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
Schubert scholars have had a field day interpreting his strange 1822 tale of death, exile and reconciliation, titled ‘Mein Traum’...
Reviewed by Richard Wigmore in issue: 12/2022
Rossini’s Messa di Gloria, commissioned for performance on the feast of Our Lady of Sorrows in Naples in March 1820,...
Reviewed by Richard Osborne in issue: 12/2022
There is absolutely no justification for this recording except for the fact that it works so well. That is to...
Reviewed by Ivan Moody in issue: 12/2022
Little survives of the work of Mogens Pedersøn, one of the most prominent Danish musicians of the early Baroque period;...
Reviewed by Fabrice Fitch in issue: 12/2022
To deal first with the purely instrumental works on this collection, both Fratres and Spiegel im Spiegel are given superbly...
Reviewed by Ivan Moody in issue: 12/2022
Confession time: I admit to having not previously heard a note of this Polish composer before, despite the fact that...
Reviewed by Malcolm Riley in issue: 12/2022
Anna Isabella Leonarda (1620-1704) entered an Ursuline convent in the Piedmontese city of Novara at the age of 16 and...
Reviewed by David Vickers in issue: 12/2022
‘The generality of the world have ears and hear not’, wrote Handel’s friend Mary Delany of the failure of Theodora...
Reviewed by Richard Wigmore in issue: 12/2022
The Nine German Arias occupy a special niche in Handel’s wide and wondrous output. With texts by Barthold Heinrich Brockes...
Reviewed by Lindsay Kemp in issue: 12/2022
It is a deep pleasure to hear this ensemble flourish. Since winning the 2019 Gramophone Early Music Award it has...
Reviewed by Edward Breen in issue: 12/2022
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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