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Mstislav Rostropovich: Cellist of the Century - The Complete Warner Recordings is a comprehensive collection featuring the legendary cellist's most celebrated performances, offering high-quality audio and a unique opportunity to experience the artistry that defined a generation.
J**R
Two Boxes in One - Now in Original Jacket Format
The new "Cellist of the Century" box is a combination of two older boxes:EMI: Mstislav Rostropovich: The Complete EMI Recordings plusWarner: Mstislav Rostropovich Plays Cello Works A combined total of 35 CDs + 2 DVDs.The "Cellist of the Century" is 40 CDs + 3 DVDs:-- 17 EMI CDs, recorded 1956-1999-- 9 Erato and Teldec CDs, recorded 1968, 1982-1995-- 13 CDs "Rostropovich: The Russian Years" recorded "live" in the Soviet Union 1950-1974 and 1996-- 1 CD Rostropovich interview-- 3 EMI DVDs (Bach Suites + Dvorak & Saint-Saens Concerti)There is one new recording that appears here for the first time:- David Matthews: Romanza for Cello & Small Orchestra, recorded in 1990 at the Queen Mother's 90th Birthday Concert,but the the rest of the five CD difference is accounted for by the fact that the new box is an "original jacket" collection with shorter playing times per CD.The cardboard jackets reproduce the artwork (and timings) of the original LPs.One thing they do not reproduce is program notes: the back of each jacket is devoted to track listings.-- The 1956 recording of Saint-Saens Cello Concerto with Malcolm Sargent is released in stereo for the first time.-- Contrary to Warner's advertising, the Rostropovich interview was in the old EMI box. The new box adds a 13 minute poem (in French!)-- You get one additional DVD not in the original EMI box (Dvorak & Saint-Saens Concerti) but it's available separately.REMASTERED SOUNDThe early reports were mixed.Warner's press release made extravagant claims for the analog recordings (1956-1979):"Wherever possible, the engineers of Art et Son studios have refined the sound, always with scrupulous respect to the original sources. The analogue recordings originating from EMI and Erato (CD1-15) have been remastered in 24 BIT – 96 kHz from the original tapes. These are, therefore, the first recordings where the presence and definition of sound are heard in such detail."The digital recordings (1983-1999) were only described as "remastered" in the press release.No details.Warner no longer identifies the remastering engineers(Warner has also dropped the ADD and DDD codes).ANALOG OR DIGITAL?CDs 1-15 are analog originals - according to Warner.The label side reproduces a black vinyl record (groovy).The cardboard jacket reads "Remastered from original tapes - Published 2017".ButI'm almost certain that CDs 14 (recorded 1982-83) and 15 (1985) are digital originals.The major record companies had already switched to digital recording in 1980.It's possible that CD 14 (Landowski), a co-production with Radio France, was recorded by radio engineers still using analog tape in 1982.but when CD 15 (the Dvorak Concerto with Ozawa and the Boston Symphony) was released in 1985, Erato proudly advertised it as DDD.CDs 16-27 are definitely digital originals, recorded 1985-1999.The label side is shiny silver with a small painted area in the center.The cardboard jacket reads "Remastered - Published 2017" (no longer "remastered from original tapes".)The undisputed analog originals on CDs 1-13 (and part of CD 26) were recorded between 1956 (Myaskovsky & Saint-Saens) and 1979 (Brahms Double Concerto with Perlman).Warner seems to have done a conscientious job.The new analog remasterings are an improvement over those in the old EMI box,with a deeper bass (mixed blessing - you can hear some groans that were masked in the old box).But the new digital remasterings sound a lot like the "old" digital remasterings.POSITIVE: If you missed out on the old EMI box, the new "Cellist of the Century" box will save you a lot of money.Expensive as it is, it still costs less than used copies of the old EMI box.That box was issued in 2008, but withdrawn soon after (apparently there was a dispute over ownership