile" while if you listen closely to the one from the 3rd Symphony, you'll realise that Santana totally ripped off the melody for the second track on his "Supernatural" album, "Love of My Life" with Dave Matthews. At least Yes had the decency to give the credit to Brahms when they did it though.

This box set though comes highly recommended.

5 out of 5 stars Bernstein's Riveting Brahms Symphonies and more with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.......2005-09-09

Leonard Bernstein has been praised and condemned by musical critics who have examined his unique, distinctive style of conducting. Along with Herbert von Karajan, Bernstein was probably among the two finest music directors of his generation; critics have thoroughly compared and contrasted Bernstein's emotional approach with Karajan's stern, almost business-like approach to conducting. Regardless of whether or not you may love Bernstein's style of conducting, he is still revered and loved by his harshest critics, the musicians who enjoyed playing for him as members of some of the world's greatest symphony orchestras. For example, I had the pleasure of meeting one of the Vienna Philharmonic's concertmasters last March here in New York City, hearing his lavish praise of Bernstein as both a musician and person. He still regarded Bernstein as one of his favorite conductors, viewing their concerts as among the highlights in his own noteworthy career as solo violinist and concertmaster of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.

The enthusiasm and admiration which the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra had for its favorite American conductor is present in this splendid Deutsche Grammophon collection which has been compiled recently from the original digital recordings made during live concerts held in the early 1980s. Among these are one of my favorite recordings of the Brahms 2nd Symphony, which is a lush, lovely reading of Brahms' most pastoral symphony, and a valid interpretation inspite of Bernstein's tendency for slower tempi. Similarly, the other three symphony recordings are splendid in their own right, with the brooding 1st Symphony a mesmerizing, exciting performance. I strongly recomend this CD collection as a fine example of Bernstein still conducting at the height of his artistic powers, demonstrating the excellent collaboration between the conductor and his favorite European orchestra. Without question, this remains one of the best Brahms symphony cycles available to discerning collectors and novices of classical music alike.
Brahms: Complete Symphonies
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Not good, not bad, just generic
  • Beautiful orchestra, but Muti conducts from an easy chair
  • Muti delivers
  • Bargain Brahms from a Great Brahms Orchestra
Brahms: Complete Symphonies
Brahms , Philadelphia Orchestra , and Riccardo Muti
Manufacturer: Philips
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Symphonies | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Mendelssohn: 5 Symphonies; 7 Overtures
  2. Complete Concertos / Overtures
  3. Tchaikovsky: Symphony No6, Op74; Skryabin: Symphony No4
  4. Tchaikovsky: Symphony 5 / Francesca da Rimini
  5. Beethoven: Complete Symphonies

ASIN: B000065TV5
Release Date: 2002-06-11

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 68: Un Poco Sostenuto - Allegro - Mano Allegro
  2. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 63: Andante Sostenuto
  3. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 63: Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso
  4. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op. 63: Adagio - Piu Andante - Allegro Non Troppo, Ma Con Brio
  5. Variations For Orchestra In B Flat Major On A Theme By Joseph Haydn Op. 56A

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Allegro Non Troppo
  2. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Aagio Non Troppo - L'Istesso Tempo, Ma Grazioso
  3. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Allegretto Grazioso (Quasi Andantino) - Presto Ma Non Assai - Tempo 1
  4. Symphony No. 2 In D Major, Op. 73: Allegro Con Spirito
  5. Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80
  6. Tragic Overture, Op. 81

Tracks:

  1. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: Allegro Con Brio
  2. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: Andante
  3. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: Poco Allegretto
  4. Symphony No. 3 In F Major, Op. 90: Allegro
  5. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: Allegro Non Troppo
  6. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: Andante Moderato
  7. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: Allegro Giocoso - Poco Meno Presto - Tempo 1
  8. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: Allegro Energico E Pissionato - Piu Allegro

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Not good, not bad, just generic.......2007-07-02

I concur with Santa Fe Listener on this one...this is classic Muti, preferring not to take any chances, remaining true to his belief that the composer, rather than the conductor, should do the talking. While his performances don't have the same creepily synthetic quality of later Karajan, nonetheless it has the generic, all-the-notes-in-right-place flavor which makes it all too easy to forget after a short time.

As a cycle, it is nicely affordable & certainly doesn't run roughshod over the music, so it at least has got that going for it. I guess it would a good starter set for the novice, but for anyone already familiar with these symphonies, there are far better sets (my own personal preference is Walter) from which to choose.

3 out of 5 stars Beautiful orchestra, but Muti conducts from an easy chair.......2006-11-26

Listeners form their own allegiances, but I'm shockeed that early reviewers think that Muti has made a first-rate Brahms cycle. It's certainly true that the Philadelphia Orch. sounds gorgeous, but Muti never asks them to stretch. Every single movement is taken at a comfortable pace with underplayed solos and not the slightest hint of real struggle or tension. This is Brahms relegated to assisted living. There are other conductors who take a plush-velvet approach to the Brahms symphonies (Sawallisch and the aging Barbirolli), but without inner drama, these readings get boring veyr fast. Even the push-and-pul of Jochum is preerable. As to the truly great Brahmsians of the stereo era, I will stick with late Walter, Bernstein, Karajan, and when I am in the mood, the ever-tantalizing, ever-frustrating Celibadache.

5 out of 5 stars Muti delivers.......2004-05-22

Muti's recordings of the Brahms symphonies are powerful and sweeping, with good detail and a realistic acoustic. Muti provides his usual (and wonderful) lyricism, which fits most of the pieces very well.

