Showing posts with label Schneiderhan Wolfgang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schneiderhan Wolfgang. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Wilhelm Furtwängler: Unissued recordings on CD format




Wilhelm Furtwängler: Unissued recordings on CD format
Delta Classics (Japan) 2005
very very poor poor sound

Bach, Brandenburg Concerto No.5 in D, BWV 1050:
1. Allegro [14:17.24]
2. Affetuoso [7:58.06]
3. Allegro [5:44.37]
Wilhelm Furtwängler, Wolfgang Schneiderhan, Josef Niedermayer,
Wiener Philharmoniker, Wilhelm Furtwängler
(Vienna, Dec. 21/22, 1940)

Schubert, Rosamunde Overture D 644 [10:49.04]
Orchestra sinfonico della RAI di Torino, Wilhelm Furtwängler
(Torino, March 11, 1952)

R. Strauss, 'Don Juan' tone poem op.20 [18:05.60]
Berliner Philharmoniker, Wilhelm Furtwängler
(Berlin, May 1, 1951)

Ravel, Rhapsodie espagnole
1. Prélude à la nuit [4:39.60]
2. Malagueña [2:15.07]
3. Habanera [2:41.14]
4. Feria [6:47.39]
Orchestra sinfonico della RAI di Torino, Wilhelm Furtwängler
(Torino, March 3, 1952)

Friday, 16 September 2011

Mozart : The Violin Sonatas - Wolfgang Schneiderhan, Carl Seemann - Box Set 3CDs - 1954, 1955, 1956

Mozart : The Violin Sonatas
Wolfgang Schneiderhan, Carl Seemann
1954, 1955, 1956


Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
The Sonatas for Piano and Violin
Carl Seemann : Piano
Wolfgang Schneiderhan : Violin
Recording : Vienna, Konzerthaus, Mozart-Saal, 9/1953 (k. 304, 380, 
454, 526), 12/1954 (K.376),10/1995 (K. 301, 305, 306, 377);
Hanover, Beethoven-Saal, 12/1954 (K.296, 378, 379), 12 1955 (K. (481)

Year : 1954, 1955, 1956

More info about this album & to listen to Samples : Here

Tuesday, 14 September 2010

Mozart: Violin Concerto No.4 - Haydn: Symphonies Nos.92 & 104 - Wolfgang Schneiderhan, Hans Rosbaud

Mozart: Violin Concerto No.4 - Haydn: Symphonies Nos.92 & 104
Wolfgang Schneiderhan, Hans Rosbaud, Berlin Phiharmonic Orchestra
[DG 457 720-2]

The Haydn "London" Symphony has everything one wants from this piece--grandeur, breadth, singing lines, nobility of phrase, an irradiated orchestral tone. The Oxford Symphony has elegance and wit to spare, not to mention poise and balance of textures. The Mozart D Major Concerto (15 March 1956) finds Schneiderhahn in top form.
-- Gary Lemco --

Here is a wonderful bargain, three major works in fine mono sound led by one of the greatest conductors of the 20th century. Hans Rosbaud was probably best known for his pioneering work with contemporary composers from Stravinsky to Ligeti. But he was a superb conductor of the classical repertoire as well. Here he performs the improbable task of getting the mighty Berlin Philharmonic to play Haydn and Mozart with the kind of clarity and attention to detail we have come to expect from period instrument groups, and with more expression than we usually get from those ensembles. Wolfgang Schneiderhan, an unjustly neglected violinist, plays very stylish Mozart as well. Highest recommendation!
-- Leslie Gerber --

Posted by octron