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Sibelius: Finlandia etc / Rosbaud

Posted By: Berthold_80
Sibelius: Finlandia etc / Rosbaud

Sibelius: Finlandia, etc. / Hans Rosbaud
Deutsche Grammophon | The Originals | 02 Jan. 1996
EAC rip | ape (img+cue) | no log | 164 MB

Cannes Classical Awards 1996


Some collectors danced a happy jig when this CD was issued. Hans Rosbaud recorded more Sibelius than the company could fit on one LP, and assembling all these pieces was very difficult in the 1950s when they were issued. It was worth the trouble. As we can now hear, the typical insight and communicative powers of this legendary conductor combined with the great orchestra to produce some of the best Sibelius performances ever recorded. Beautifully reprocessed from fine 1955-58 mono originals, this CD is a treasure.
Leslie Gerber (Amazon.com)

Karajan was not the only German champion of Sibelius in the post-war years, though he was the most influential. Hans Rosbaud also broke a lance for him at a time when his music was cold-shouldered in Germany. Not long before his death in 1962 Rosbaud made guest appearances with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and insisted on including the Fourth Symphony in his programmes. At this time he was very much identified with contemporary music. Not only had he conducted the premiere of Schoenberg’s Moses und Aron but also the Second Piano Concerto of Bartok with the composer as soloist, and after the war he was active in espousing the cause of Boulez and Stockhausen. However, this CD collects the Sibelius recordings Rosbaud made with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra during the 1950s, none of which has ever been reissued since.
Deryck Cooke spoke of Rosbaud’s Tapiola with enthusiasm: “Although he lacks Karajan’s ultra-sensitivity to beauty of sound, he has all his drama and precision, and does not make the fatal error of jamming on the brakes after the final climax; moreover the intensity of the final pages is something to marvel at”. In its evocation of the terrors of the forest it has few rivals and can stand alongside the great Tapiolas of Koussevitzky, Beecham, Karajan and Kajanus. Every time I hear this performance I succumb completely to its spell.
The more popular Sibelius pieces also come off very well and, pace Deryck Cooke, I thought The Swan of Tuonela had no want of atmosphere or subtlety. In any event, Rosbaud’s Tapiola makes this issue a must for all Sibelians, and DG deserve our thanks for making it available again.
Robert Layton, Gramophone [8/1996]

JEAN SIBELIUS:

Finlandia op. 26

Valse triste op. 44

The Swan of Tuonela op. 22 No. 3

Festivo op. 25 No. 3
from "Scènes historiques"

Karelia-Suite op. 11 *
1. Intermezzo. Moderato
2. Ballade. Tempo di menuetto
3. Alla marcia. Moderato

Tapiola op. 112 *

Berliner Philharmoniker

Hans Rosbaud

Rec.: Jesus Christ Church, Berlin, 11/1954; 03/1957 *

Download: part 1, part 2
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