Search - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Herbert von Karajan :: Mozart & Beethoven: Gieseking-Philharmonia Wind Quartet

Mozart & Beethoven: Gieseking-Philharmonia Wind Quartet
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Herbert von Karajan
Mozart & Beethoven: Gieseking-Philharmonia Wind Quartet
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Walter Gieseking is joined by stellar wind players, including the great hornist Dennis Brain; and the Quintets have a gleaming, robust quality that make them irresistible. They were recorded in the mid- 1950s, a time when...  more »

     
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Amazon.com
Walter Gieseking is joined by stellar wind players, including the great hornist Dennis Brain; and the Quintets have a gleaming, robust quality that make them irresistible. They were recorded in the mid- 1950s, a time when Gieseking sometimes operated on automatic pilot, but here he sounds involved and fluent; the keyboard part played with aristocratic grace and, where appropriate, sparkling high spirits. The filler is one of Herbert von Karajan's few successful Mozart recordings, aided immeasurably by the expert first-desk soloists of the Philharmonia. Fans of Gieseking and Dennis Brain will want this disc, but anyone will enjoy this happy combination of fine playing, music that's lovely if not profound, and excellent mono sound. --Dan Davis
 

CD Reviews

Awesome Wind Quintet
rodboomboom | Dearborn, Michigan United States | 01/02/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Mozart called his Quintet for Piano and Winds his finest, saying that it received the greatest applause.Applause is appropriate upon hearing this marvelous disc full of piano, winds and orchestra accompaniment. Never much of any instrument overshadowing or stand aloneness, but always together, with remarkable tone balance and pure speaking.Performers here are extraordinary, from superb hornist Brain to clarinetest Walton to bassoonist James and oboist Sutcliffe soaring on the Sinfonia, which is one of treasures of this piece."
1955 AND COUNTING
DAVID BRYSON | Glossop Derbyshire England | 09/08/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Gieseking was not a chamber music player to any great extent, but Mozart's looming bicentennial year of 1956 seems to have prompted him to this unusual venture along with partnering Schwarzkopf in Mozart as accompanist. There has been a recent reissue on Sony of these very two works performed in 1953 by that dyed-in-the-wool chamber player Serkin with the principals of the Philadelphia, and it was that issue that reawakened my interest in the Gieseking set, which I have owned for many years. On the References LP the recorded sound is quite remarkably good, and if it has been further enhanced on this cd then so much the better. Brain's horn tone is caught beautifully, and that more than anything else is where this disc has a clear advantage. The woodwind sound is particularly pleasant too, and Gieseking's famously beautiful touch is reproduced very faithfully, to his entire advantage in the Beethoven work, perhaps a little less so in the Mozart.



Mozart's quintet breaks new ground in its treatment of wind timbre in a chamber context, and it is a relaxed and unqualified masterpiece. Beethoven's shows that mixture of caution with iconoclasm that was to be characteristic of him all his career, caution in this instance getting the upper hand. The piece is attractive and already individual in tone - he is following what was an innovative model, but he remains for the most part his master's voice still, his own further novelties being only at the margin. It is far and away the more straightforward work of the two, and Gieseking seems to me far more at home in it, however immersed he may have been getting in Mozart at the time. It is a work that responds particularly well to his refined and elegant manner in Beethoven. Serkin was another sort of Beethoven interpreter basically, but he doesn't try to give such a work as this the kind of `thus spake' treatment he awards to bigger and more powerful compositions. As far as the piano part goes I should say both accounts are admirable, and Gieseking has a clear advantage in terms of the recorded sound.



When it comes to the Mozart there is no question at all that this account is relaxed, the question is whether it may just be too relaxed. What I can't feel sure of is to what extent the players, and the pianist in particular, really intended it to sound the way it does. You just have to play the Serkin account to be back in the normal world of Mozart-playing - alert, graceful and lively and with the characteristic variety of tone-colour that Serkin brought to this composer and to chamber music playing in general, the fruit of a lifetime's practice and familiarity already at age 50 on top of his inborn instinct. I sense that Gieseking basically set the tempo and idiom here. His touch is always tasteful and properly scaled, but after listening to Serkin it seems oddly monochrome, and after listening to Gieseking himself in the Beethoven it seems curiously diffident. This impression could be wrong of course. There is no question whatsoever but that the manner is very original and unusual, and by no means ineffective. This is Mozart, it is hallowed ground, and treading on it with deference and wariness is perfectly understandable. I can't make up my mind after all these years of knowing the performance, and I suspect I never shall be able to. What is unquestionable is just how beautiful it all is, and the recording engineers seem to have been very leading-edge for their time.



This is a disc that I have no qualms about recommending all the same. I can only suppose that its prospective purchasers are interested in hearing Gieseking, Dennis Brain and their illustrious partners in the two quintets. I am of course unable to offer comment on the filler consisting of a minor work of spurious attribution to Mozart performed under the baton of Uncle Herbert, but I suspect I would have had next to nothing to say about that in any event."
One Of The Greatest Chamber Music CDs
Jeffrey Lipscomb | Sacramento, CA United States | 05/23/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"While I take exception to his description of this music as "lovely if not profound," the Amazon headnote here by Dan Davis provides an otherwise perceptive description of what is heard on this wonderful Testament CD. This is some of Gieseking's very finest playing, and the superb Philharmonia wind players are fully attuned to him in both the Mozart and the Beethoven. This Mozart Quintet is vastly superior to Brain's recording made one year later with a lesser ensemble (coupled on EMI with Brain's superlative accounts of Mozart's 4 Horn Concertos). To my taste, the only Quintets that matched Testament's were once on Supraphon LP with pianist Jan Panenka and the delightfully rustic-sounding Prague Conservatory Professors' Chamber Ensemble (Supraphon, would you PLEASE give us a CD issue?). And I fully agree with Davis that Karajan's Mozart here is one of that conductor's best efforts (usually Karajan's Mozart - and virtually everything else he recorded - sounds like excessively smoothed-out, half-hearted Bruckner).



This CD may be hard to find, but it is utterly essential listening for anyone who savors chamber music-making at its finest.



Highly recommended."