Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Overture
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Jourdain - Minuet
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: The Fencing Master
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Entrance and Dance of the Tailors
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Minuet of Lully
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Courante
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Entry Of Cleonte
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: Intermezzo (Prelude To Act 2)
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme - Suite, Op. 60: The Dinner
Schlagobers, Op. 70: Waltz
Josephslegende, Op. 63: Symphonic Fragment
Track Listings (23) - Disc #7
Metamorphosen: Study For 23 Solo Strings
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Night
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Sunrise
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: The Ascent
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Entering The Forest
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Strolling By The Stream
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: By The Waterfall
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Apparition
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: In Flowery Meadows
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: In A Mountain Pasture
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Lost In The Thickets And Undergrowth
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: On The Glacier
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Dangerous Moments
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: On The Summit
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Vision
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Mists Rise Up
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: The Sun Grows Dark
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Elegy
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Quiet Before The Storm
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: A Thunderstorm - Descent
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Sunset
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Conclusion
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64: Night
Track Listings (5) - Disc #8
Aus Italien, Op.16: I: Andante
Aus Italien, Op.16: II: Allegro molto con brio
Aus Italien, Op.16: III: Andantino
Aus Italien, Op.16: IV: Finale (Allegro molto)
Macbeth, Op. 23: Symphonic Poem
Track Listings (22) - Disc #9
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Introduktion (Massiges Zeitmass)
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Massig (Don Quixote)
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Maggiore (Sancho Panza)
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation I: The adventure with the windmills
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation II: The battle with the sheep
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation III: Discourse between knight and squire
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation IV: The adventure with the pilgrims
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation V: The knight's vigil
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation VI: The meeting with Dulcinea
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation VII: The ride through the air
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation VIII: The voyage in the enchanted boat
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation IX: The combat with the two magicians
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Variation X: The defeat of Don Quixote
Don Quixote, Op. 35: Finale (Sehr ruhig)
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: I: Entree and stately round
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: II: Courante
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: III: Carillon
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: IV: Sarabande
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: V: Gavotte
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: VI: Tourbillon - Wirbeltanz
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: VIII: Allemande
Dance Suite from harpsichord pieces by Francois Couperin: VIII: March
When it comes to the music of Richard Strauss, none of the world's great orchestras has a more distinguished tradition than the Staatskapelle Dresden. As pit orchestra of the Dresden Court Opera, the Staatskapelle was invo... more »lved in the premieres, between 1901 and 1911, of Feuersnot, Salome, Elektra, and Der Rosenkavalier; later, with Karl Böhm conducting, its players participated in the premiere of Daphne. Most of Strauss's major tone poems have been in the Dresden orchestra's concert repertory since completion. Back in the 1970s, EMI was able to capitalize on this association when it reunited the Staatskapelle with Rudolf Kempe--a native of Dresden, one of the master conductors of the 20th century, and an absolutely authoritative Straussian--for an integral recording of Strauss's orchestral works and concertos. The cycle was warmly received when it was originally released on LP, and it has become one of the treasures of the CD catalog since EMI reissued it whole, in three volumes, in 1992. With this latest repackaging, the whole impressive enterprise becomes available in one box. Across the board, Kempe and the Dresdeners give magnificent readings of the music. Their Zarathustra is imposing and grand; their Heldenleben suitably heroic and quite smashingly played; their Till Eulenspiegel and Don Juan delightfully brisk, characterful, and exultant (the latter is dispatched in a blazing 16:06, and receives as ardent and exhilarating a reading as you are ever likely to encounter on disc). One of the finest of all the offerings is the account of Eine Alpensinfonie, a Kempe favorite and still a sonic knockout after nearly three decades. The less familiar orchestral works are here, as well, including the early tone poems Aus Italien and Macbeth and the admittedly rather frothy ballet scores Josephslegende and Schlagobers. Of special value are the accounts of all Strauss's concerted works, from the early Violin Concerto (played by Ulf Hoelscher) and Burleske for piano and orchestra (with Malcolm Frager as soloist), through Don Quixote (featuring Paul Tortelier in magisterial form) and the two horn concertos, to the Oboe Concerto of 1946 and the final Duett-Concertino for clarinet and bassoon. It's hard to imagine any label tackling such a project in today's bottom-line environment, or coming up with such definitive readings from today's performers. All the more reason to celebrate the appearance of this compendium. --Ted Libbey« less
