Can there be a more prodigiously gifted and versatile musician
in the world today than Daniel Barenboim? Symphonic and opera
conductor as well concert pianist, recitalist, chamber musician,
Lieder accompanist par excellence, the Argentinian-born Israeli
Renaissance man of music is also one of the most extensively
recorded artists of all time. Sony Classical is proud to present
the first complete retrospective collection of his albums for
CBS/Sony Classical and RCA Red Seal on 46 CDs and DVDs.
Barenboim the pianist made his first commercial s in
1958 and soon began documenting his refreshing, vital
interpretations of Mozart and Beethoven on disc. Before long he
had added conducting to his already intensive musical activities,
in 1965 beginning a close relationship with the English Chamber
Orchestra. Much of that collaboration is to be found in Sony’s
vast new set, notably Mozart concerto s in which
Barenboim’s deep understanding of the composer is placed in the
service of violinists Isaac Stern and Pinchas Zukerman.
Soon Barenboim was conducting virtually all the leading European
and American symphony orchestras. Among the ensembles spotlighted
in the new collection is the London Philharmonic, with whom he
made a series of distinguished Elgar s, including “a
red-blooded passionate performance” (Penguin Guide) of the Second
Symphony: “The playing of the LPO is superb throughout and the
orchestra responds to Barenboim’s every whim … Music seldom
brings actual tears to my eyes, but I confess that the playing of
the very soft last bars, from the molto lento, did” (Gramophone).
Another treasurable Barenboim/LPO project found him partnering
the legendary Arthur Rubinstein in the complete Beethoven Piano
Concertos (when his own as a soloist accompanied by
Otto Klemperer had already become a catalogue landmark). Of this
1977 Grammy winner for “Best Classical Album”, Gramophone wrote:
“Have the Beethoven concertos ever been better accompanied, if
accompaniment is the right word? … In each work [Barenboim and
the orchestra] provide an opening tutti of such weight, richness
of characterization and beauty of sound that the entry of the
soloist, so splendidly prepared for, comes almost as an
anti-climax. It is a little while before even Rubinstein's
personality can match the splendour of the scene which has been
set for him.”
The list of Barenboim’s other remarkable collaborations in this
set is too long to be detailed here. A few examples must suffice:
with Itzhak Perlman, the Brahms Violin Sonatas – not only on CD,
but now for the first time on DVD; with Isaac Stern, Beethoven’s
Violin Concerto (New York Philharmonic) and Saint-Saëns Third
Concerto (Orchestre de Paris); with Jacqueline du Pré, the Elgar
Cello Concerto with the Philadelphia Orchestra; with Pinchas
Zukerman, the Elgar Violin Concerto (London Philharmonic) – “a
reading which gloriously combined the virtuoso swagger of a
Heifetz with the tender, heartfelt warmth of the young Menuhin.
Barenboim is a splendid partner” – and viola soloist in Berlioz’s
Harold in Italy (Orchestre de Paris); with John Williams, guitar
concertos by Rodrigo and Villa-Lobos (English Chamber Orchestra);
and with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Mahler song cycles (Berlin
Philharmonic).
The wide range of symphonic works in this collection finds
Daniel Barenboim conducting Tchaikovsky’s Fourth (New York
Philharmonic); Beethoven’s Seventh from the legendary 1989 Berlin
Wall concert , Schubert’s “Unfinished” and Berlioz’s
“Fantastique” (Berlin Philharmonic); and Schoenberg’s Pelleas und
Melisande (Orchestre de Paris). Barenboim the soloist can also be
heard in piano concertos by Brahms (with Zubin Mehta and the New
York Philharmonic) and Beethoven (conducting the Berlin
Philharmonic himself from the keyboard). There’s also a
large-scale choral work, the Berlioz Te Deum, in an imposing
made in St. Eustache with Orchestre de Paris forces.
The video releases in the new collection are especially
enticing. As already mentioned, there is a first DVD release of
the Brahms Violin Sonatas with Itzhak Perlman, coupled with
Brahms’s Horn Trio (with the Chicago Symphony’s famed Dale
Clevenger). And Barenboim’s unusually imaginative and varied
Vienna Philharmonic New Year’s Concert from 2014 – one of the
most highly praised of these occasions in years – is also
included on DVD as well as CD. The Times of London remarked on
its special qualities: “Recent New Year’s Day concerts have been
flat affairs, but the champagne spirit flows freely in Daniel
Barenboim’s second stint on the podium… The plums (encores apart)
are a seductive Tales from the Vienna Woods (Johann II) and a
gorgeous ‘Moonlight Interlude’ from Capriccio”, while Presto
Classical wrote: “Despite his associations with more heavyweight
Austrian composers, Barenboim never overplays his hand and has
the idiom absolutely off-pat… he shapes and paces things quite
beautifully, revealing all sorts of detail.”