Berg: Concerto for violin; Ravel: Tzigane

On this CD:

1. Violin Concerto
Composed by Alban Berg
Performed by Stuttgart SWR Radio-Symphony Orchestra with Frank Peter Zimmermann
Conducted by Gianluigi Gelmetti

2. Violin Concerto in D, for violin & orchestra in D Major
Composed by Igor Stravinsky
Performed by Stuttgart SWR Radio-Symphony Orchestra with Frank Peter Zimmermann
Conducted by Gianluigi Gelmetti

3. Tzigane, rhapsodie de concert for violin & piano (or orchestra)
Composed by Maurice Ravel
Performed by Stuttgart SWR Radio-Symphony Orchestra with Frank Peter Zimmermann
Conducted by Gianluigi Gelmetti

Berg: Concerto for violin; Ravel: Tzigane, Music, Alban Berg, Maurice Ravel, Igor Stravinsky, Gianluigi Gelmetti, SWR Radio-sinfonieorchester Stuttgart, Frank Peter Zimmermann, Chamber, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Concerto, Violin Concerto, Violin with Keyboard
Berg, Stravinsky: Violin Concertos / Perlman, Ozawa
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Bland & Un-Committed Performances
  • This a Masterpiece of Alban Berg
  • For the Stravinsky
  • Why all the fuss? This is mediocre.
  • Beautiful music
Berg, Stravinsky: Violin Concertos / Perlman, Ozawa

Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Bartók: Violin Concerto No. 2; Rhapsodies Nos. 1 & 2
  2. Great Recordings Of The Century - Brahms: Violin Concerto / Giulini, Perlman, Chicago SO
  3. Schumann: Piano Concerto Op. 54; Grieg: Piano Concerto Op. 16
  4. Berg: Violin Concerto; Schoenberg: Piano Concerto; Violin Concerto
  5. Alban Berg: Violin Concerto "To the Memory of an Angel" (1935) / Wolfgang Rihm: "Time Chant" Music for Violin & Orchestra (1991-92) - Anne-Sophie Mutter

ASIN: B000001GQX
Release Date: 1996-08-13

Tracks:

  1. Violin Concerto - To The Memory Of An Angel: Andante - Allegro
  2. Violin Concerto - To The Memory Of An Angel: Allegro - Adagio - (Coda)
  3. Violin Concerto In D: Toccata
  4. Violin Concerto In D: Aria 1
  5. Violin Concerto In D: Aria 2
  6. Violin Concerto In D: Capriccio
  7. Rapsodie de concert pour violon et orchestre: Tzigane

Amazon.com essential recording

Berg's Violin Concerto is atonal--yes, it's the "A" word, but you shouldn't let that keep you from getting to know this modern masterpiece; it's actually very listener-friendly. The music tells a story. The first movement is a character sketch of the young, flirtatious Manon Gropius, daughter of Alma Mahler and architect Walter Gropius. She died tragically of meningitis, and the second movement depicts the horrifying onset of her illness, her death, and her transfiguring apotheosis. Dedicated "to the memory of an angel," it's one of the most heartfelt and moving tributes imaginable. Stravinsky's much more abstract Violin Concerto is about being a violin concerto. Both works, modern classics, are exceptionally well played and recorded by Itzhak Perlman and Seiji Ozawa. Regarding Berg, this was a landmark recording of Perlman's both in his career as a performer and in the history of the work itself. For Perlman, generally perceived as a heart-on-sleeve traditionalist of the "old school," this venture into musical modernism confounded his detractors while at the same time introducing many new listeners to a work that, though difficult, has since come to be regarded as one of the touchstones of the Romantic concerto repertoire. Stravinsky's concerto is less controversial though no less well-played. In sum, these performances are landmarks in the Perlman discography. --David Hurwitz

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Bland & Un-Committed Performances.......2004-05-30

These are two of my favorite pieces, but the performances here are utterly bland and un-committed. Perlman merely saws through both with a mechanical, un-inflected proficiency - he often sounds like he's more in a hurry to get home. Ozawa is worse: he virtually sleepwalks his way through both scores, offering very little in the way of true collaboration. The orchestral commentary in both works just sort of wanders by, with little accentuation or inflection. In Perlman's equally bland account of the Stravinsky with Barenboim, the latter at least provided a more detailed and better executed framework than this catatonic effort by Ozawa.

