Review - David Oistrakh: The Warner Remastered Edition – The Complete Columbia & HMV Recordings
Rob Cowan on a revealing collection of recordings by the Russian violinist David Oistrakh
If you love the sound of German-Romantic horns, this album is for you. Topped and tailed by two miniatures for...
Reviewed by Guy Rickards in issue: 09/2023
‘Life-enhancing’ was how Richard Bratby described James Ehnes and Andrew Armstrong’s Beethoven sonata cycle for Onyx on the release of...
Reviewed by Tim Ashley in issue: 09/2023
Ligeti’s Horn Trio (1982) is one of the most powerful musical memorials to a troubled time, just before the retreat...
Reviewed by Arnold Whittall in issue: 09/2023
We’ve met Carl Philipp Stamitz already in this issue – see my Clarinet Focus on page 38. This set of...
Reviewed by David Threasher in issue: 09/2023
Among the glut of talented Irish composers who’ve come through recently, Garrett Sholdice is one of the standouts. Having been...
Reviewed by Liam Cagney in issue: 09/2023
This second volume completes the Kungsbacka’s eminently satisfying survey of Schumann’s music for piano trio. The Third Trio of 1851...
Reviewed by David Threasher in issue: 09/2023
Penderecki’s works for string quartet cover the whole of his creative life, the first acknowledged one dating from 1960 and...
Reviewed by Ivan Moody in issue: 09/2023
This is the second solo album from violinist Eva Saladin. Her first (Glossa) explored 17th-century violin sonatas from the so-called...
Reviewed by Mark Seow in issue: 09/2023
When is a violin sonata not a violin sonata? When it’s by Mozart, we’re told, the idea with him, metaphorically...
Reviewed by Rob Cowan in issue: 09/2023
A piece or performance of Janáček tends to impress us by means of unfiltered expression. To look for hidden depths...
Reviewed by Peter Quantrill in issue: 09/2023
Rob Cowan on a revealing collection of recordings by the Russian violinist David Oistrakh
In our current dark times we need Debussy as much as ever. And this book is a perfect way in if you...
Rob Cowan’s monthly survey of historic reissues and archive recordings
Rob Cowan on the legacies of a trio of conductors in the music in which they excelled
Rob Cowan dives into Warner’s second volume of Wolfgang Sawallisch’s recordings
It’s hard to think of another book about a specific instrument that goes quite as deep as this
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