Beethoven: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D major, Op. 61
Romances: No. 1 in G, Op.40; No. 2 in F, Op.50
Yehudi Menuhin, Wilhelm Furtwängler
Testament SBT 1109
Review Gramophone Nov 1997
Yehudi Menuhin's ennobled interpretation of the Beethoven Violin Concerto has, over the years, been available in at least six separate recorded performances; but the one that was taped at the Kunsthaus, Lucerne was the first to be scheduled for commercial release. I reviewed an even earlier live Menuhin recording — made in Moscow during 1946 — in June, but the Lucerne production boasts better sound, finer conducting and superior orchestral playing.
The question that most collectors will be asking is whether — or how — this Lucerne set compares with the 1953 EMI recording that Menuhin and Furtwatigler made in London with the Phil harmonia. The answer is simple: the older sessions achieved the better performance, the newer ones, the better recording. Alan Sanders's excellent booklet-note recounts a touching occasion where Menuhin unknowingly tuned in to a broadcast of the Lucerne recording and "reflected that he would dearly love to be able to realize the Beethoven Concerto in such a fashion". The collaboration with Furtwãngler had obviously inspired a rare and distant inspirational flight, one that even memory could not adequately recall. And it is a great performance: ardent, inward, unhurried, with a rapturously beautiful Larghetto (faster than the Philharmonia recording though not as broad as its Moscow predecessor) and with superior playing of Kreisler's two cadenzas. Turning to the worthy Philharmonia remake witnesses a noticeable drop in intensity and a rather more awkward delivery of the solo line. As to the Music & Arts September 1947 broadcast (with droning Dakotas reminding us of the Berlin Airlift), that, too, is well worth hearing - though the interpretatively similar Lucerne performance has a more refined tonal profile. The two Romances are nicely done, though personally I would have preferred less weight of utterance and rather more elegance (David Oistrakh is among my own favourites). Andrew Walter's transfers are extremely impressive, save that some conspicuous 'de-noising' near the beginning of the 1..arghetto leaves a rather synthetic aftertaste (unavoidable, perhaps, given the • limitations of available source material). Viewed overall, this is a memorable CD
The question that most collectors will be asking is whether — or how — this Lucerne set compares with the 1953 EMI recording that Menuhin and Furtwatigler made in London with the Phil harmonia. The answer is simple: the older sessions achieved the better performance, the newer ones, the better recording. Alan Sanders's excellent booklet-note recounts a touching occasion where Menuhin unknowingly tuned in to a broadcast of the Lucerne recording and "reflected that he would dearly love to be able to realize the Beethoven Concerto in such a fashion". The collaboration with Furtwãngler had obviously inspired a rare and distant inspirational flight, one that even memory could not adequately recall. And it is a great performance: ardent, inward, unhurried, with a rapturously beautiful Larghetto (faster than the Philharmonia recording though not as broad as its Moscow predecessor) and with superior playing of Kreisler's two cadenzas. Turning to the worthy Philharmonia remake witnesses a noticeable drop in intensity and a rather more awkward delivery of the solo line. As to the Music & Arts September 1947 broadcast (with droning Dakotas reminding us of the Berlin Airlift), that, too, is well worth hearing - though the interpretatively similar Lucerne performance has a more refined tonal profile. The two Romances are nicely done, though personally I would have preferred less weight of utterance and rather more elegance (David Oistrakh is among my own favourites). Andrew Walter's transfers are extremely impressive, save that some conspicuous 'de-noising' near the beginning of the 1..arghetto leaves a rather synthetic aftertaste (unavoidable, perhaps, given the • limitations of available source material). Viewed overall, this is a memorable CD
5 comments:
Not my rip (eMule source, credits to jimdrp): APE+CUE, no log
PW: iceshoweronfire
https://rapidshare.com/files/438571949/SBT1109.part1.rar
https://rapidshare.com/files/588393081/SBT1109.part2.rar
http://www.embedupload.com/?d=4JODYCISDF
http://www.embedupload.com/?d=6VMUJ5GYBN
But it is rare and exceptional recording and most beautiful interpretation - Menuhin and Furtwängler, Lucerne Festival Orchestra - 1947! Thanks for bringing it here.
Thanks a lot.
Additional link
PW: iceshoweronfire
http://www.multiup.org/en/miror/b8e2f81d04af0805b1b5aa3355316f4e/sbt1109.rar
octron said...
P.W : iceshoweronfire
https://mega.co.nz/#!rd9xWSCT!lHbYoV4x_vpr3dPrepnSwXrnIXcRZqUFzccj9DKbqUI
additional link:
https://www.firedrive.com/file/8485CE8047E68D72
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