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Sergiu Celibidache conducts Liszt, Ravel and Brahms | Orfeo - Orfeo d'Or C788122

Sergiu Celibidache conducts Liszt, Ravel and Brahms

£10.87

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Label: Orfeo - Orfeo d'Or

Cat No: C788122

Barcode: 4011790788128

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 11th March 2013

Contents

Artists

Robert Casadesus (piano)
Vienna Symphony Orchestra

Conductor

Sergiu Celibidache

Works

Brahms, Johannes

Symphony no.1 in C minor, op.68

Liszt, Franz

Les Preludes: symphonic poem, S97

Ravel, Maurice

Piano Concerto in D major for the left hand

Artists

Robert Casadesus (piano)
Vienna Symphony Orchestra

Conductor

Sergiu Celibidache

About

Sergiu Celibidache was one of the truly unique, unconventional conductors of the 20th century. When Furtwängler was banned from conducting after the Second World War, Celibidache restructured the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and conducted it until Furtwängler’s return. However, after Furtwängler’s death in 1954 and the subsequent appointment of Herbert von Karajan as his successor, Celibidache’s relations with the orchestra were broken off.

Over the ensuing years, up to the moment that he took on the Munich Philharmonic in 1979, Celibidache never tied himself to a single orchestra for any length of time. Instead, he led a truly nomadic existence as a restless artist. He seldom travelled to musical centres such as Vienna.

His concert with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra from October 1952, now released in its entirety by Orfeo, thus offers interesting insights into a time when Celibidache still seemed to be weighing up his options. In Brahms’s First Symphony he comes across as more urgent in his tempi than was the case with the conductor we know from later years and from his later recordings. However, he was already outstanding in his sense of tone colour and in his ability to get his orchestral musicians truly to listen to one another.

This is evident in 'Les Préludes' at the beginning of the concert, and above all in the 'Concerto for the Left Hand', played by none other than Robert Casadesus. With his pianistic refinement, French clarity and aristocratic command, it was not surprising that Casadesus became the interpreter of this work. In his collaboration with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra under Sergiu Celibidache, he succeeded in exemplary fashion in maintaining the tension throughout that is characteristic of this concerto, and in making the most of the grotesque nature of many of its episodes. A fascinating encounter between two great musicians.

Live Recording: Wiener Konzerthaus, October 30, 1952

Also Available

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