of the Soviet recordings), and it became incredibly expensive.Now it seems the problem has been overcome - the Soviet recordings are included in the new box.POSITIVE: You get a 200 page book of (mostly) photos.NEGATIVE: I had hoped that the missing program notes would be reprinted in the book, but they are not.NEGATIVE: The oversized box offers clumsy CD storage, and won't fit on most shelves.POSITIVE OR NEGATIVE? One-third of the contents is contemporary music commissioned by Rostropovich (sixteen composers).Up to you whether this is a positive or negative.This is in contrast to the competing box from DG, where less than ten percent is contemporary music (Bernstein, Britten, Shostakovich and Messiaen)The composers in the Warner box are a lot more avante-garde (program notes would have helped).ROSTROPOVICH: THE RUSSIAN YEARSI have not included the thirteen CDs of Soviet recordings in this EMI/Warner discography.These recordings are not EMI/Warner originals, but were licensed from a Russian source.A lot of nice stuff, in particular premiere or near-premiere recordings of music by Prokofiev and Shostakovich (1950s mono).The thirteen CD "Russian Years" box was originally released in 1997 (see the end of this review for a link + the contents list).PART ONE: BASIC REPERTOIRE (stereo unless otherwise indicated)C.P.E. BACH- Concerto for Cello Wq.171: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992J.S. BACH- Suites (6) for Cello Solo 1991 (also on DVD)BEETHOVEN- Concerto for Piano, Violin & Cello with Sviatoslav Richter & David Oistrakh: Herbert von Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic 1969- Variations on Handel's "See the Conquering Hero Comes" with Vasso Devetsi piano 1974- Variations on Mozart's "Ein Madchen oder Weibchen" with Vasso Devetsi piano 1974BLOCH- Schelomo: Leonard Bernstein, ORTF National Orch. 1976BRAHMS- Concerto for Violin & Cello---- with David Oistrakh: George Szell, Cleveland Orch. 1969---- with Itzhak Perlman: Bernard Haitink, Amsterdam Concertgebouw 1979- Sonata for Cello & Piano No.2 with Alexander Dedyukhin 1957 monoDEBUSSY- Clair de Lune from Suite Bergamesque with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 mono- Preludes Book 1, No.2 'Minstrel' with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoDVORAK- Concerto for Cello Op.104---- Adrian Boult, Royal Philharmonic 1957---- Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic 1977 (also on DVD)---- Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony 1985HAYDN- Concerti (2) for Cello: Rostropovich soloist & conductor, Academy of St. Martin in the Fields 1975HONEGGER- Concerto for Cello (premiered 1929) Kent Nagano, London Symphony 1989MILHAUD- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1934) Kent Nagano, London Symphony 1989MYASKOVSKY- Concerto for Cello: Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1956POPPER- Elfentanz Op.39 with Alexander Dedyukhin, piano 1957 monoPROKOFIEV- Symphony-Concerto for Cello (premiered 1952) *---- Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1957---- Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony 1987RACHMANINOV- Vocalise Op.34, No.14 with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoSAINT-SAENS- Concerto for Cello No.1---- Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1956---- Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic 1977 (also on DVD)SCHUMANN- Concerto for Cello: Leonard Bernstein, ORTF National Orchestra 1976SCRIABIN- Etude Op.8, No.11 in B Flat Minor with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoSHOSTAKOVICH- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1959) * Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony 1987- Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (premiered 1967) * with Galina Vishnevskaya soprano, Vasso Devetzi piano, Ulf Hoelscher violin & Rostropovich cello 1974R. STRAUSS- Don Quixote: Herbert von Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic 1975- Sonata for Cello & Piano with Vasso Devetsi 1974TARTINI- Concerto for Cello: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992TCHAIKOVSKY- Variations on