Mendelssohn: Lieder ohne Worte (Remastered) Daniel Barenboim
Album info
Album-Release:
1979
HRA-Release:
24.08.2018
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Genre: Classical
Artist: Daniel Barenboim
Composer: Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
Album including Album cover
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- Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847): Lieder ohne Worte, Op.19:
- 1 No.1 In E (Andante con moto), MWV U 86 - "Sweet Remembrance" 03:08
- 2 No. 2 In A Minor (Andante espressivo), MWV U 80 02:19
- 3 No.3 In A (Molto allegro), MWV U 89 - "Hunting Song" 02:09
- 4 No. 4 In A (Moderato), MWV U 73 02:02
- 5 No. 5 In F Sharp Minor (Agitato), MWV U 90 - "Restlessness" 03:02
- 6 No. 6 In G Minor (Andante sostenuto), MWV U 78 - "Venetian Gondola Song" 01:52
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.30:
- 7 No. 1. Andante espressivo In E Flat, MWV U 103 04:23
- 8 No. 2. Allegro di molto In B Flat Minor, MWV U 77 01:55
- 9 No. 3. Andante sostenuto in E, MWV U 104 - "Consolation" 02:13
- 10 No. 4. Agitato e con fuoco In B Minor, MWV U 98 02:29
- 11 No. 5. Andante grazioso In D, MWV U 97 01:38
- 12 No. 6. Allegretto In F Sharp Minor, MWV U 110 - "Venetian Gondola Song" 02:56
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.38:
- 13 No. 1. Con moto In E Flat, MWV U 121 02:40
- 14 No. 2. Allegro non troppo In C Minor, MWV U 115 - "Lost Happiness" 01:53
- 15 No. 3. Presto In E, MWV U 107 - "La harpe du poète" 02:12
- 16 No. 4. Andante In A, MWV U 120 02:26
- 17 No. 5. Agitato In A Minor, MWV U 137 - "Appassionata" 02:15
- 18 No. 6. Andante Con Moto In A Flat, MWV U 119 - "Duetto" 02:17
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.53:
- 19 No. 1. Andante con moto In A Flat, MWV U 143 03:22
- 20 No. 2. Allegro non troppo In E Flat, MWV U 109 - "The Fleecy Cloud" 02:39
- 21 No. 3. Presto agitato In G Minor, MWV U 144 02:29
- 22 No. 4. Adagio In F, MWV U 114 - "Sadness of Soul" 02:23
- 23 No. 5. Allegro In A Minor, MWV U 153 - "Folk-Song" 02:46
- 24 No. 6. Molto allegro vivace In A, MWV U 154 - "La fuite" 02:33
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.62:
- 25 No. 1 Andante Espressivo In G, MWV U 185 02:03
- 26 No. 2 Allegro con fuoco in B flat, MWV U 181 01:36
- 27 No. 3 Andante maestoso in E minor, MWV U 177 - "Funeral March" 02:48
- 28 No. 4 Allegro con anima in G, MWV U 175 - "Morning Song" 01:25
- 29 No. 5 Andante In A Minor, MWV U 151 - "Venetian Gondola Song" 02:50
- 30 No. 6 Andante Grazioso In A, MWV U 161 - "Spring Song" 02:08
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.67:
- 31 No. 1. Andante in E flat, MWV U 180 02:24
- 32 No. 2. Allegro leggiero In F Sharp Minor, MWV U 145 - "Lost Illusions" 02:08
- 33 No. 3. Andante tranquillo in B flat, MWV U 102 02:41
- 34 No. 4. Presto In C, MWV U 182 - "Spinning Song" 01:54
- 35 No. 5. Moderato In B Minor, MWV U 184 - "The Shepherd's Complaint" 02:10
- 36 No. 6. Allegro non troppo in E, MWV U 188 - "Cradle Song" 02:11
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.85:
- 37 No. 1. Andante espressivo in F, MWV U 189 02:24
- 38 No. 2. Allegro agitato in A minor "Adieu" 00:56
- 39 No. 3. Presto in E flat, MWV U 111 02:22
- 40 No. 4. Andante sostenuto in D, MWV U 190 - "Elegy" 02:51
- 41 No. 5. Allegretto in A, MWV U 191 01:48
- 42 No. 6. Allegretto con moto in B flat, MWV U 155 02:01
- Lieder ohne Worte, Op.102:
- 43 No. 1. Andante un poco agitato in E minor, MWV U 162 03:10
- 44 No. 2. Adagio in D, MWV U 192 02:13
- 45 No. 3. Presto in C, MWV U 195 - "Tarantelle" 01:17
- 46 No. 4. Un poco agitato in G minor, MWV U 152 - "The Sighing Wind" 02:16
- 47 No. 5. Allegro vivace in A, MWV U 194 - "The Joyous Peasant" 01:06
- 48 No. 6. Andante In C, MWV U 172 - "Belief" 02:30
- 6 Kinderstücke op.72:
- 49 1. Allegro non troppo, MWV U 171 00:58
- 50 2. Andante sostenuto, MWV U 170 01:47
- 51 3. Allegretto, MWV U 164 00:57
- 52 4. Andante con moto, MWV U 169 01:47
- 53 5. Allegro assai, MWV U 166 01:31
- 54 6. Vivace, MWV U 168 01:26
- Gondellied (Barcarolle) in A major (1837):
- 55 Allegretto non troppo, MWV U 136 02:30
- 2 Klavierstücke:
- 56 1. Andante cantabile, MWV U 93 03:07
- 57 2. Presto agitato, MWV U 94 02:29
- Albumblatt In E Minor, Op.117, MWV U134:
- 58 Albumblatt In E Minor, Op.117, MWV U134 04:49
Info for Mendelssohn: Lieder ohne Worte (Remastered)
When in 1973 the 22-year-old Daniel Adni first recorded the Songs without Words (as part of a three-LP Mendelssohn recital) he had the field to himself. Nowadays things are rather different, with notable competition coming from the searching Livia Rev, and in sharper contrast, the volatile Daniel Barenboim, whose characterization does yet more to emphasize the variety of the set as a whole.
