Showing posts with label weber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weber. Show all posts

Friday, July 20, 2012

More from Luboshutz and Nemenoff plus....

 

Hambro and Zayde! More music for piano four hands. Yes, you all know how much I this stuff and well, I cannot resist. Luboshutz and Nemenoff on a mono Remington and Hambro and Zayde on an Enoch Light stereo special.
What I enjoy about these two records is that the artists play with the utmost taste and discretion. Nothing is thrown off slapdash for pure effect and every piece receives the serious attention to the proper style that it justly deserves. There is a little of everything here and together, a fine 75+ minutes of satisfying music making is offered.

Details in the downloads. I think there is about 10 -12 years between both these recordings.



Sunday, August 7, 2011

David Glazer and the Kohon Quartet performing Hummel and Weber


A transfer of a lovely lp that I made some time ago. I was listening to it today and thought I'd better post it here before it slipped my mind....I am getting old too fast! David Glazer and the Kohon Quartet performing the clarinet quintets of Hummel and Weber. This Vox lp dates from 1963 and my copy is the mono edition in very good sound.

Of the two pieces presented here, the Hummel, I think, is the superior offering. At his best, Johann Nepomuk Hummel bridged the years between Mozart and Beethoven by taking composing elements of both and incorporating them into his own, relaxed, Viennese kind of way. You can hear Mozart in the quick passages and Beethoven in the softly lyrical slow movement. Its really exquisite music beautifully performed by one of the great 20th century clarinetists with this very underrated American string quartet. Hummel really was at his best in the works he wrote for smaller ensembles.

The Weber is enjoyable but does not plumb the depths of inspiration that this composer found in his dramatic writing for the human voice. Weber wrote a lot for the clarinet and his compositions display a great understanding of the technical capabilities of the instrument. The Weber is a showpiece for clarinet accompanied by string quartet rather than a work written for 5 instruments in equal partnership as is the case with Hummel. However, paired as they are, the styles work well and the variety makes this an engaging, nearly hour listen.

Wonderful stuff..pour a glass of wine or crack open a good ale and relax in your favorite easy chair!

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Monday, March 21, 2011

Scherchen conducts overtures by Weber and French opera composers


From a three lp mono reissue by Westminster, we have a whole bunch of overtures conducted by Hermann Scherchen with the Paris National Opera Orchestra. There are five overtures by Carl Maria von Weber as well as overtures by French opera composers Adam, Auber, Boeldieu, Lalo and Thomas. I have not transferred all 3 lps but only recordings from Paris, which fills nicely fills a cd.

As with all Scherchen issues, there is plenty of excitement and often scrappy playing. Scherchen certainly has the measure of the music and his imprint is firmly on these gems. They are all a delight from start to finish. As always, I am left thinking what results Scherchen would have gotten with a truly first rate orchestra at his disposal.

I believe all of these recordings date from the late 50's and were originally released in both stereo and monaural.

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