a Rococo Theme: Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony 1985VIVALDI- Concerto for Cello RV406: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992ANTHOLOGYMusic for cello & organ by J.S.Bach, Caix d'Herelois, Frescobaldi, Handel, Marcello, Rheinberger & Saints-Saens with Herbert Tachezi 1993* Prokofiev's Symphony-Concerto (1952) and Shostakovich's First Cello Concerto (1959) + Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (1967) were commissioned by Rostropovich.Contemporary music that has entered the basic repertoire.Objective standard: Basic repertoire is anything recorded more than ten times.PART TWO: CONTEMPORARY MUSIC COMMISSIONED BY ROSTROPOVICH (stereo)DUTILLEUX- Concerto for Cello 'Tout un monde lointain': Serge Baudo, Orchestre de Paris rec.1974GAGNEUX- Triptyque pour violoncelle et orchestre: Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony rec.1994GUBAIDULINA- Canticle of the Sun: Ryusuke Numajiri, London Voices rec.1999HALFFTER- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, Orchestre National de France rec.1985HODDINOTT- Noctis Equi, Scena for Cello & Orchestra: Kent Nagano, London Symphony rec.1989JOLIVET- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, ORTF National Orchestra rec.1969KNAIFEL- Chapter Eight for Cello & Chorus: Norman Scribner conductor rec.1995*LANDOWSKITwo works for Soprano (Galina Vishnevskaya), Cello & Orchestra:- "Un enfant appelle": composer, ORTF National Orchestra rec.1982- "La Prison": composer, Orchestre National de Lille rec.1983LUTOSLAWSKI- Concerto for Cello: composer, Orchestre de Paris rec.1974MATTHEWS- Romanza for Cello & Orchestra: Raymond Leppard, English Chamber Orchestra rec.1990MORET- Concerto for Cello: Paul Sacher, Collegium Musicum de Zurich rec.1989PENDERECKI- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, Philharmonia Orch rec.1986PROKOFIEV- Symphony-Concerto for Cello (premiered 1952) *SHCHEDRIN- Concerto for Cello 'sotto voce': Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony rec.1994SCHNITTKE- Concerto for 3 (Violin, Viola & Cello) with Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet: Moscow Soloists rec.1995- Trio for Violin, Viola & Cello with Kremer, Bashmet rec.1995- Menuet for Violin, Viola & Cello with Kremer, Bashmet rec.1995SHOSTAKOVICH- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1959) *- Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (premiered 1967) ** Prokofiev and Shostakovich are listed under Part One: Basic Repertoire.PREVIOUSLY RELEASED CDs MENTIONED IN THIS REVIEW:-- "The Russian Years": Rostropovich - The Russian Years 1950-1974 The best analysis of "The Russian Years" was done by "Discophage" - see his review dated November 21, 2012.Review titled "The Russian Years of Rostropovich vs his Brilliant days: Russia wins"(includes detailed contents list)-- DVD of Dvorak/Saint-Saens Concerti: Dvorak/Saint-Saens: Cello Concertos - Mstislav Rostropovich, Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic Orchestra ANALYSES OF COMPETING ROSTROPOVICH BOXES ON OTHER LABELSSee Comment One (dated 6 January, 2017). Click on "Sort by oldest".PART ONE: DG, DECCA & PHILIPS RECORDINGSPART TWO: SONY RECORDINGS OF ROSTROPOVICHPhotos: The old EMI and Warner boxes.
A**N
Shoot the messenger than the message
What I say I alway like the sound of cello as it so expressive like human voice expressive as well joyful.Is it worth it as I can Big Mac for 6 weeks eating and I hope the the sun paper is soft.The sound is not overbearing like Mama Yoyo and it alway hit my head and you run to water LOO.Welll buy it now as the price is Amazon is ...if you buy it you now you can 10 cans of baked bean that will empower you can climb the stair faster.Higly recommended.Read the reviewer on Amazon UK a lot of wind no result and do not pass the sun paper.Highly recommended and you will invest the invest in you lifetime of cello music which take longer to burn than violin or violinist.
T**A
My Mum loves it
I bought this for my Mum and she loves it.
H**H
Worth the money
Came on timeEverything in thereBeautiful musicNo complaints
J**.
Die Cellisten-Legende!