The obvious difference between the two Daniels is choice of tempo. Almost always, and so often in blander contexts, Adni favours a more leisurely approach, robbing his phrasing of an element of longer forward flow, and causing several Andante numbers to outstay their welcome since he includes every repeat. The three delightful gondola songs are certainly too static to convey the liquidity of water. And he surely takes too solemn a view of the engaging Duet at the end of Book 2, marked Andante con moto. Conversely, I sometimes thought Barenboim just a shade too hasty for the music’s good, not just in agitato contexts but also in a piece such as the meditative D major Adagio in the final book. Yet there is always a stronger sense of motivation behind his spontaneous phrasing, and always his melody sings and soars in response to the connotation of Mendelssohn’s title.
All that said, there is much that is very pleasing in Adni’s self-effacing, caring, truly serious musicianship. As I remarked when the record first emerged, such emotional as well as pianistic composure is not encountered every day of the week from one so young. And the round, mellow warmth of his tone is never for a moment in doubt in this very clear, albeit close, recording.' (Gramophone)
". . . captivating. His playing is beautifully scaled, with a fine sense of Mendelssohnian intimacy . . ." (Nigel Simeone , International Record Review)
Daniel Barenboim, piano
Digitally remastered
Daniel Barenboim
one of the outstanding musical figures of our time, was born in Buenos Aires to parents of Russian-Jewish descent. He began piano lessons at the age of five with his mother, continued musical studies with his father, and gave his first official concert in Buenos Aires when he was seven. In 1952, the family moved to Israel, and two years later his parents took Daniel to Salzburg to take part in Igor Markevitch’s conducting classes. In 1955 and 1956, he studied harmony and composition with Nadia Boulanger in Paris.
Following his debut in Vienna and Rome in 1952, Barenboim soon became known as one of the most versatile pianists of his generation. Major debuts followed in Paris (1955), London (1956) and New York (1957), where he performed with Leopold Stokowski. His recording career began in 1954. In the 1960s, he set down the Beethoven concertos with Otto Klemperer, the Brahms concertos with Sir John Barbirolli, and, as both pianist and conductor, all the Mozart with the English Chamber Orchestra. Always active as a chamber musician, he performed most frequently with his late wife, cellist Jacqueline du Pré, and violinists Itzhak Perlman and Pinchas Zukerman. In song recitals, he has accompanied such artists as Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Dame Janet Baker, Thomas Quasthoff, Anna Netrebko, Jonas Kaufmann and Magdalena Kožená.
From the mid-1960s, Barenboim began to devote more time to conducting. From 1975 to 1989 he was chief conductor of the Orchestre de Paris, with whom he often performed contemporary works by composers such as Lutosławski, Berio, Boulez, Henze, Dutilleux and Takemitsu. In 1973 he made his opera debut at the Edinburgh Festival and in 1981 his debut at the Bayreuth Festival, where over 18 consecutive summers he conducted Tristan und Isolde, Ring, Parsifal and Die Meistersinger. In 1991, he succeeded Solti as music director of the Chicago Symphony and in 2006 was named “honorary conductor for life”. In 1992, he became general music director of Berlin’s Deutsche Staatsoper, and in 2000, the Berlin Staatskapelle appointed him “chief conductor for life”. He also appears regularly with the Berliner Philharmoniker and the Wiener Philharmoniker, with whom he led the 2014 New Year’s Concert.
