Customer Reviews


9 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews
Most Helpful First | Newest First

92 of 94 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Five stars and a bullet, June 12, 2000
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
Pierre Boulez, the enfant not-very-terrible-any-more of French music, has surpassed himself. Twenty-two years ago, CBS released his Complete Works of Anton Webern, and it's remained the definitive Webern collection. Until, as they say in movie trailers, now.

This consists of the three Webern albums Boulez has recorded for DG over the past five years or so, plus everything else Webern ever wrote. It thus scores straightaway over the earlier CBS/Sony set, which was restricted to works that had opus numbers and filled three CDs. This one includes the charming early songs, the equally early "Im Sommerwind" for orchestra and a number of posthumous and otherwise non-Opus works that didn't make it onto the earlier set. Webern is a composer whose entire output takes about six hours to listen to in its entirety, and it's all here, on six CDs.

That's fine; is it any good? Well, it's digitally recorded, and if ever a composer was born for CD, it's Webern. The pianissimos are more ppp than ever, thanks to better recording techniques. Boulez himself has also unbuttoned a bit. His earlier set, recorded between 1967 and 1972, was high on austerity and, if it fell down at all, did so on emotion. The older Boulez (he's 75 this year) is more relaxed about letting tuttis blare and climaxes, well, climax. The result is both as intellectually satisfying as we've come to expect from Boulez, and warmly expressive; in general, a more moving and less didactic set of recordings than the previous lot. And all the better for it, as far as this composer (and this listener) is concerned.

There are many benefits of a digital set, not the least being the better registration of timbral variety, which Webern (as is well known) made into a compositional principle. Even those allergic to twelve-tone music can't help but be ravished by the intricate sweetness of his arrangement of the Bach six-part fugue from the "Musical Offering". The arrangement of Schubert's German Dances has been re-recorded, and can be heard now in all its sprightliness. (The CBS/Sony set has an archive recording conducted by Webern himself in the thirties, but dodgy sound quality prevented it from shining forth properly, despite Webern's witty conducting.)

This is, for my money, the best classical recording that's likely to be released this year, if not for the next ten years. I don't know whether it's a complement to the CBS/Sony set or a replacement for it, but either way it's a wonderful package. Congratulations to all involved.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


26 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thank You Boulez, October 22, 2001
By 
Jack Jones (Woodland Hills, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
If you are a fan of the "New Vienna School" (Schoenberg, Berg, Webern) or 20th century "classical" or "serious" music, this disk set is very rewarding. Beautifully recorded and packaged, and with equally good liner notes, it is a treat to strap on the headphones and listen.

I debated between buying this or Boulez's older Webern set and went with this one. There is much more music on this set because pieces without opus numbers are included. They lend a lot of insight into his "published" works. I also went with this set because it is a modern digital recording, the previous set being from the early 70's. I will often side with a classic recording when needed-performance over sound. Here, I'm happy to report, the listener gets both. Every detail is captured.

Thank you very much Pierre Boulez and DG for making this project happen. Please keep the Schoenberg and Berg disks coming. And thank you Anton Webern for continually opening my ears.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Poesia do silêncio, January 25, 2008
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
Conheci a obra de Anton Webern ao ler a Poesia Concreta, especificamente a obra e a série de poemas "poetamenos" de Augusto de Campos. Este autor, inclusive, escreveu vários artigos sobre a obra de Webern, destacando a regência de Boulez, a qual está registrada neste boxset.