To my ears, no modern version of either work has matched the stunning achievement of Arthur Grumiaux, who recorded both concertos in excellent 1967 stereo sound for Philips (they were coupled on the same LP). In the Berg, Grumiaux was ably accompanied by Igor Markevitch, whereas the Stravinsky was led by Ernest Bour, a champion of modern music who was trained by Scherchen and who succeeded Hans Rosbaud at the SW German Radio. The orchestra in both cases was the Amsterdam Concertgebouw.

Grumiaux was one of the last century's greatest violinists, and his combination of rhythmic zest and soaring lyricism in both works was extraordinary: he was simply a finer musician than the likes of Perlman, Stern, or Zukerman. The Grumiaux Stravinsky Concerto is available in a fine Stravinsky collection on a Philips "two-fer." Unfortunately, the Berg remains in limbo - it is urgently in need of a CD transfer.

There are two old 1930's recordings that remain my interpretive benchmarks in each concerto: Louis Krasner with Anton Webern in the Berg, and Samuel Dushkin with the composer conducting in the Stravinsky. I feel that people who love these pieces should make an effort to find them and hear for themselves what is possible in this music.

Despite crackly, deficient mono sonics, the Berg Concerto from May 1, 1936 on Testament Continuum SBT 1004 is an absolute marvel. Krasner premiered the work a year before in Barcelona with Scherchen conducting. Berg's friend and compatriot Anton Webern was supposed to conduct, but he got cold feet at the last moment about performing his late comrade's final testament. Just listen to the performance on this Testament CD - which Webern DID conduct, with the BBC Symphony - and you will hear what is missing with Perlman and Ozawa. It is deeply inflected and romantically impassioned: the phrasing is simply gorgeous.

The 1935 Paris recording with Dushkin in the Stravinsky can now be heard in a splendid transfer on an Andante CD set. Stravinsky was closer to his roots than would later be the case: he and Dushkin fashion an earthy performance that hails back to ancient Russia itself. Dushkin is an obedient fiddler - he plays his part EXACTLY the way Stravinsky wanted it to be heard. His playing may take some getting used to: the composer insisted on an abandoned, rhapsodic, somewhat swoopy style that makes most contemporary accounts sound bland by comparison. A Columbia Records executive once told me that Stravinsky was so incensed at Isaac Stern being chosen for the stereo re-make that he threatened to break his recording contract. But he later relented, and the result was dreary in comparison with the earlier version.

To conclude: try to hear Grumiaux for the best modern accounts of these magnetic scores. The earlier historic versions are wonderful reminders of truly "living" music: they are a sharp contrast to the sterile, dry-as-toast renderings we usually get these days.

5 out of 5 stars This a Masterpiece of Alban Berg.......2002-06-04

Although atonal music is rather mechanic, Alban Berg's violin concerto is very sorrowful and romantic. Of course Perlman's performance is obviously magnificent. This is a "Must" recording for every deep classical music lovers.Highly recomended.

5 out of 5 stars For the Stravinsky.......2002-02-07

I listened to the vinyl version of this recording as a kid, and along with Schoenberg's string trio, it was basically my introduction to 20th century music. I have to say I usually do not have the stomach for the sustained tension in serial composers longer orchestral works. I respect them as composers and greatly enjoy a disc of Berg/Schoenberg/Webern piano music I have, but really have a difficult time with works such as this Berg and Schoenberg's piano concerto. (Although the Schoenberg string trio is an all-time favorite and I enjoy practically any other kind of 20th century music.) It is difficult to discern any kind of shape in the Berg concerto. That Bach chorale is nice, but everything surrounding it is quite unintelligible to me.

