Brahms - Symphonies nos. 1-4
Despatch Information
This despatch estimate is based on information from both our own stock and the UK supplier's stock.
If ordering multiple items, we will aim to send everything together so the longest despatch estimate will apply to the complete order.
If you would rather receive certain items more quickly, please place them on a separate order.
If any unexpected delays occur, we will keep you informed of progress via email and not allow other items on the order to be held up.
If you would prefer to receive everything together regardless of any delay, please let us know via email.
Pre-orders will be despatched as close as possible to the release date.
Label: Australian Eloquence
Cat No: ELQ4824969
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 2
Genre: Orchestral
Release Date: 14th July 2017
Contents
Artists
Wiener PhilharmonikerConductor
Rafael KubelikAbout
Cowan observes that Kubelík came to take a more expansive view of this music in the recorded cycle he made almost 30 years later with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. In Vienna, exposition repeats were cut, tempi were taut and often uncommonly swift for the time, even in the pastoral Second and ruminative Third symphonies; impulsiveness and sudden access to drama were paramount, yet always modulated by the renowned, sweetly refined string sound. ‘Music has always developed by moving on to something new once one idiom has been exhausted,’ the conductor once remarked, ‘but it has always had a form. Like a tree, like a man, it must have a skeleton, flesh and veins – it must have its own logic.’
Such sensitivity to nature and to his fellow man stood Kubelík in good stead when approaching the work of a composer who felt likewise, and yet whose creativity was indeed ruthlessly disciplined by musical logic, whether in the long-gestated, darkness-to-light journey of the First or the ineluctable tragedy of the Fourth. These qualities, too, Kubelík had absorbed from his father, the violinist Jan Kubelík, whom he always regarded with more than filial respect. There is, indeed, an evolving tradition at work in these performances which commands attention anew.
‘The performance illuminated by the fine general quality of sound is a strong one … The symphony is kept moving throughout, culminating in a finale which is positively exhilarating.’ - Gramophone, June 1958 (Symphony no.1)
‘The slow movement is taken unusually slowly but Kubelík justified it in drawing hushed expressive playing from the Vienna orchestra.’ - The Stereo Record Guide, 1958 (Symphony no.1)
‘Kubelík’s performance has a splendid impulse to it; and the Vienna Philharmonic is at its best … this is an exciting version.’ - Gramophone, February 1959 (Symphony no.2)
‘The strong point […] is the breadth of dynamic range, and this tells particularly in the finale.’ - The Stereo Record Guide, 1958 (Symphony no.3)
‘Kubelík gives a smooth and loving reading of the work, reserving excitement, as such, for the finale. The excitement, in fact, is doubly effective when held in reserve.’ - Gramophone, October 1956 (Symphony no.4)
This product has now been deleted. Information is for reference only.
Error on this page? Let us know here
Need more information on this product? Click here