Requiem Mass, for soloists, chorus & orchestra (Manzoni Requiem): Ingemisco
An die Leier ('Ich will von Atreus S?hnen'), song for voice & piano, D737 (Op. 56/2)
Die Forelle ('In einem B?chlein helle'), song for voice & piano, D. 550 (Op. 32)
Fr?hlingsglaube ('Die Linden L?fte'), song for voice & piano (3 versions), D. 686 (Op. 20/2)
Gesang ('Was ist Sylvia,...'), song for voice & piano, ('An Sylvia'), D. 891 (Op. 106/4)
Die Allmacht ('Gross ist Jehovah'), song for voice & piano, D. 852 (Op. 79/2)
Schwanengesang (Swan Song), song cycle for voice & piano, D. 957: St?ndchen D. 957/4 Serenata
Adelaide, song for voice & piano, Op. 46
Songs (5) for voice & piano, Op. 106: St?ndchen Op 106, No 01 Serenata
Eugene Onegin, opera, Op. 24: Lenski's Aira
Songs (7) for voice & piano, Op. 28, R63: The Forest Sleeps
I Dr?mmen di ?r Mig N?ra (You are near in my dreams), song for voice & piano
Suite for violin & piano, Op. 15: Maiden Under a Linden Tree
Lilacs, song for voice & piano, Op. 21/5: Lilacs Op 21 No.5
In the silence of the secret night, song for voice & piano, Op. 4/3: In the Silence of Night Op 04 No.3
Ein Traum (A Dream), song for voice & piano, Op. 48/6
Turandot, opera: Nessun dorma
Ideale for voice & piano (or orchestra)
Rigoletto, opera: La donna ? mobile
Tosca, opera: E lucevan le stelle
Zueignung ('Ja, du weisst es, teur Seele'), song for voice & piano (or orchestra), Op. 10/1 (TrV 141/1)
The Sibelius Violin Concerto joins those of Beethoven and Brahms at the pinnacle of Romanticism's achievements in this form, and Jascha Heifetz is an ideal interpreter of its lyricism and sheer technical dazzle. The firewo... more »rks-filled Prokofiev and the gentler Glazunov fill out the bargain-priced disc agreeably. This is Prokofiev's Second Violin Concerto; Heifetz never recorded the equally brilliant No. 1, and (though adequately recorded by many violinists) it is slightly less familiar as a result. --Joe McLellan« less
The Sibelius Violin Concerto joins those of Beethoven and Brahms at the pinnacle of Romanticism's achievements in this form, and Jascha Heifetz is an ideal interpreter of its lyricism and sheer technical dazzle. The fireworks-filled Prokofiev and the gentler Glazunov fill out the bargain-priced disc agreeably. This is Prokofiev's Second Violin Concerto; Heifetz never recorded the equally brilliant No. 1, and (though adequately recorded by many violinists) it is slightly less familiar as a result. --Joe McLellan