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
The early evolution of Stravinsky from fledgling to Firebird feels like the most natural thing in the world as one...
Reviewed by Edward Seckerson in issue: 09/2022
Here’s an exercise in comparisons, and not necessarily the ones you might expect. Herbert Blomstedt makes his DG debut at...
Reviewed by David Threasher in issue: 09/2022
The key works of early 20th-century modernism can often seem as challenging today as one imagines they were when new....
Reviewed by Arnold Whittall in issue: 09/2022
As my recent Collection (3/22) demonstrated, we’re not exactly short of recordings of Respighi’s Pines of Rome. Most of them...
Reviewed by Mark Pullinger in issue: 09/2022
Although Steve Reich’s music is often compared with the visual paintings and sculptures of like-minded artists such as Sol LeWitt,...
Reviewed by Pwyll ap Siôn in issue: 09/2022
Whether or not these three iconic 20th-century piano-orchestral masterpieces have previously appeared together on a single CD, it’s a wonderful...
Reviewed by Jed Distler in issue: 09/2022
Koechlin wrote his Seven Stars’ Symphony after belatedly seeing his first film, The Blue Angel, in 1933 at the age...
Reviewed by Christian Hoskins in issue: 09/2022
Giovanni Antonini alights upon three symphonies from the mid-1770s, a period during which opera was coming to occupy more of...
Reviewed by David Threasher in issue: 09/2022
If only Thomas de Hartmann’s music was as consistently engrossing as his biography. A Ukrainian-born aristocrat, student of Arensky and...
Reviewed by Andrew Farach-Colton in issue: 09/2022
Gluck’s record as a reformer doesn’t apply only to opera. In 1761, a year before Orfeo ed Euridice, he was...
Reviewed by Lindsay Kemp in issue: 09/2022
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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