Review - Charles Ives: The RCA and Columbia Album Anthology
Richard Whitehouse on an inviting anniversary collection devoted to Charles Ives
Although overshadowed by the major figures of his day, Hermann Goetz, who died of tuberculosis in 1876 at the age...
Reviewed by Bryce Morrison in issue: 4/2004
The first concerto played may not be familiar to those confined to the older editions of the Complete Organ Works...
Reviewed in issue 8/1984
Schnittke’s 12 Penitential Psalms (1988) are not biblical: Nos. 1-11 use sixteenth-century Russian texts and No. 12 is a wordless...
Reviewed by Arnold Whittall in issue: 5/1999
‘Turner, Eva, soprano. Recording exclusively for Columbia.’ Thus ran her entry in the light-blue ‘celebrity’ catalogue of 1938, which listed...
Reviewed by John Steane in issue: 8/2000
I must say I’ve enjoyed renewing acquaintance with Amy Beach’s fine Gaelic Symphony of 1896, whose nobly elegant progress, sumptuous...
Reviewed by Andrew Achenbach in issue: 11/1999
The 1836 Pleyel, used here, is an enticing piano. In the outstanding booklet-note (by three writers, including the pianist himself)...
Reviewed by Nalen Anthoni in issue: 2/2004
Since this version first appeared on LP, the production from which it derives has achieved a kind of legendary status....
Reviewed by Alan Blyth in issue: 5/1989
Although Andrzej Panufnik's three string quartets are relatively late works, the second of them—subtitled Messages—is actually a delayed musical reaction...
Reviewed in issue 12/1993
Johann Christian Bach’s Op. 1 keyboard concertos were published in 1763: they are chamber works, played here, as they should...
Reviewed by Stanley Sadie in issue: 7/1996
Not since Ronald Corp’s recording with his New London Orchestra, I think, have Satie’s three ballets been available on one...
Reviewed by Lionel Salter in issue: 10/1999
Richard Whitehouse on an inviting anniversary collection devoted to Charles Ives
Reinvented almost 60 years since the introduction of the original, this preamp/power amp combination...
‘What emerges is a sense of a musician of true grit and principle, one who fought for what she...
Andrew Farach-Colton on the Channel Classics recordings of Pieter Wispelwey
Rob Cowan immerses himself in collections devoted to three composers and a quartet
David Gutman welcomes two collections released to celebrate the conductor’s career
If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.