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Wonderful album! More info on Amazon -- Paganini for Two.Shaham and Söllscher's later album of Schubert works -- Schubert for Two -- may be even better. It's one of my desert island discs.Dave
Eine Kleine NachtmusikMozart: Overtures, Masonic Funeral Music, Eine Kleine NachtmusikOtto Klemperer and New Philharmonia Orchestra on EMI Classics.
Hi Everyone,Most Eine recordings out there are with bigger chamber ensembles. Some years ago, I heard on radio WQXR in NYC one of their programs lead-in themes, using probably a quartet recording of the slow movement. It was just wonderful, very serene and surreal, esp. heard late night, everything is dead quiet but the music. I have had my eye out for a well-recorded quartet-type of chamber Eine recording. Any suggestion?Many thanks.
EKN was written to be performed by a string quartet plus double bass; when heard that way you realise how the big orchestrated versions crush the life out of the music. I own two versions by quartets, both from the '80s and both on period instruments I believe: the one by the Academy of Ancient Music/Hogwood on Florilegium (EKN is actually played by the Salomon Quartet) is gorgeous in every way (I used to think the sound was a bit bright, but the better my system's got the less it's an issue). The recording by members of the Drotningholm Ensemble on BIS sounds poor and is played rather charmlessly at an incomprehensibly fast pace. You'd think there must be newer quartet recordings, though ...
Thanks for your recommendation, I picked up a used Hogwood CD from Amazon. Wonderful it is. I also thought it's a bit bright, but it's not an issue. I was surprised that the bass part has a very strong presence in at least the Romanze movement instead of a more "blended in" sensation. No complaint there either. There aren't many available played by a 5-instrument group. May be this Hogwood "WAS" the one I heard. Memory, no matter how unreliable, tells me that the QXR sound I heard was even more serene to the sense (the way the violin's vibrato comes through the radio). This Hogwood one is probably the closest to the real deal.Thanks again.
You're very welcome. Incidentally, strong vibrato.........................As you enjoyed that, can I also recommend the AAM/Hogwood recording of the Mozart Clarinet and Oboe concertos (L'Oiseau Lyre 414339-2 1986). The former is his last and, many seem to agree, finest concerto ... and this is my favourite of the half-dozen versions I own.
Holst: "The Planets"Interesting sound processing via Phase 4 Stereo;