Unsung Composers

The Music => Composers & Music => Topic started by: edurban on Sunday 27 December 2009, 16:15

Title: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: edurban on Sunday 27 December 2009, 16:15
1) Armstrong Gibbs: 'Odysseus: Symphony in four movements'  What a find this is, a big choral symphony from 1937-8 not much different in idiom from the Vaughan Williams 'Sea Symphony' (albeit without V W's titanic personality.)  Heartily recommended to those who enjoy Ireland's 'These Things Shall be' and similar conservative British choral works from between the Wars.  Another side to the composer of the luscious light music favorite "Dusk".

2) York Bowen Violin Concerto (but that's for another thread...)

David

Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: thalbergmad on Sunday 27 December 2009, 18:00
I had asked my family to pay my sheet music bill, so i had a big pile of concerto scores containing Rubbra, Gradstein, Martino, Luke, Rozycki, Colomer, Farkas, Rietti, Labor, Beringer, Gaillard & Seymour Bernstein.

Next year i will ask them to convert the loft into a library.

Thal

Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: mbhaub on Sunday 27 December 2009, 20:32
Hardly unsung, but I got the new big box from Sony of the Haydn Symphonies with Stuttgart CO and Dennis Russel Davies. Two disks in so far -- 35 to go! Some of the symphonies are surely unsung. Sound is fine, but too bad they weren't done in SACD. The packaging is irritating: the box is much bigger in profile than a regular cd so that the box doesn't fit on the shelves. What were they thinking?
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: Peter1953 on Sunday 27 December 2009, 20:46
A familiar name, very sung, very romantic, but nevertheless I'll mention it: the recently by DGG issued (specially priced) 17 CD set celebrating the 200th anniversary of Frédéric Chopin's birth. A complete edition of all his works, as the notes on the box says "combining the very best recordings from the Deutsche Grammophon and Decca catalogues" (including recordings of Yundi Li and Rafał Blechacz).
Chopin has been my favourite composer even before I was born. Next year I'll hope to go to Chopin's birthplace Żelazowa Wola, a pilgrimage tour.
Of course I already had most of his works, but this edition includes some rare opus numbers which I didn't had, like his first piano sonata op. 4. I'm very happy with it.

I hope the other box will arrive one of these days. Hans Bronsart von Schellendorff, I'll be waiting for you...
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: TerraEpon on Sunday 27 December 2009, 20:51
Quote from: Peter1953 on Sunday 27 December 2009, 20:46A complete edition of all his works,

As usual, not quite true...even if one excludes that flute piece which is sometimes considered spurious.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: Peter1953 on Sunday 27 December 2009, 22:08
Quote from: TerraEpon on Sunday 27 December 2009, 20:51As usual, not quite true...even if one excludes that flute piece which is sometimes considered spurious.

You have a point, TerraEpon. I used to had an enormous collection of classical music on tapes, which is now all lost. But I still have my catalogue. And from Chopin I also had Variations on a theme by Rossini for flute and harp, and Variations in E Major for piano and flute on 'Non più mesta' from 'La Cenerentola' by Rossini. These works are missing in DGG's Complete Edition.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: peter_conole on Monday 28 December 2009, 02:32
Hi all

A slightly late Merry Christmas to all and best wishes for 2010-which could turn out to be new-release wonder year.

Re the topic: that glorious Noskowski Symphony no.1 (the one Alan is keen on - bring on no.2). Another copy - a gift from me which was passed  on to a deserving music explorer.

Missing from under the Christmas tree (pour moi- ordered under my supervision by she-who-tolerates-my-music-lust about six weeks ago from JPC) were the Kreutzer violin concertos 15, 18 and 19, THAT new Raff disc and a promising chamber music disc. Am a bit concerned. Had to send JPC a reminder in mid-December. The package has now been mailed. Christmas rush? Or the result of sub-contracting out mailing/despatch?   

regards
Peter
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: TerraEpon on Monday 28 December 2009, 06:57
Quote from: Peter1953 on Sunday 27 December 2009, 22:08
You have a point, TerraEpon. I used to had an enormous collection of classical music on tapes, which is now all lost. But I still have my catalogue. And from Chopin I also had Variations on a theme by Rossini for flute and harp, and Variations in E Major for piano and flute on 'Non più mesta' from 'La Cenerentola' by Rossini. These works are missing in DGG's Complete Edition.

...that's the same piece. But beyond that, it's also missing the solo piano version of Rondo in C, Contredanse in Gb 'Kulaway', Andantino in g 'Wiosna (if this is by him...it's a song transcription), and Canon in f. It also repeats Andante Spinato twice (somewhat sensible, as in one case it's attached to the Grande Polonaise in Eb -- both versions of which IS there).
There's also some variants, and some pretty newly discovered stuff, though I'm willing to be lienet on those.