Diese limitierte Sonderedition ist ein Traum! Hervorragend aufgemacht mit umfangreichem Begleitbuch. Die Aufnahmen sind eine höchstspannende Zeitreise durch das musikalische Leben Rostropowitschs. Seine Persönlichkeit und Cellofähigkeiten waren Grund für einen Großteil der heutigen Standardcelloliteratur des 20. Jhdts: Schostakowitsch, Prokofiew, Britten etc. So finden sich hier auch zahlreiche Uraufführungen. Teilweise auch illegale Mitschnitte von Konzerten in der verschlossenen UDSSR.Rostropowitschs unfassbare Energie und grenzenlose technische Fähigkeiten spiegeln sich in Aufnahmen wider, die auch heute noch Referenzcharakter tragen wie das Dvorak-Konzert, Schostakowitsch Nr. 1, Sinfonia Concertante von Prokofiev etc. Auch sein Haydn ist bis heute ein Traum. Lediglich mit seinem Bach kann ich nur bedingt mitgehen - hier bevorzuge ich heute eher das simple, einfache wie Queyras, Bylsma oder Lipkind. Trotzdem sind die DVDs sehr sehenswert.
J**R
Two Boxes in One - Now in Original Jacket Format
The new "Cellist of the Century" box is a combination of two older boxes:EMI: Mstislav Rostropovich: The Complete EMI Recordings plusWarner: Mstislav Rostropovich Plays Cello Works A combined total of 35 CDs + 2 DVDs.The "Cellist of the Century" is 40 CDs + 3 DVDs:-- 17 EMI CDs, recorded 1956-1999-- 9 Erato and Teldec CDs, recorded 1968, 1982-1995-- 13 CDs "Rostropovich: The Russian Years" recorded "live" in the Soviet Union 1950-1974 and 1996-- 1 CD Rostropovich interview-- 3 EMI DVDs (Bach Suites + Dvorak & Saint-Saens Concerti)There is one new recording that appears here for the first time:- David Matthews: Romanza for Cello & Small Orchestra, recorded in 1990 at the Queen Mother's 90th Birthday Concert,but the the rest of the five CD difference is accounted for by the fact that the new box is an "original jacket" collection with shorter playing times per CD.The cardboard jackets reproduce the artwork (and timings) of the original LPs.One thing they do not reproduce is program notes: the back of each jacket is devoted to track listings.-- The 1956 recording of Saint-Saens Cello Concerto with Malcolm Sargent is released in stereo for the first time.-- Contrary to Warner's advertising, the Rostropovich interview was in the old EMI box. The new box adds a 13 minute poem (in French!)-- You get one additional DVD not in the original EMI box (Dvorak & Saint-Saens Concerti) but it's available separately.REMASTERED SOUNDThe early reports were mixed.Warner's press release made extravagant claims for the analog recordings (1956-1979):"Wherever possible, the engineers of Art et Son studios have refined the sound, always with scrupulous respect to the original sources. The analogue recordings originating from EMI and Erato (CD1-15) have been remastered in 24 BIT – 96 kHz from the original tapes. These are, therefore, the first recordings where the presence and definition of sound are heard in such detail."The digital recordings (1983-1999) were only described as "remastered" in the press release.No details.Warner no longer identifies the remastering engineers(Warner has also dropped the ADD and DDD codes).ANALOG OR DIGITAL?CDs 1-15 are analog originals - according to Warner.The label side reproduces a black vinyl record (groovy).The cardboard jacket reads "Remastered from original tapes - Published 2017".ButI'm almost certain that CDs 14 (recorded 1982-83) and 15 (1985) are digital originals.The major record companies had already switched to digital recording in 1980.It's possible that CD 14 (Landowski), a co-production with Radio France, was recorded by radio engineers still using analog tape in 1982.but when CD 15 (the Dvorak Concerto with Ozawa and the Boston Symphony) was released in 1985, Erato proudly advertised it as DDD.CDs 16-27 are definitely digital originals, recorded 1985-1999.The label side is shiny silver with a small painted area in the center.The cardboard jacket reads "Remastered - Published 2017" (no longer "remastered from original tapes.)The undisputed analog originals on CDs 1-13 (and part of CD 26) were recorded between 1956 (Myaskovsky & Saint-Saens) and 1979 (Brahms Double Concerto with