Karajan's First Symphony on DG is more darkly dramatic than Muti's is here (if you like drama -- and drama works for the First -- you might consider Karajan). Muti's performance is anything but slack, however. And Muti gets a better sound than Karajan does from the engineers; Muti's recording is more natural, with nice, open imaging.

For me, Muti's Fourth is bested only by Kleiber's classic interpretation on DG. Kleiber doesn't dip as far into the emotional possibilities of the work as Muti, maybe, but that isn't Kleiber's goal. His Brahms is more classical than Muti's, more Appollonian, and only Kleiber solves all of the Fourth's problems with his extraordinary panache and grace, IMHO. Still, I enjoy Muti's version very much, and if it were my only version I'd be mighty happy with it.

Overall, if you want a very good collection of all four symphonies, Muti and the Philadelphians won't disappoint.

Nutshell: Committed performances and digital sound coupled with a midline price. Very fine.

5 out of 5 stars Bargain Brahms from a Great Brahms Orchestra.......2003-11-13

When this set first came out in the early 90s, I bought the recording of the Second Symphony, which critics thought the strongest of the set. In deference to their judgment I avoided the rest of the recordings until now. I'd always thought the Muti Second a strong one without being absolutely first class, but now, heard in the company of other three symphonies and the Haydn Variations, it emerges even stronger in my estimation. Whereas Ormandy tended to wallow a bit in Brahms, Muti's approach is characteristically leaner without being in the least meaner. In fact, the ripe nostalgia of the Third Symphony, probably nobody's favorite Brahms, comes across wonderfully, as does the high drama of the Fourth, especially given Philips' burnished but impactive sound-those marvelous trombones in the finale! and trumpets and drums in the scherzo! (Not to mention the famous "auto horn" cadence from the Second Symphony finale!) The beauty of the string-and-wind playing is a given with this orchestra. But I think I've never fully appreciated the loveliness of Brahms's writing for woodwinds before hearing this set.

Luckily, though (for example) the Tragic Overture moves along at quite a clip in the faster sections--all the better for it, too, since dawdlin' in this work tends to make it sound maudlin--Muti isn't the juggernaut he often is, glossing over the subtleties along the way. This happens to some extent in his Beethoven, but he really lets Brahms breathe. A case in point is the First Symphony. I thought Muti's reading a bit too static, a bit too granitic on first hearing. But as I've lived with the performance, I've come to believe that Muti fully captures the Olympian grandeur of this best of all first symphonies, as British music critic Bernard Jacobson calls it in his notes to the recording.

So here you have a great Brahms orchestra captured in clear, assertive, yet airy sonics, in performances that are obviously the product of affection as well as serious study and attention to detail. At Philips' Trio price, this is certainly a deal.
Brahms: Greatest Hits
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Pieces too lengthy and ambient for a 'best of'.
Brahms: Greatest Hits

Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

QuartetsQuartets | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
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ASIN: B000002A1H
Release Date: 1994-08-09

Tracks:

  1. Hungarian Dance No. 5
  2. Lullaby, Op. 49, No. 4
  3. Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80
  4. Variations On A Theme By Joseph Haydn, Op. 56a: Finale. Andante
  5. Violin Concerto In D Major, Op. 77: Allegro, Ma Non Tanto
  6. Symphony No. 4 In E Minor, Op. 98: Allegro Giocoso - Poco Meno Presto
  7. Piano Quartet In G Minor, Op. 25: Rondo Alla Zingarese. Presto
  8. Tragic Overture, Op. 81
  9. Waltz In A-Flat Major, Op. 39, No. 15
  10. Symphony No. 1 In C Minor, Op.68: Adiagio-Allegro Non Troppo Ma Con Brio

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Pieces too lengthy and ambient for a 'best of'........2003-11-17

'Greatest Hits' compilations are purposeful for those who don't want 'the whole piece'.This cd has too many long and ambient versions to be suitable for beginners to Brahms.Alot of his outstanding moments are 'blended in', rather than 'stood out'.So his melodic element is missed on some selections.But there are stand-outs.This Hungarian Dance n.5 is the most extravagent version i've heard.The tempo-changes are clever, and the orchestra packs a gypsy punch.A couple of the chamber works are great (tho u can find similar to those versions on many brahms' best of's).I find the melody of 'lullaby' is a bit lost in how very slowly it's done.Most 'Brahms' Greatest Hits' do focus more heavily on his orchestral pieces.This one also does, so I feel theres too few of his great chamber (trio/4tet/5tet) themes.

Track Listings:

  1. Tchaikovsky: Symphonies Nos. 4, 5 & 6
  2. Tchaikovsky: Symphony No.5/Serenade For Strings
  3. The Best of Sir Georg Solti (The Millenium Collection) [Original recording remastered]
  4. The London Philharmonic Celebrates American Composers
  5. Torna a Surriento: Songs of Italy & Sicily [Import]
  6. Tryptych: Trios by Mathias, Ravel, Beethoven
  7. Very Best of [Import]
  8. Von Bingen: Hortus Deliciarum
  9. Walton: Belshazzar's Feast / Symphony No. 1
  10. Widor: The Organ Symphonies, Nos.1-10

Track Listings

track listings

Track Listings

Maybe Tomorrow [CD-single] [Import]

Robert Schumann: Manfred; Szenen aus "Goethes Faust"; Piano Concerto; Cello Concerto

Retro Rocket Back to Earth Rides Again [Import]

Jazz for a Literary Mind

Take Two

Street Vibes V.6 [Import]

The Divine One

Paul Plishka, A Bordeaux

Songs of Sea and Empire

Sounds Of Healing

Songs of the Plant Spirits

New York Salsa Week Light [Import]

Por las Calles de Chihuahua

Testify

La Scala