Mas ainda estou ouvindo esta preciosidade - digerindo-a aos poucos. Até onde ouvi, veio-me como uma bela aquisição.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


22 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 Star music. Some very good performances, some are aimless., August 24, 2001
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
Webern's music demonstrates a level of craft, in which few composers ever contend. The more that I listen to the works of Webern, the more I hear that each note must be just as it is. There is nothing wasted in this music. The expression is never vague, always intense. I do admire the works of many modern composers, but few are so discerning and meticulous in their works. Webern's craft is equal with the greats of music history; Guillarme de Machaut, Carlo Gesualdo, Claudio Monteverdi, J.S. Bach, Franz Joseph Haydn, Ludwig Beethoven. He is a towering figure. The music that is played here is first rate. However, I have not yet heard performances of many of his works that bring out everything that Webern's music has to offer. For example, the Op. 27 Piano Variations are seldom done justice. All of the movements are given `circa' tempo indications, but many take the movements much slower or faster than indicated. Unfortunately, on this recording the fast movement is slow and the slow movements fast. Presumably the slower tempo in the fast movement would allow for more accurate interpretation of the frequent changes between piano and forte. The problem is that the F's typically don't fade away fast enough and drown out the P's. The other option is to make the P's a little bit more like mezzo forte's. The recording that Pollini did of the work on Deutsche Gramaphon with the Boulez 2nd Sonata manages to reconcile the dynamics with the tempo. However, what I have not heard with the work is the full impact of the affect in the work. What the Pollini performance fails in is the coldness of the interpretation. For those interested, I believe that DG is currently putting out the Pollini performance with Stravinsky's Petruska and a Prokofiev sonata at a fairly low price. This recording brings together several performances of more `high profile' ensembles than the older recording on Sony, which mostly featured performances of musicians from Juilliard. The performances are often more colorful, but I can't say that I always think they surpass their predecessors. The interpretations of the works are a little bit `hit and miss.' The ensembles that Boulez conducts tend to bring out the same sorts of things in the works that the previous ensembles did with the last `complete Webern.' This is good in places; I appreciate the more resonant quality that the recent recording equipment affords, and Boulez conducts a comparable performance of the orchestral works such as the `Symphonie.' The recording of the `Konzert' for nine instruments is good. The performances of the early expressionist works, such as the `Five Orchestral Pieces,' are powerful. Boulez is less afraid to see the human in Webern and let the shocked silences speak. Furthermore, the peaks are less harsh, allowing more of the subtle affects to become visible. Some of the performances just lack a certain power of expression that the previous `complete webern' had; a viscerally that the strength of the `Webern - Vogue' afforded them. The musicians that played the previous complete were looking at Webern as a giant, they are young and virile performances. These performances sometimes view Webern as a curiosity, a historical anachronism, the way that your grandfather will tell you a strange story, of which he himself doesn't understand the point, but he relates as a bit of curio. All in all, I wouldn't say that this set of recordings is the final word on the majority of Webern's works. Many of the performances in the previous set are just as good, but neither do those constantly surpass these performances. Both have their faults. The previous set tended to be cold and more aggressive than was necessary in places. The new set tends to wander at times, as if the performer does not understand the point. It's always difficult to sum up a complete works set for a prospective buyer. Just as in `complete works' of Bach sets that I own, the performances are not always amazing. However, the strength of the compositions often overcomes my desire for a strong performance, and I'm just glad that I have a recording of someone performing that Bach work that I want to hear. Here, similarly, the performances aren't always the best, but there is a wider range of Webern's ouvre represented and many of the performances are quite good. I suppose my counsel would be that one should consider the price of this set vs. the older sony set. The sony set is less complete, but it does include all of the really monolithic, profound Webern works. You also get a view of the younger, romantic Webern in this new set, in addition to better sound quality. Certain performances are better in each set, and so you'll get some good and some bad in either choice. For those that already have a strong taste for Webern's music, try this set. For those who are looking for a starting place, you might try the sony set. The highlights of this set are the Boulez orchestral performances. He has honed his vision for Webern since the last set and they are `worth the price.' For those further exploring Webern, those performances should be heard.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a superb achievement, June 4, 2008
By 
Ray Barnes (Surrey, British Columbia Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
I share the very positive sentiments of the other reviewers. I have heard both of the Boulez anthologies and prefer this one, although the other is excellent too. Compared to the classic Karajan Webern single CD with the same orchestra, which I also admire, the newer Boulez performances of the same pieces are marked by equally fantastic orchestral playing, and even better recording quality, which makes the extreme dynamics of Webern's writing more effective. If there is a better Opus 1 by any composer than Webern's Passacaglia, I would like to hear it. The Schubert and especially Bach arrangements on the first CD are first class. In my view, all the performances are successful - with special kudos to the soprano Christiane Oelze and the Emerson String Quartet. The documentation, in substance and presentation, is excellent too.