As you can see, I've done some research on this. I'm a bit peeved at the lack of completeness for companies that SAY complete and most people just grin and bare it, assuming it is. Even discounting certain things like piano reductions of concerti, and 'original' versions, etc. there's often just OBVIOUS stuff that sure, the average classical buyer who buys up Beethoven and Mahler over and over again may not notice, but it's very annoying to me.
(And what's more, Chopin isn't even a favorite, he just has a small enough body of work combined with being very popular that allows complete (/piano) editions with much more ease)

I even started to write up a very long post in detail about Brilliant's so-called complete Rachmaninov edition...if anyone's interested I could continue and post it.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: Alan Howe on Monday 28 December 2009, 23:31
Goldmark's opera Merlin on Profil. Just listening to the beginning now: the idiom has its Wagnerisms, but frankly I am more struck by similarities with, say, Verdi's Otello. It's an interesting style and somewhat at odds with the more conservative composer I know from the chamber music.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: chill319 on Tuesday 29 December 2009, 00:03
'Twas a very merry Christmas for one who has several decades of catching up to do...

1. Furtwaengler, Symphonic Concerto (Then-Bergh, Kubelik, Bavarian Radio SO)
2. Berger, Symphony 2 (Bernbacher, Bremen State PO) -- a gift
2. Gliere, Symphony 3 (Faberman, RPO)
3. Ludolf Nielsen, Symphony 3 (Cramer, Bamberg SO)

Furtwaengler, composer of moral imperatives, seems to me the largest achievement amongst a group of quite large achievements; Berger's passionate "High German" idiom doesn't waste a single bar; Gliere, whom I misjudged for years, conjures an immediately appealing soundscape while pursuing his own musical ends with rigor; Nielsen 3 sounds almost as remarkable as the other three (the last movement in particular being for me a stunner). Four testaments to the extraordinary phenomenon of Western art music as it flourished and peaked in England and the Continent between the wars of Napolean and Adolf Hitler.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: Mark Thomas on Tuesday 29 December 2009, 17:01
Hang on, is the Bernbacher performance of Wilhelm Berger's superb Second Symphony now available on a commercial CD? I have a copy of the radio broadcast, but didn't know that it is now generally available.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: Jonathan on Tuesday 29 December 2009, 19:01
Ok, again not terribly unsung but Mussorgsky - "Pictures" and 10 other pieces on Brilliant and also Moszkowski's world, volume 2 (with works by Brahms and Juon) which now completes the set on 4 hands music!
There might be more CDs when I see my parents later this week...
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: chill319 on Tuesday 29 December 2009, 21:27
Alas, Mark, I'm listening to a private recording of a broadcast of Berger 2. Knowing the work now, it's hard to believe we don't have Toscanini's version, Klemperer's version, and Furtwaengler's version, as well as Bernbacher's, to choose from among commercial releases.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: Mark Thomas on Tuesday 29 December 2009, 22:33
Yes, Berger's Second is a wonder, isn't it?

BTW, I had no unsungs waiting for me under our Christmas tree. My wife has long since despaired of my endless quest for 19th century novelties and forgotten masterpieces. On the other hand, she's very happy to come with me when there's a piece of Raff's being played somewhere exotic...
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: JimL on Wednesday 30 December 2009, 00:30
I got myself the Rufinatscha disc.  Unfortunately (or fortunately?) it arrived so fast that I really didn't have a chance to put it under anybody's Christmas tree.  We don't have a Hannukah bush at my house.  Maybe next year. ;)
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: JSK on Thursday 31 December 2009, 21:42
Some of which I bought myself and much of it not unsung:

The set of 5 Russian operas on Bravissimo/Opera D'Oro
The budget 10-CD Smetana set.
Several $1 CDs from Goodwill, perhaps the most interesting of which is a set of MacDowell's piano concertos.
Parkin's set of Bax's piano music on Chandos. It was pretty much the only good deal at the one (terrible) used CD store in town where almost everything is overpriced and the Sound of Music songs are in the "Classical" section.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: oldman on Thursday 31 December 2009, 23:03
Santa guided me to www.emusic.com, where I found for sale a selection mp3 downloads from the Sterling label that cost me only a fraction of the $19.95 @ I would have had to pay for them elsewhere elsewhere. As a result I have a Christmas feast of the music of the music of Paul Buttner, Hans Huber, Ludwig Norman, Elfrida Andree and Frederick Cliffe.

A nice years end IMHO.
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: TerraEpon on Friday 01 January 2010, 06:42
Quote from: JSK on Thursday 31 December 2009, 21:42
The budget 10-CD Smetana set.

Eh? What's this?


Edit: Aha, this: http://www.amazon.com/Bedrich-Smetana-B/dp/B000GFKUEA (http://www.amazon.com/Bedrich-Smetana-B/dp/B000GFKUEA)
Bleh, old mono stuff. Ah well. Someone really needs to release a nice full set of Smetana's piano music that isn't mono with different music on each channel (no lie!)
Title: Re: What Unsung Composers Were Under Your Christmas Tree?
Post by: JSK on Friday 01 January 2010, 08:12
Quote from: TerraEpon on Friday 01 January 2010, 06:42
Quote from: JSK on Thursday 31 December 2009, 21:42
The budget 10-CD Smetana set.

Eh? What's this?


Edit: Aha, this: http://www.amazon.com/Bedrich-Smetana-B/dp/B000GFKUEA
Bleh, old mono stuff. Ah well. Someone really needs to release a nice full set of Smetana's piano music that isn't mono with different music on each channel (no lie!)
I got it because the perfoamances looked OK and it was cheap.