When it comes to the music of Richard Strauss, none of the world's great orchestras has a more distinguished tradition than the Staatskapelle Dresden. As pit orchestra of the Dresden Court Opera, the Staatskapelle was involved in the premieres, between 1901 and 1911, of Feuersnot, Salome, Elektra, and Der Rosenkavalier; later, with Karl Böhm conducting, its players participated in the premiere of Daphne. Most of Strauss's major tone poems have been in the Dresden orchestra's concert repertory since completion. Back in the 1970s, EMI was able to capitalize on this association when it reunited the Staatskapelle with Rudolf Kempe--a native of Dresden, one of the master conductors of the 20th century, and an absolutely authoritative Straussian--for an integral recording of Strauss's orchestral works and concertos. The cycle was warmly received when it was originally released on LP, and it has become one of the treasures of the CD catalog since EMI reissued it whole, in three volumes, in 1992. With this latest repackaging, the whole impressive enterprise becomes available in one box. Across the board, Kempe and the Dresdeners give magnificent readings of the music. Their Zarathustra is imposing and grand; their Heldenleben suitably heroic and quite smashingly played; their Till Eulenspiegel and Don Juan delightfully brisk, characterful, and exultant (the latter is dispatched in a blazing 16:06, and receives as ardent and exhilarating a reading as you are ever likely to encounter on disc). One of the finest of all the offerings is the account of Eine Alpensinfonie, a Kempe favorite and still a sonic knockout after nearly three decades. The less familiar orchestral works are here, as well, including the early tone poems Aus Italien and Macbeth and the admittedly rather frothy ballet scores Josephslegende and Schlagobers. Of special value are the accounts of all Strauss's concerted works, from the early Violin Concerto (played by Ulf Hoelscher) and Burleske for piano and orchestra (with Malcolm Frager as soloist), through Don Quixote (featuring Paul Tortelier in magisterial form) and the two horn concertos, to the Oboe Concerto of 1946 and the final Duett-Concertino for clarinet and bassoon. It's hard to imagine any label tackling such a project in today's bottom-line environment, or coming up with such definitive readings from today's performers. All the more reason to celebrate the appearance of this compendium. --Ted Libbey
"An "unfair" advantage? Yes, for several reasons...In addition to having a self-effacing genius for Wagner, Brahms and Richard Strauss,
Rudolf Kempe was a Dresden-area native, and knew all the lesser-known "odd corners" of Strauss' output. And the Dresdeners bring something to the Straussian "table" which no other orchestra could provide- not even Karajan's Berlin, Reiner's Pittsburgh & Chicago or Szell's Cleveland...
Because not only did 9 of Strauss's 15 operas premiere in Dresden, WITH THIS ORCHESTRA, but practically all of them were constantly in and out of the repetoire. And well into the 1970s, when these recordings were made, there must have been several members of the orchestra who had performed under Strauss himself...All that vivid characterization, feeling and stylistic "memory," applied to the orchestral works. This contributed to the Dresdeners' innate mastery of two of Strauss' most challenging traits:
1) his quirky, Half Italian-Half German sense of melody
(Sir Tommy Beecham: "The melody of Strauss is not German, it is Italian") and
2) his strange mixture of objectivity & subjectivity, i.e.,
the most disturbing aspect of Strauss' art- more so than mere volume & dissonance. (It was THIS which made Strauss a child of Mozart, as opposed to the post-Beethovenian, then post-Schoenbergian paradigms which dominated German music during Strauss' long lifetime).
The result is that, in these performances, Strauss' orchestral works are animated and illuminated as never before or since...What Reiner and Szell achieved with supreme, from-scratch effort
is brought to the surface almost effortlessly and naturally...
What, in lesser hands, comes off as trivial (Burleske, Domestica, Le Bourgeoise), is now fascinating
and whimsical; what seemed "bombastic" (Heldenleben, Domestica, Joseflegende, Zarathustra) is now deeply human and even humorous. And it's all executed with a sense of the post-Wagnerian orchestra as a marvellous toy which the "child" Strauss couldn't wait to play with. This stems from Strauss' earliest influence, before Brahms and Wagner, and that was Mendelssohn. Indeed, Strauss never lost his Mendelssohnian
sense of fantasy and whimsy, even in his "heaviest" works
(DIE FRAU OHNE SCHATTEN, ELEKTRA).
This is true of the earliest work presented here, the VIOLIN CONCERTO, completed when Strauss was 17. Strauss was hard on this piece when he said that "No one after Brahms should have written such a thing." As it turns out, Brahms' VIOLIN CONCERTO was only three years older, and while the first movement begins in a forceful, "Brahmsian" vein, the Mendelssohnian whimsical aspect, and Strauss' own developing sensibility, win out time and again: TILL & DON QUIOXTE in the "womb," so to speak. And no one has drawn out these qualities more than Ulf Hoelscher, Kempe and the Dresdeners.