Personally, I find with Webern's work something in common with that of Bach, a kind of absolute purity of expression, or however you may wish to describe it (which is not implying that Webern is every bit as great as Bach though). They are totally concentrated in expression and require the same level of involvement not only from the performer but also to a large measure the listener too. I think these aleatory, uncompromising pieces will never be popular with the mainstream classical music loving audience (my local symphony orchestra has not performed a mature Webern work in recent memory, if ever), but for those willing to make the time and effort to "do the homework" and listen to the pieces again and again, they will reap the benefits, as with Bach, of great spiritual experience. Personally, I find the Webern cantatas especially beautiful.

Just a matter of personal taste, for those who are "dipping their toes" into these difficult pieces, I find the vocal works a little more approachable at first than the purely instrumental ones. Webern's pointillistic, ascerbic writing can initially give a very cold, forbidding, austere impression - so much so that one is tempted to stop listening. The vocal works offer, for lack of a better term, a warmer, more "lyrical" sound. Das Augenlicht for mixed chorus and orchestra on CD 2 is a good example. Yet there is underlying emotional and spiritual depth, somehow enhanced by the absence of sentimentality. One could make a similar observation about Bach's The Art of Fugue, or has been noted elsewhere, Flemish Renaissance music. The latter is also marked by severe economy of expression, and Webern was thoroughly familiar with it.

The price is very fair for such an outstanding album. I do not expect another one like it to be made for a very long time.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, June 23, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
Magnificent. Beautiful digital recordings, reasonably priced. Boulez's tempos are authoritative. Wonderful to have a (more or less) complete collection of Webern's output. Too bad the public is too stupid to care, but Webern himself faced that misunderstanding.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars not much more to be said, July 31, 2001
By 
"iechyd" (slc, ut, usa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
... i could be extremely nit-picky, and complain about the solo piano pieces, and their performer's occasional humming, and the baffling ordering of the quartet disc, and the discrepencies in the translations of the booklet, and how the english left out any explanation of sator arepo etc..., yet the french seems to, and all the little tiny errors, in the booklet... but... these are all moot points when any of the performances are heard. it brings to light all facets of the composer, so he no longer seems ascetic and overly intellectual, just check out the highly romantic string quartet op. 28, and variations for orchestra, yes even the solo piano pieces with the humming. all in all, a very enlightening experience.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars How to Discover Webern's Greatness, September 14, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
The CD formate
and the organization of the set allows one to listen repeatedly to a single work or compare the development of Webern's musical prowess.

I have the old version on CBS also with Boulez conducting, but the LP format (much as I prefer the true sound of the medium to the digital cd format) was not conducive to studying the music, I was interested and then listened to the album record by record, opus by opus, and when I completed listening,the records stayed on the shelf; I have not touched the album since bought it.

The new DGs cd compilation, has great performances and liner notes. It compels one compare pieces and to explore this seemingly abstruse music in more detail. I have used the new set to explore these works, revealing Webern's brevity, concision, delicacy , depth of feeling, and above all the greatness of some of his pieces such as the 6 bagatelles for string quarter, the variations for piano and the three small pieces (or should one say tiny!) for cello and piano.

Because of this set, I can now consider Webern as a familiar composer--one of the most innovative and concise composers of all time
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


9 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a transcendent masterpiece, July 16, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Complete Webern [Box Set] (Audio CD)
The performances here are absolutely brilliant.

Nuance, detail, sensitivity.

This is not merely music, this is magic!

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Complete Webern [Box Set]
Complete Webern [Box Set] by Anton Webern (Audio CD - 2000)
$71.98 $56.17
In Stock
Add to cart Add to wishlist