Michael Barenboim / Daniel Barenboim / Wiener Philharmoniker / Pierre Boulez SCHOENBERG Violin & Piano Concerti
Peral Music—Daniel Barenboim’s digital record label “for the thinking
ear”—is proud to release the Vienna Philharmonic’s debut recordings of
Arnold Schoenberg’s Violin Concerto and Piano Concerto, featuring the
iconic composer and conductor Pierre Boulez, pianist and conductor
Daniel Barenboim, and violinist Michael Barenboim. The new release
captures the esteemed Vienna Philharmonic’s first performances of both
works.
Dating from 2005 and 2012, these are the Vienna Philharmonic’s first
recordings of two of Schoenberg’s works: the Piano Concerto with Daniel
Barenboim under Pierre Boulez and the Violin Concerto with Michael
Barenboim under the direction of his father.
The Vienna Philharmonic has enjoyed a close bond with Schoenberg’s
music, since he himself conducted two performances of his Gurre-Lieder
in 1920 and afterwards wrote a personal letter of thanks, expressing his
gratitude to the musicians for their work together. Since then there
have been more than 100 performances of his works, and the orchestra
even played an important part in the foundation of the Arnold Schoenberg
Center in Vienna in 1998.
It is all the harder to believe that the Vienna Philharmonic had
never previously played either of these two works. For Daniel Barenboim
the orchestra’s performances of Schoenberg’s music are full of
“tenderness, good-natured informality and naturalness.” Their “playing
is very much inspired by the venue.”
This makes it all the more inconceivable that these works by arguably
the greatest composer of the 20th century, and a native of Vienna to
boot, had been overlooked by the orchestra for so many years.
It was not until 2005 that Pierre Boulez conducted the Vienna
Philharmonic’s first performance of Schoenberg’s Piano Concerto, when
the soloist was Daniel Barenboim. Seven years later Barenboim returned
with his son Michael and the two of them gave the first performance of
Schoenberg’s Violin Concerto op. 36 with the orchestra. “Highly
explosive music,” Michael Barenboim describes Schoenberg’s piece: “Every
bar is aflame.” The work’s difficulties are plain. When it received its
first performance in 1940, the composer’s daughter, Gertrud Greissle,
remarked that “The difficulties are not purely intentional, but they are
unavoidable.” Even today the virtuosity of Schoenberg’s Violin Concerto
instils a sense of awe in many violinists. For a time Jascha Heifetz
regarded the work as unplayable.
But for Barenboim, “Where other orchestras wrestle with the
difficulties, the Viennese may do so as well, but they then discover
themselves in the music, and this is really wonderful.”
u used to have a rip of the lp Micheal Gielen schoenberg brendel can u repost? vinyl
ResponderEliminaru used to have a rip of the lp Micheal Gielen schoenberg brendel can u repost? vinyl
ResponderEliminar