Perlman).Warner seems to have done a conscientious job.The new analog remasterings are an improvement over those in the old EMI box,with a deeper bass (mixed blessing - you can hear some groans that were masked in the old box).But the new digital remasterings sound a lot like the "old" digital remasterings.POSITIVE: If you missed out on the old EMI box, the new "Cellist of the Century" box will save you a lot of money.Expensive as it is, it still costs less than used copies of the old EMI box.That box was issued in 2008, but withdrawn soon after (apparently there was a dispute over ownership of the Soviet recordings), and it became incredibly expensive.Now it seems the problem has been overcome - the Soviet recordings are included in the new box.POSITIVE: You get a 200 page book of (mostly) photos.NEGATIVE: I had hoped that the missing program notes would be reprinted in the book, but they are not.NEGATIVE: The oversized box offers clumsy CD storage, and won't fit on most shelves.POSITIVE OR NEGATIVE? One-third of the contents is contemporary music commissioned by Rostropovich (sixteen composers).Up to you whether this is a positive or negative.This is in contrast to the competing box from DG, where less than ten percent is contemporary music (Bernstein, Britten, Shostakovich and Messiaen)The composers in the Warner box are a lot more avante-garde (program notes would have helped).ROSTROPOVICH: THE RUSSIAN YEARSI have not included the thirteen CDs of Soviet recordings in this EMI/Warner discography.These recordings are not EMI/Warner originals, but were licensed from a Russian source.A lot of nice stuff, in particular premiere or near-premiere recordings of music by Prokofiev and Shostakovich (1950s mono).The thirteen CD "Russian Years" box was originally released in 1997 (see the end of this review for a link + the contents list).PART ONE: BASIC REPERTOIRE (stereo unless otherwise indicated)C.P.E. BACH- Concerto for Cello Wq.171: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992J.S. BACH- Suites (6) for Cello Solo 1991 (also on DVD)BEETHOVEN- Concerto for Piano, Violin & Cello with Sviatoslav Richter & David Oistrakh: Herbert von Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic 1969- Variations on Handel's "See the Conquering Hero Comes" with Vasso Devetsi piano 1974- Variations on Mozart's "Ein Madchen oder Weibchen" with Vasso Devetsi piano 1974BLOCH- Schelomo: Leonard Bernstein, ORTF National Orch. 1976BRAHMS- Concerto for Violin & Cello---- with David Oistrakh: George Szell, Cleveland Orch. 1969---- with Itzhak Perlman: Bernard Haitink, Amsterdam Concertgebouw 1979- Sonata for Cello & Piano No.2 with Alexander Dedyukhin 1957 monoDEBUSSY- Clair de Lune from Suite Bergamesque with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 mono- Preludes Book 1, No.2 'Minstrel' with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoDVORAK- Concerto for Cello Op.104---- Adrian Boult, Royal Philharmonic 1957---- Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic 1977 (also on DVD)---- Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony 1985HAYDN- Concerti (2) for Cello: Rostropovich soloist & conductor, Academy of St. Martin in the Fields 1975HONEGGER- Concerto for Cello (premiered 1929) Kent Nagano, London Symphony 1989MILHAUD- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1934) Kent Nagano, London Symphony 1989MYASKOVSKY- Concerto for Cello: Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1956POPPER- Elfentanz Op.39 with Alexander Dedyukhin, piano 1957 monoPROKOFIEV- Symphony-Concerto for Cello (premiered 1952) *---- Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1957---- Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony 1987RACHMANINOV- Vocalise Op.34, No.14 with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoSAINT-SAENS- Concerto for Cello No.1---- Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1956---- Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic 1977 (also on DVD)SCHUMANN- Concerto for Cello: Leonard Bernstein, ORTF National Orchestra 1976SCRIABIN- Etude Op.8, No.11 in B Flat Minor