Beethoven: Symphonies / Overtures - The Remastered Stereo Recordings [7 CD set]

Beethoven: Symphonies / Overtures - The Remastered Stereo Recordings [7 CD set] cover $55.00 Out of Stock
add to cart

LUDWIG van BEETHOVEN
Beethoven: Symphonies / Overtures - The Remastered Stereo Recordings [7 CD set]
The Cleveland Orchestra, George Szell

[ Sony Classical / 5 CD Box Set ]

Release Date: Friday 31 January 2025

Sony Masterworks proudly presents a special remastered recording of Beethoven, conducted by the legendary George Szell. This remarkable 7-CD collection is housed in an elegant clamshell box and accompanied by an informative booklet.

Many facets of George Szell come together in this album: Although born in Budapest to a Hungarian Jewish family, he was a true Viennese musician, supremely talented and rudely arrogant. Beethoven was central to his repertoire - even more so than for most conductors. The Cleveland Orchestra was the pearl in Szell's crown. Artur Rodzinski turned a mediocre group into a fine ensemble; Szell polished it to perfection. Donal Henahan of The New York Times called it "the world's keenest symphonic instrument." A decade after Szell's death, Cleveland's music director Christoph von Dohnanyi complained: "We give a great concert, and George Szell gets a great review."

"When one listens to these nine Beethoven symphonies, one does not hear a wrong note, a smudged entrance, an ill-tuned moment, nor an awkward phrase."

Szell felt that Columbia shortchanged Cleveland in favour of Ormandy's Philadelphia Orchestra and Mitropoulos's New York Philharmonic, which were making far more recordings. Part of the reason was Szell's limited repertoire: the 18th and 19th-Century Austro-German classics, to which he admitted Dvoƙák. He never recorded a French symphony - not Berlioz, not Bizet, not Franck, not Saint-Saëns. He disliked 20th-Century music intensely (of a new Stravinsky score: "It is written in the post-Webernian small-fart-burp-belch-hiccup technique.") and recorded very little of it. In Rodzinski's time, the orchestra was about 80 players, meaning a half-sized string section.

Szell managed to boost it to 100 by the time of these recordings. They were enormously troubled seasons, with continuing battles among Szell, the musicians, their union (which ruled rather than supported them), management, and the board. None of that can be felt in these faultless performances.

"Szell gives you a reading full of historical imagination. Beethoven probably did not hear this symphony in his head as Szell gives it to us, but it certainly conjures up the world of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It takes a musician of immense culture to pull something like this off." (ClassicalNet on Symphony No 1 on the original CD release)

"The third movement stands out for its oboe and clarinet solos (Marc Lifschey and Robert Marcellus). The finale, the biggest challenge in the symphony, arrives with nobility and without mawkishness. All in all, a patrician reading." (ClassicalNet on Symphony No 6 on the original CD release)

Tracks:

Symphonies Nos. 1-9 (complete)
with Adele Addison (soprano), Jane Hobson (mezzo), Richard Lewis (tenor), Donald Bell (bass)
Cleveland Orchestra Chorus

Egmont Overture, Op. 84
König Stephan Overture, Op. 117
Leonore Overture No. 1, Op. 138
Leonore Overture No. 2, Op. 72a
Fidelio Overture Op. 72c
Coriolan Overture, Op. 62

Symphony No. 1 in C Major, Op. 21: I. Adagio molto - Allegro con brio (Remastered Version)