The BURLESKE, with Malcolm Frager, is tonally beautiful and acerbically witty at the same time: Mendelssohn, Brahms, and a passing wink at Wagner- with Strauss' sensibility growing at an alarming rate. The HORN CONCERTOS, with Peter Damm, are scintillatingly lucid and fresh- although, of course, NOBODY could beat the classic Dennis Brain/Sawallisch disc. The late concertos (Oboe, Second Horn, and especially the Clarinet-Bassoon Duet-Concerto) are deft, contemplative, and seem to cross the same autumnal landscape as Brahms' op. 114-120 (the clarinet chamber works and the late piano pieces).
The COUPERIN Suite of 1923 is a posh, refined pleasure; and the best passages in the JOSEFLEGENDE "Fragment" come off as sort of "Zarathustra Revisited." The SALOME DANCE OF THE 7 VEILS is more senusous than Reiner's, less glossy than Karajan's. The ROSENKAVALIER WALTZES, in an arrangement by Kempe himself, are, to say the least, "idiomatic." The BOURGEOISE GENTILHOMME Suite is the best complete one in stereo- enough to give even Fritz Reiner a run for his money: polish, devastating wit, consummate stylistic ease. However, not even Kempe & the Dresdeners can make more than rambling curiosities out of the PARERGON ZUR SYMPHONIA DOMESTICA and the PANATHENAENZUG. (The less said about the thankfully brief SCHLAGOBERS WALTZ, the better.)
The four "outer" program works (AUS ITALIEN & MACBETH, the DOMESTICA & EINE ALPENSINFONIE) are, put simply, definitive...
AUS ITALIEN shines with all sorts of unexpected colors- especially the third movement's portrayal of shimmering water- a passage which captured the imagination of even Claude Debussy when he heard it. The MACBETH sizzles with drama and that infamous Straussian "counterpoint of nerves."
The DOMESTCIA conjours up a lost, Pre-WW I world of holidays-at-the-seaside, children in sailor suits and seemingly permanent security...No wonder that, in Vienna in 1939, on his 75th birthday (under the Nazis and with war obviously coming), just after he conducted the DOMESTICA, Strauss was found outside the "green room," in tears, muttering "Now it's all over ! "
Then perhaps the greatest recording in this box: EINE ALPENSINFONIE- one of the great Strauss recordings of all time...You get a feeling of rich, inner spirituality and seemingly effortless, wholistic detail. Yet, for all its inner integrity, this ALPENSINFONIE paradoxically projects more "atmosphere, color and scent" than any other. (Go figure.)
The DON JUAN is "hot" and crisply executed enough to energize one's libido. The TILL is the essence of insolent cheekiness, making some "punk rock" attitudes seem genteel by comparison.
Only in two of the tone-poems does Kempe fall short of the very greatest stereo versions: 1) His ZARATHUSTRA is lyrical and lucid, but lacks a certain "narrative core" ; certainly it's not the "movie music of the mind" we've come to expect from the glossy 1973 Karajan. Still, for my money, the very greatest stereo ZARATHUSTRAS are Karl Bohm's 1958 Berlin and (as a close "second") Reiner's 1954 Chicago. 2) The TOD is indeed moving, and refreshingly lacks any hint of sticky pathos, but it simply hasn't got the ontological intensity of Reiner's 1950 RCA account, any of Furtwangler's (live or studio); or Szell's 1957 Cleveland...You couldn't go WRONG with Kempe's versions, or even begin to call them "failures." It's just that there are greater ones.
But the DON QUIOXTE is one of the best, more warmly human and dignified than either of Reiner's versions, or Szell's or Karajan's. An exquisitely chiselled picture of poignant regret and compassion. Many have preferred Kempe & Tortelier's earlier Berlin "DQ" (available on Testament), but the Dresdeners sound as if they were BORN to play and to master the bittersweetness of this work. Still, for the greatest hi-fi DQ, go to Szell & Fournier - not the dry-as-dust 1961 Cleveland disc, but the live 1964 Concertgebouw (on Audiophile Classics). You'll never regret it.
The HELDENLEBEN has more humanity and less "bombast" than almost any version since the 1947 Beecham, but, of course, with even greater sonic impact.
The METAMORPHOSEN is preferable to any of Karajan's versions, for its greater clarity and unassuming spirituality. Nevertheless, to get the real measure of this work's Brucknerian depth, you must have Furtwangler's live 1947 version. (This is available on DG, finally in listenable sound).
Although the 9 discs in the 1999 boxed set are NOT fresh, from-scratch transfers, there seems to be greater high-end definition and a warmer, more "tube"-like ambience than in the last incarnation of these recordings (the 3-volume 1992 edition).