with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoSHOSTAKOVICH- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1959) * Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony 1987- Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (premiered 1967) * with Galina Vishnevskaya soprano, Vasso Devetzi piano, Ulf Hoelscher violin & Rostropovich cello 1974R. STRAUSS- Don Quixote: Herbert von Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic 1975- Sonata for Cello & Piano with Vasso Devetsi 1974TARTINI- Concerto for Cello: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992TCHAIKOVSKY- Variations on a Rococo Theme: Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony 1985VIVALDI- Concerto for Cello RV406: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992ANTHOLOGYMusic for cello & organ by J.S.Bach, Caix d'Herelois, Frescobaldi, Handel, Marcello, Rheinberger & Saints-Saens with Herbert Tachezi 1993* Prokofiev's Symphony-Concerto (1952) and Shostakovich's First Cello Concerto (1959) + Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (1967) were commissioned by Rostropovich.Contemporary music that has entered the basic repertoire.Objective standard: Basic repertoire is anything recorded more than ten times.PART TWO: CONTEMPORARY MUSIC COMMISSIONED BY ROSTROPOVICH (stereo)DUTILLEUX- Concerto for Cello 'Tout un monde lointain': Serge Baudo, Orchestre de Paris rec.1974GAGNEUX- Triptyque pour violoncelle et orchestre: Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony rec.1994GUBAIDULINA- Canticle of the Sun: Ryusuke Numajiri, London Voices rec.1999HALFFTER- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, Orchestre National de France rec.1985HODDINOTT- Noctis Equi, Scena for Cello & Orchestra: Kent Nagano, London Symphony rec.1989JOLIVET- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, ORTF National Orchestra rec.1969KNAIFEL- Chapter Eight for Cello & Chorus: Norman Scribner conductor rec.1995*LANDOWSKITwo works for Soprano (Galina Vishnevskaya), Cello & Orchestra:- "Un enfant appelle": composer, ORTF National Orchestra rec.1982- "La Prison": composer, Orchestre National de Lille rec.1983LUTOSLAWSKI- Concerto for Cello: composer, Orchestre de Paris rec.1974MATTHEWS- Romanza for Cello & Orchestra: Raymond Leppard, English Chamber Orchestra rec.1990MORET- Concerto for Cello: Paul Sacher, Collegium Musicum de Zurich rec.1989PENDERECKI- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, Philharmonia Orch rec.1986PROKOFIEV- Symphony-Concerto for Cello (premiered 1952) *SHCHEDRIN- Concerto for Cello 'sotto voce': Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony rec.1994SCHNITTKE- Concerto for 3 (Violin, Viola & Cello) with Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet: Moscow Soloists rec.1995- Trio for Violin, Viola & Cello with Kremer, Bashmet rec.1995- Menuet for Violin, Viola & Cello with Kremer, Bashmet rec.1995SHOSTAKOVICH- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1959) *- Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (premiered 1967) ** Prokofiev and Shostakovich are listed under Part One: Basic Repertoire.PREVIOUSLY RELEASED CDs MENTIONED IN THIS REVIEW:-- "The Russian Years": Rostropovich - The Russian Years 1950-1974 The best analysis of "The Russian Years" was done by "Discophage" - see his review dated November 21, 2012.Review titled "The Russian Years of Rostropovich vs his Brilliant days: Russia wins"(includes detailed contents list)-- DVD of Dvorak/Saint-Saens Concerti: Dvorak/Saint-Saens: Cello Concertos - Mstislav Rostropovich, Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic Orchestra ANALYSES OF COMPETING ROSTROPOVICH BOXES ON OTHER LABELSSee Comment One (dated March 24, 2017). Click on "Sort by oldest".PART ONE: DG, DECCA & PHILIPS RECORDINGSPART TWO: SONY RECORDINGS OF ROSTROPOVICHPhotos: The old EMI and Warner boxes. Mstislav Rostropovich: The Complete EMI RecordingsMstislav Rostropovich Plays Cello WorksRostropovich - The Russian Years 1950-1974Dvorak/Saint-Saens: Cello Concertos - Mstislav Rostropovich, Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic Orchestra
S**A
Straordinario tributo al più grande violoncellista di ogni tempo....
