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
Time was when Charles-Marie Widor was known only for his Toccata in F, which, in all its multitudinous recorded versions,...
Reviewed by Marc Rochester in issue: 05/2019
You don’t have to know that Fazıl Say’s 10-part Troy Sonata is a musical parallel to Homer’s Iliad in order...
Reviewed by Jed Distler in issue: 05/2019
Although he never quite made the transition from cult artist to mainstream composer, Horaţiu Rădulescu (1942-2008) is widely regarded as...
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse in issue: 05/2019
It’s just not fair. The pianist is marvellous and the programme is attractive. But the brittle, drier-than-dry recorded sound really...
Reviewed by Michelle Assay in issue: 05/2019
If technicolour accounts of Mussorgsky’s Pictures are not your thing, and you wish the pianist wasn’t determined to make the...
Reviewed by Michelle Assay in issue: 05/2019
On the surface, Michael Korstick’s interpretation of Franck’s Prélude, choral et fugue is a model of control and forethought, with...
Reviewed by Jed Distler in issue: 05/2019
Although most of these pieces have been collated on various anthologies of French piano music, few of them can match...
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse in issue: 05/2019
The UK-based Romanian pianist Alexandra Dariescu continues her survey of various prelude cycles with Fauré and Messiaen. It commences with...
Reviewed by Jed Distler in issue: 05/2019
Forkel’s pioneering biography of Bach may mention a suite ‘made for an Englishman of rank’, but that is where the...
Reviewed by Jonathan Freeman-Attwood in issue: 05/2019
Jayson Gillham’s is the most enjoyable and worthwhile disc of hyphenated Bach since Hannes Minnaar’s (Cobra, 1/14) and Víkingur Ólafsson’s...
Reviewed by Jeremy Nicholas in issue: 05/2019
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 on the legacies of a trio of conductors in the music in which they excelled
Rob Cowan’s monthly survey of historic reissues and archive recordings
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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