To get to the point, I think the average listener would find the Stravinsky far more accessible and enjoyable. It is basically an all-around well crafted piece and each movement is very exciting.

2 out of 5 stars Why all the fuss? This is mediocre........2001-02-24

I'm normally a big fan of the DG Originals series, but this is one they could have left in the vaults. The performance of the Berg is adequate. But I don't get the fuss when this has now become a competitive field. (It was not when this recording was originally released in 1980.) Throughout the work Perlman is distant and uninvolved, with a thin wirey tone that borders on ugly at times (and yes, I know this is a "dissonant" and tragic work, but the tone is simply colorless, which is different) and Ozawa conducts like he's not really listening to his fiddle player, not really relating some intricate accompaniments to what Perlman's violin line is. Time and again he skates over climaxes, holds back, fails to get all the depth from his accompanist role. The sound is not that great for a DG Originals reissue--it's rather dry. The Stravinsky fares better (though the soundstage is close-up and bizarre), but it is hardly reason to recommend the recording itself. Zukerman/Boulez, Szigeti/Mitropoulos, Krasner/Webern (the very first recording and only the second performance of the work), and above all Mutter/Levine easily beat this recording. The Mutter in particular is a hair-raising account where every shading of the score is examined and given breath and color, where the work's "Modern" and "Romantic" worlds are for once melded appropriately. (The Krasner is another example of that, largely thanks to Webern's insightful accompaniment, but with that 1936 performance there's the issue of extremely limited sound.) In short, Stravinsky, four stars...Berg one.

5 out of 5 stars Beautiful music.......2000-11-26

It is amazing how different these two pieces are. The Berg is cold, almost steely, where as the Stravinsky has a much mnore organic feel to it, I love this recording. In the Berg you can feel the sorrow of the composer, but some sort of comfort is reached in the Bach organ chorale at the end. A msterpiece of composition. Yet if you don't like 12 tone contempoary music, then the its not for you. The Stravinsky is much warmer, with easier to follow themes, good yes, in fact it is very good, but the Berg is great. Despite its warmness of feel that the Stravinsky is less emmotive than the Berg. the playing by both soloist and orchestra is wonderful. They do both composers credit.
Berg: Concerto for violin; Ravel: Tzigane
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Berg: Concerto for violin; Ravel: Tzigane

    Manufacturer: EMI Records [All429]
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

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    ASIN: B00000DNP8
    Release Date: 2001-06-05

    Tracks:

    1. I. Andante - Allegretto
    2. II. Allegro - Adagio
    3. I. Toccata
    4. II. Aria I
    5. III. Aria II
    6. IV. Capriccio
    7. Tzigane - Rhapsody For Violin And Orchestra
    A Life in Music, Vols. 8-15
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      A Life in Music, Vols. 8-15
      Gabriel Fauré , Camille Saint-Saëns , Edouard Lalo , Franz Waxman , Pablo de Sarasate , Ernest Chausson , Maurice Ravel , Bela Bartok , Sergey Prokofiev , Alban Berg , Igor Stravinsky , George Rochberg , Samuel Barber , Sir Peter Maxwell Davies , Paul Hindemith , Krzysztof Penderecki , Leonard Bernstein , Henri Dutilleux , Eugene Ormandy , Daniel Barenboim , Claudio Abbado , Andre Previn , Stanislaw Skrowaczewski , Lorin Maazel , Ellen Fitton , Charles Harbutt , Paris Orchestra , Isaac Stern , Philadelphia Orchestra , New York Philharmonic , Richard King , London Symphony Orchestra [members of] , Peter Serkin , Columbia Symphony Orchestra , Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra , Royal Philharmonic Orchestra , and Minnesota Orchestra
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      Release Date: 1995-08-15

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