Gran bel lavoro ha fatto la Warner con questo cofanetto celebrativo. Ad iniziare dalla confezione, molto compatta, una scatola bassa e assai più piccola di quanto ci si aspetterebbe in foto. E elegantissima, con un cartoncino vellutato color rosso fegato, a rivestire quello che é un vero e proprio tesoro, cioè tutte le registrazioni eseguite da Rostropovich per la EMI (oggi appunto Warner), per la Erato, per diverse etichette russe negli anni '50, un tesoro che per la prima volta viene offerto "raccolto" in questo prezioso involucro.A cotanto tesoro musicale é stato aggiunto un bel libro pieno di frasi, considerazioni, racconti e soprattutto tante bellissime fotografie che da sole, anche senza le parole, basterebbero a far capire la grandezza di questo musicista russo: tutti i più grandi interpreti di quegli anni, da Oistrakh a Richter, da Karajan a Giulini sono raffigurati in pose, anche ufficiose (davanti a tazze di thè fumante, per esempio..) ma esplicative della quantità di collaborazioni importantissime che Rostropovich negli anni ha intessuto e, per fortuna, documentato su nastro di registrazione. E ho detto interpreti per dire separatamente quante foto con compositori, più o meno famosi, da Prokofiev a Shostakovich, da Milhaud a Britten, tutti dedicatari di un concerto o di una sonata al più grande violoncellista di sempre.Eh sì, perché poi alla fine Rostropovich ha questa unicità che lo contraddistingue: per i direttori é sempre esistita almeno una coppia, spesso un trio, di grandi nomi che si contendono la palma del migliore, da Toscanini vs Furtwlanger a Klemperer vs Walter, Karajan vs Bernstein e Abbado, e così anche per i pianisti e i violinisti che dire di Horowitz vs Rubinstein, Richter vs Gilels, Brendel vs Pollini e la Argerich, oppure di Oistrakh vs Heifetz e Mehuin, tanto per fare qualche semplice e banale esempio?Ecco nel caso di Rostropovich il suo nome é associato per antonomasia all'epiteto "violoncellista del secolo", senza che si possa realmente contrapporre una vera alternativa.Non solo per la sua tecnica immacolata e il suo virtuosismo sovraumano, doti che in fondo si ritrovano anche in altre leggende del violoncello quali Starker, Piatigorsky e soprattutto Fournier.Ma il suo essere "senza rivali" é sopratutto per il suo essere un "musicista a tutto tondo", tanto da poter anche dirigere orchestre importanti in un repertorio assai vasto e anche nell'opera!La qualità di incisione? Considerando che il box contiene da registrazioni russe monofoniche degli anni '50 a registrazioni digitali in DDD negli anni '90, la qualità audio é abbastanza discontinua, talvolta assai scarsa (molte delle incisioni russe), talvolta eccezionale (una manciata di registrazioni EMI degli anni '80..), perlopiù decorosa e al di sopra della sufficienza.Peraltro ci sono note esplicative della Warner, anche se invero un pò nebulose, che dichiarano che "tutto il repertorio registrato é stato sottoposto a remixing in studio a 24 bit/96 Khz, e in generale sembra comunque che ci sia un miglioramento rispetto ai CD usciti in precedenza con le stesse registrazioni per tipi della EMI.Riporto qui di seguito il repertorio registrato, suddiviso per autore.Buon ascolto a tutti voi...C.P.E. BACH- Concerto for Cello Wq.171: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992J.S. BACH- Suites (6) for Cello Solo 1991 ( anche in DVD)BEETHOVEN- Concerto for Piano, Violin & Cello with Sviatoslav Richter & David Oistrakh: Herbert von Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic 1969- Variations on Handel's "See the Conquering Hero Comes" with Vasso Devetsi piano 1974- Variations on Mozart's "Ein Madchen oder Weibchen" with Vasso Devetsi piano 1974BLOCH- Schelomo: Leonard Bernstein, ORTF National Orch. 1976BRAHMS- Concerto for Violin & Cello---- with David Oistrakh: George Szell, Cleveland Orch. 1969---- with Itzhak Perlman: Bernard Haitink, Amsterdam Concertgebouw 1979- Sonata for Cello & Piano No.2 with Alexander Dedyukhin 1957 