Janos Starker, Walter Susskind & The Philharmonia Orchestra Dvorak: Cello Concerto & Faure: Elegie For Cello And Orchestra XRCD24
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- HIQXRCD45
Audiophile XRCD24 Mastered from the Original Analogue EMI Master Tapes!
Can Be Enjoyed on Any CD Player!
By the mid 1950s, the Hungarian cellist Janos Starker (1924-2013) was already a legend and principal cellist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Reiner. EMI producer Walter Legge arranged for Starker to record all the essential works in his repertoire and this stereo recording of the Dvorák concerto, made at London's Kingsway Hall in 1956, has become a highly collectable album.
Starker plays with great virtuosity and often poetically. His interpretation of the concerto is one of the best recordings of the piece ever. Tohru Kotetsu was responsible for the remastering of the XRCD24, assisted by Shizuo Nomiyama and Kazuo Kiuchi.
As the Telegraph obituary put it: 'Starker possessed a phenomenal technique. His bow attacked the strings with both a ravishing intensity and a deep, biting edge. He was equally startling to watch, his piercing black eyes glaring out from beneath deep black eyebrows.' But he wasn't all scary many a recital programme involved him performing in short sleeves, puffing on a cigarette (he smoked 60 a day) and sipping scotch, interspersed with sharing his low opinions on conductors.
In the original October 1957 mono review in Gramophone:
"undeniably a great performance...Starker's playing is of great virtuosity and often of great poetry...certainly among the leading recorded performances of this wonderful concerto."
Features:
- Mastered from the Original Analogue EMI Master Tapes!
- Superior Audiophile XRCD24
- XRCD24 is a standard "Red Book" CD and can be enjoyed on any CD player
Musicians:
- Janos Starker, cello
- The Philharmonia Orchestra
- Walter Susskind, conductor
Selections:
Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904)
Concerto in B Minor, Op.104
1. First Movement: Allegro
2. Second Movement: Adagio ma non troppo
3. Third Movement: Finale: Allegro moderato – Andante – Allegro vivo
Gabriel Faure (1845-1924)
4. Élégie, Op.24