...Characterization, stylistic genius, humanity. I can't say anything more."
Surely the best thing even Rudolf Kempe ever did?
R. J. Stove | Gardenvale, Victoria Australia | 11/06/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"A justly acclaimed set, now offered at a price cheaper than even Naxos ever manages. Incidentally each copy I've seen has a full booklet description of the tracks on the various CDs [..]
This Strauss integrale, aided by recording quality that is never less than very acceptable and is usually excellent, ranks as surely the best thing even Rudolf Kempe ever did. Every piece works, but for a rather brusque METAMORPHOSEN that, try as I might, I can't admire - it lacks the poetry of Christoph von Dohnanyi's wonderful version which I've praised elsewhere on Amazon - and a somewhat lumbering COUPERIN DANCE SUITE devoid of the sparkle and neatness characterizing Erich Leinsdorf's ASV rendition (best of luck trying to track down that). Otherwise, though obviously it would be a shame to miss out on Herbert von Karajan, Fritz Reiner, Sir Georg Solti, etc. (or even the underrated Zdenek Kosler in AUS ITALIEN), you could derive a very good idea of Strauss's orchestral accomplishments even if you never bought a non-Kempe recording again.
Two particular highlights: first, the best (because noblest) DON QUIXOTE ever committed to disc; second, the milk-white tone of Manfred Clement in the ever-fresh OBOE CONCERTO. And where else will you get even adequate - let alone impressive - performances of such curiosities as MACBETH, the VIOLIN CONCERTO (slightly marred by the soloist's moments of wayward intonation), or the improbably-named PARERGON ZUR SINFONIA DOMESTICA? To have the wonderful Dresden band - associated with Strauss from the early 20th century onwards - in such pieces, rather than the usual provincial ensemble in a boxy-sounding broadcast dub on some fugitive Central European label, is a treat. This collection indicates the gravity of orchestral music's loss when Kempe died in 1976, at the all too early (for a conductor) age of 65."
Excellent interpretations of Strauss works
Anton | USA | 04/24/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I own both, the LP and CD versions of this set. The sound of the set is very good, and in the case of the Eine Alpensinfonie it is excellent, with the orchestra layout presented vividly, with a deep soundstage and lots of detail. The orchestra, conductor and performers are in top shape. Kempe is a commited straussian and it shows in all of these works. The Zarathustra is spacious and never hurried, as it should be. Malcolm Frager's Burlesque and Tortelier's Don Quixote reveal excellent phrasing and pace. The Till Eulenspiegel and the Don Juan exude a joy rarely heard in other interpretations. I have many versions of these works but I keep coming back to Kempe and the Staatskapelle Dresden. Buy it, you will not regret it."
A classic for the ages
Telamon | New York City | 02/13/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Pounce on this one. I can't imagine a better Strauss set (there isn't; run don't walk to the store). What struck me first about this 9-CD set was the sound. I hear things in the orchestration I never did before, little details cropping up, which are I guess buried in other recordings, and it makes me hear Strauss in a better, more-rounded light. This one has it all. The choice of music, the orchestra, the conductor, the recording. What can I say. I rank this set with other favorite sets, like the Vegh Beethoven quartets, the Kempff sonatas, Reiner's "Music for Strings..." by Bartok, Stokowski's "The Planets." A classic, a must-hear. Hey, even if you're not such a fan of R. Strauss, you should have this set. It'll open your eyes and ears. Bravo!"
Essential Strauss
Paul Bubny | Maplewood, NJ United States | 05/15/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Rudolf Kempe reportedly disliked being considered a Strauss specialist, but if you listen to this set, you'll easily understand how he earned that reputation. This may have been the last flowering of the "Strauss tradition" that was originated by the composer himself; the clarity and warmth in Kempe's conducting and the playing by one of Strauss' favorite orchestras represent the old-fashioned approach to this richly-scored body of music. And we don't get only the familiar tone poems, although they're all here in performances that could hardly be improved on (best is "Don Quixote"). There's also Strauss' concertante music (the set is worth buying for the disc of wind concerti alone) and suites from Strauss' works for the stage (although "Der Rosenkavalier" is represented not by the familiar suite which is now attributed to Artur Rodzinski, but by one of Kempe's own arranging). All of it is worth exploring to get a fuller picture of Strauss' music, even if you may not find yourself returning very often to the "Panathenaenzug" for piano left-hand and orchestra.Recording quality varies--these performances were taped over a period of six years in the early 1970s--but the sound overall is nearly as consistent as the music-making. A must if you're a Richard Strauss fan."