monoDEBUSSY- Clair de Lune from Suite Bergamesque with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 mono- Preludes Book 1, No.2 'Minstrel' with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoDVORAK- Concerto for Cello Op.104---- Adrian Boult, Royal Philharmonic 1957---- Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic 1977 (also on DVD)---- Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony 1985HAYDN- Concerti (2) for Cello: Rostropovich soloist & conductor, Academy of St. Martin in the Fields 1975HONEGGER- Concerto for Cello (premiered 1929) Kent Nagano, London Symphony 1989MILHAUD- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1934) Kent Nagano, London Symphony 1989MYASKOVSKY- Concerto for Cello: Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1956POPPER- Elfentanz Op.39 with Alexander Dedyukhin, piano 1957 monoPROKOFIEV- Symphony-Concerto for Cello (premiered 1952) *---- Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1957---- Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony 1987RACHMANINOV- Vocalise Op.34, No.14 with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoSAINT-SAENS- Concerto for Cello No.1---- Malcolm Sargent, Philharmonia Orch. 1956---- Carlo Maria Giulini, London Philharmonic 1977 (also on DVD)SCHUMANN- Concerto for Cello: Leonard Bernstein, ORTF National Orchestra 1976SCRIABIN- Etude Op.8, No.11 in B Flat Minor with Alexander Dedyukhin piano 1957 monoSHOSTAKOVICH- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1959) * Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony 1987- Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (premiered 1967) * with Galina Vishnevskaya soprano, Vasso Devetzi piano, Ulf Hoelscher violin & Rostropovich cello 1974R. STRAUSS- Don Quixote: Herbert von Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic 1975- Sonata for Cello & Piano with Vasso Devetsi 1974TARTINI- Concerto for Cello: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992TCHAIKOVSKY- Variations on a Rococo Theme: Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony 1985VIVALDI- Concerto for Cello RV406: Hugh Wolff, Saint Paul Chamber Orch. 1992ANTHOLOGYMusic for cello & organ by J.S.Bach, Caix d'Herelois, Frescobaldi, Handel, Marcello, RheinbergerDUTILLEUX- Concerto for Cello 'Tout un monde lointain': Serge Baudo, Orchestre de Paris rec.1974GAGNEUX- Triptyque pour violoncelle et orchestre: Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony rec.1994GUBAIDULINA- Canticle of the Sun: Ryusuke Numajiri, London Voices rec.1999HALFFTER- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, Orchestre National de France rec.1985HODDINOTT- Noctis Equi, Scena for Cello & Orchestra: Kent Nagano, London Symphony rec.1989JOLIVET- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, ORTF National Orchestra rec.1969KNAIFEL- Chapter Eight for Cello & Chorus: Norman Scribner conductor rec.1995*LANDOWSKITwo works for Soprano (Galina Vishnevskaya), Cello & Orchestra:- "Un enfant appelle": composer, ORTF National Orchestra rec.1982- "La Prison": composer, Orchestre National de Lille rec.1983LUTOSLAWSKI- Concerto for Cello: composer, Orchestre de Paris rec.1974MATTHEWS- Romanza for Cello & Orchestra: Raymond Leppard, English Chamber Orchestra rec.1990MORET- Concerto for Cello: Paul Sacher, Collegium Musicum de Zurich rec.1989PENDERECKI- Concerto for Cello No.2: composer, Philharmonia Orch rec.1986PROKOFIEV- Symphony-Concerto for Cello (premiered 1952) *SHCHEDRIN- Concerto for Cello 'sotto voce': Seiji Ozawa, London Symphony rec.1994SCHNITTKE- Concerto for 3 (Violin, Viola & Cello) with Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet: Moscow Soloists rec.1995- Trio for Violin, Viola & Cello with Kremer, Bashmet rec.1995- Menuet for Violin, Viola & Cello with Kremer, Bashmet rec.1995SHOSTAKOVICH- Concerto for Cello No.1 (premiered 1959) *- Seven Romances on Verses by Alexander Blok (premiered
L**G
excited
awesome
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