Review - Charles Ives: The RCA and Columbia Album Anthology
Richard Whitehouse on an inviting anniversary collection devoted to Charles Ives
Readers who feel this Warner Music/NVC Arts issue looks familiar are referred to my ‘Singertalk’ article in May last year...
Reviewed by ssteptoe in issue: 2/2005
Mikhail Pletnev sets the young Beethoven fairly and squarely before us in the opening movement of the young tearaway’s first...
Reviewed by Richard Osborne in issue: 13/2007
While he may be less a born symphonist than having had symphonism thrust upon him, Carl Vine made a sizeable...
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse in issue: 4/2006
Many music lovers will not have been exposed to much of Frank Martin’s music, and that includes me. So I...
Reviewed by Ivan March in issue: 4/2008
Arne Nordheim composed his single-movement cello concerto Tenebrae (''Shadows'') in 1982. The commission—from Rostropovich—prompted him to compose a series of...
Reviewed in issue 12/1992
Commissioned by the New York downtown composers’ collective Bang on a Can for their People’s Commissioning Fund Concert in 2000,...
Reviewed by bwitherden in issue: 4/2003
Five producers‚ three conductors and five different recording venues were used for this collection of popular songs from ‘as many...
Reviewed in issue 3/2002
It clearly made sense to combine these two recordings. The two original issues were each rather slim value, since they...
Reviewed by John Warrack in issue: 2/1988
Sir Andrew Davis’s first recording for Chandos brings this extravagantly enjoyable resuscitation of The Crown of India, an “Imperial Masque...
Reviewed by Andrew Achenbach in issue: 1/2010
I wonder if Mauricio Kagel knew Flanders and Swann’s “I’m a Gnu”? I only raise the possibility because the seventh...
Reviewed by Philip_Clark in issue: 7/2009
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.