In 1999, together with the late Palestinian-born writer and Columbia University professor Edward Said, Barenboim founded the West-Eastern Divan workshop and orchestra, bringing together talented young musicians from Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Tunisia and Israel to make music under the guidance of some of the world’s finest musicians. The workshop seeks to enable dialogue between the various cultures of the Middle East and promote the experience of playing music together. In summer 2005, the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra presented a concert of historic significance in the Palestinian city of Ramallah, which was telecast and recorded for DVD. In summer 2013, the orchestra and Barenboim toured Europe, performing in Lucerne and Salzburg, among other major festivals, and at the Berlin Waldbühne. In summer 2014 they will be giving concerts at the Teatro Colón of Buenos Aires as well as the Salzburg and Lucerne Festivals, including concert performances of Tristan und Isolde. Musicians of the Berlin Staatskapelle have participated as teachers in this project since its inception. Barenboim also initiated a project for music education in the Palestinian territories, which includes a music kindergarten as well as a youth orchestra.
In 2007, Barenboim began a close relationship with the Teatro alla Scala in Milan, where he conducts opera and concerts as well as playing chamber music. In 2011 he was appointed music director of the legendary Milan institution. Both there and in Berlin, beginning in 2010, he has conducted Guy Cassier’s new staging of the Ring (he also conducted the complete cycle with the Berlin Staatskapelle during the 2013 BBC Proms at London’s Albert Hall). With the Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala his projects have included the Verdi Requiem in Milan and on tour to the Lucerne and Salzburg festivals and the Berlin Philharmonie, as well as at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, where he also conducted Don Giovanni with the Scala forces.
Other Barenboim appearances in 2013-14 include concerts with the Berlin Staatskapelle in Berlin, St. Petersburg, Dresden, Vienna, Istanbul, at the Enescu Festival in Bucharest and in Armenia; Rimsky-Korsakov’s opera The Tsar’s Bride at La Scala and Berlin, Così fan tutte at La Scala; and Wozzeck, Don Giovanni, Il trovatore, Simon Boccanegra and Tannhäuser in Berlin. His solo appearances include performances of the Brahms First Piano Concerto with Sir Simon Rattle and the Berliner Philharmoniker and the Second with Zubin Mehta and the Berlin Staatskapelle plus recitals throughout Germany as well as in Milan and Mallorca.
For his efforts towards reconciliation in the Middle East as well as his musical achievements, Barenboim has been the recipient of many prizes and honours, among them the titles of Grand Officier in France’s Légion d’Honneur and Knight Commander of the British Empire (KBE), Germany’s Grosses Verdienstkreuz mit Stern, Spain’s Príncipe de Asturias Prize (jointly with Edward Said), Japan’s “Praemium Imperiale” for art and culture, Israel’s Wolf Foundation Arts Prize, the Evangelische Akademie’s Tolerance Prize, the Buber-Rosenzweig Medal, Willy Brandt Prize, Ernst von Siemens Music Prize and Herbert von Karajan Music Prize.
Barenboim’s books include his autobiography A Life in Music (also published in German, French and Spanish), Parallels and Paradoxes (with Edward Said, also in French), Music Quickens Time (also in French, Italian, German and Spanish), An Orchestra Beyond Borders: Voices of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra (with Elena Cheah), Dialogue sur la musique et le théâtre: Tristan et Isolde (with Patrice Chéreau; also in Italian) and La musica è un tutto (also in French).
Barenboim began his close association with Deutsche Grammophon in 1972. His vast discography on the Yellow Label features the artist as conductor of orchestral repertoire (by composers including Berlioz, Bruckner, Debussy, Elgar, Hindemith, Ravel, Saint-Saëns, Schumann, Tchaikovsky and Wagner) and opera (Cimarosa, Massenet, Saint-Saëns, Tchaikovsky and Wagner) and as pianist in concertos (Beethoven and Berg), chamber music (Brahms and Mozart), song recitals (with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Christa Ludwig, Jessye Norman, Anna Netrebko and Thomas Quasthoff) and solo repertoire (Beethoven, Chopin, Mendelssohn and Schubert).
In 2010, Daniel Barenboim signed a wide-ranging new contract with Decca/Deutsche Grammophon. DG releases under the new agreement to date include Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony (with the Berlin Staatskapelle), the Chopin Concertos (with Andris Nelsons conducting the Berlin Staatskapelle), the Liszt Concertos (with Pierre Boulez and the Berlin Staatskapelle) and “The Warsaw Recital” (Chopin). Decca has issued the Tchaikovsky “Pathétique” Symphony and Schoenberg’s Variations for Orchestra (with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra) and a vast project entitled “Beethoven for All”, including the complete cycle of Nine Symphonies with Barenboim conducting the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, released in June 2012, followed in August by another new set containing the Five Piano Concertos, with Barenboim at the keyboard and conducting the Berlin Staatskapelle, and in October by the complete Piano Sonatas. 2013 audio releases included Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique and Liszt’s Les Préludes with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra and the Verdi Requiem from La Scala (also on DVD and Blu-ray); video releases include Barenboim’s 70th Birthday Concert at the Berlin Philharmonie and the nine Beethoven Symphonies with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra live from the BBC Proms 2012. Scheduled for 2014: audio releases of Schubert’s complete Piano Sonatas and Elgar’s Second Symphony with the Berlin Staatskapelle; and Berg’s Lulu from Berlin’s Schillertheater released on DVD.
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