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Dvorak: The Symphonies [Box Set]
 
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Dvorak: The Symphonies [Box Set] [Box set]

Antonin Dvorak , Istvan Kertesz , London Symphony Orchestra Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)

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MP3 Download, 39 Songs, 1992 $32.51  
Audio CD, Box set, 1992 $33.91  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         


Disc 1:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Symphony No.1 in C minor, Op.3 - "The Bells of Zlonice" - 1. Maestoso - Allegro18:54Album Only
listen  2. Symphony No.1 in C minor, Op.3 - "The Bells of Zlonice" - 2. Adagio di molto13:38Album Only
listen  3. Symphony No.1 in C minor, Op.3 - "The Bells of Zlonice" - 3. Allegretto 8:41Album Only
listen  4. Symphony No.1 in C minor, Op.3 - "The Bells of Zlonice" - 4. Finale (Allegro animato)12:41Album Only
listen  5. Symphony No.2 in B flat, Op.4 - 1. Allegro con moto16:26Album Only


Disc 2:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Symphony No.2 in B flat, Op.4 - 2. Poco adagio14:06Album Only
listen  2. Symphony No.2 in B flat, Op.4 - 3. Scherzo (Allegro con brio)12:33Album Only
listen  3. Symphony No.2 in B flat, Op.4 - 4. Finale (Allegro con fuoco)11:05Album Only
listen  4. Symphony No.3 in E flat, Op.10 - 1. Allegro moderato11:34Album Only
listen  5. Symphony No.3 in E flat, Op.10 - 2. Adagio molto, tempo di marcia16:08Album Only
listen  6. Symphony No.3 in E flat, Op.10 - 3. Finale (Allegro vivace) 7:59Album Only


Disc 3:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Symphony No.4 in D minor, Op.13 - 1. Allegro12:39Album Only
listen  2. Symphony No.4 in D minor, Op.13 - 2. Andante sostenuto e molto cantabile11:16Album Only
listen  3. Symphony No.4 in D minor, Op.13 - 3. Scherzo (Allegro feroce) 6:20$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Symphony No.4 in D minor, Op.13 - 4. Finale (Allegro con brio) 9:46Album Only
listen  5. Symphony No.5 in F, Op.76 - 1. Allegro, ma non troppo12:48Album Only
listen  6. Symphony No.5 in F, Op.76 - 2. Andante con moto 8:15Album Only
listen  7. Symphony No.5 in F, Op.76 - 3. Scherzo. Allegro scherzando 6:40$0.99 Buy Track


Disc 4:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Symphony No.5 in F, Op.76 - 4. Allegro molto12:24Album Only
listen  2. Symphony No.6 in D, Op.60 - 1. Allegro non tanto15:50Album Only
listen  3. Symphony No.6 in D, Op.60 - 2. Adagio11:31Album Only
listen  4. Symphony No.6 in D, Op.60 - 3. Scherzo (Furiant: Presto) 7:53Album Only
listen  5. Symphony No.6 in D, Op.60 - 4. Finale (Allegro con spirito)10:19Album Only
listen  6. Overture In Nature's Realm, Op.9113:34Album Only


Disc 5:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Symphony No.7 in D minor, Op.70 - 1. Allegro maestoso10:17Album Only
listen  2. Symphony No.7 in D minor, Op.70 - 2. Poco adagio10:07Album Only
listen  3. Symphony No.7 in D minor, Op.70 - 3. Scherzo (Vivace) 7:20Album Only
listen  4. Symphony No.7 in D minor, Op.70 - 4. Finale (Allegro) 9:14Album Only
listen  5. Symphony No.8 in G, Op.88 - 1. Allegro con brio10:02Album Only
listen  6. Symphony No.8 in G, Op.88 - 2. Adagio 9:59Album Only
listen  7. Symphony No.8 in G, Op.88 - 3. Allegretto grazioso - Molto vivace 6:02$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Symphony No.8 in G, Op.88 - 4. Allegro ma non troppo 9:00Album Only


Disc 6:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Symphony No.9 in E minor, Op.95 "From the New World" - 1. Adagio - Allegro molto12:30Album Only
listen  2. Symphony No.9 in E minor, Op.95 "From the New World" - 2. Largo12:28Album Only
listen  3. Symphony No.9 in E minor, Op.95 "From the New World" - 3. Scherzo (Molto vivace) 7:24Album Only
listen  4. Symphony No.9 in E minor, Op.95 "From the New World" - 4. Allegro con fuoco11:18Album Only
listen  5. Carnival Overture, Op.92 8:59Album Only
listen  6. Scherzo capriccioso, Op.6611:48Album Only
listen  7. Muj Domov Overture, Op.62 (My Home) 9:36Album Only


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Dvorak: The Symphonies [Box Set] + Rachmaninov: The Symphonies + Brahms: The Symphonies
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Product Details

  • Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra
  • Conductor: Istvan Kertesz
  • Composer: Antonin Dvorak
  • Audio CD (February 11, 1992)
  • SPARS Code: ADD
  • Number of Discs: 6
  • Format: Box set
  • Note on Boxed Sets: During shipping, discs in boxed sets occasionally become dislodged without damage. Please examine and play these discs. If you are not completely satisfied, we'll refund or replace your purchase.
  • Label: Decca / London
  • ASIN: B0000041WV
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,027 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording

For decades, there were only three complete collections of Dvorák's symphonies: this one; Rowicki's with the same orchestra; and Kubelik's with the Berlin Philharmonic. Kertész offers the most rustic, gutsy interpretations of all. Famous for his dislike of rehearsals, he allows the London Symphony to make a much rougher sound than his colleagues tolerate, and though not the last word in polish, the results have a spontaneous charm that's pretty hard to resist. More to the point, Dvorák's early symphonies (Nos. 1 to 5) remain sadly neglected, and each one of them is full of gorgeous tunes cloaked in mellifluous orchestration. At budget price, this set now costs less than it did on LP in the 1960s. How can you do better than that? --David Hurwitz

Product Description

Collector's Edition. 6 CD Box set.

 

Customer Reviews

28 Reviews
5 star:
 (20)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (28 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

68 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An incredible bargain, August 1, 2000
By 
This review is from: Dvorak: The Symphonies [Box Set] (Audio CD)
It's hard to believe that Decca is reissuing this set at this price given the fact that it pretty much renders most of the more recent, full price recordings of Dvorak moot. This is simply a terrific cycle of the Dvorak symphonies!

Kertesz brings life and excitement to all these pieces. His touch works especially well in the first six symphonies, which are all sadly neglected in the concert hall. Rhythms are crisp and bracing. The orchestral sound pulses with life. The Amazon reviewer rightly notes that the playing isn't perfect, but there is so much vibrancy to the playing that the occasional crudeness is irrelevant.

This bargain is also an excellent introduction to the treasures that lie in Dvorak's early symphonies. Numbers one and two are certainly overlong, but you have to love the scherzo of the first. Three and four are considered Wagnerian by many critics, but both contain a wealth of gorgeous melody. (I especially like the opening of three and the soaring melody introduced a few minutes into the Finale of 4.) Five is a wonderfully bucolic piece (at least until the Finale), with another memorable scherzo. Six is very Brahmsian--with a wonderful opening movement rich with horns.

You may have recordings of the last three, but Kertesz need not bow before anyone in these pieces, so don't let duplication keep you from getting this. I noticed that DG has rereleased the wonderful Kubelik cycle, but it is more expensive. Get this one and hope that DG offers Kubelik on separate discs so that you can get his fabulous sixth.

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71 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Melody flows from Dvorak's pen like water from a tap., October 29, 2002
By 
Bob Zeidler (Charlton, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dvorak: The Symphonies [Box Set] (Audio CD)
In the early '60s, I developed an interest in the Dvorak symphonies beyond the evergreen "Symphony from the New World" and began acquiring a complete set on the Artia label from Czechoslovakia. These were authoritative, idiomatic performances, but the sound quality - and the lack of stereo on at least a few of them - left me wishing for more.

I had barely finished this Artia set when the first release or two of Istvan Kertész's performances with the London Symphony, then on London LPs, hit the market. I can't really remember, at this late date, which was the first in the set except that it included a performance of the "Hussite Overture" that literally blew me away. In pretty short order, I soon had a second full set of Dvorak symphonies - the Kertész set - in splendidly up-to-date stereo sound and in performances that sounded, if anything, even more idiomatic than those Artia performances. And, as noted, a large part of the "freshness" to these Kertész performances may well be due to his relaxed approach to what had been for him new repertoire.

I don't know that there's ever been a more melodic composer than Dvorak. Some might opt for Tchaikovsky, but I would differ with them. Even Dvorak's early symphonies - long unknown to concert-goers and record-collectors - have the gift of spontaneous melody, if not the perfection of craft that his later works in the genre did. And his overtures and orchestral scherzi matched the symphonies in melodiousness: the "In Nature's Realm" Overture is downright irresistable in this respect.

This boxed set of the works, remastered for CD, is a splendid bargain. The remastered sound need take second place to any other integral set of the Dvorak symphonies (save one, which I mention briefly at the end). And of course the full magic of Kertész's performances is there for all to enjoy without concern for "settling for second best" in any respect.

But I have a few gripes about how Decca has gone about this CD release. The set of symphonies and overtures comes in two 4-CD jewel boxes inside a slipcase. But there are only 6 CDs, the penny-pinching for which leads to awkward sidebreaks for a few of the symphonies. And the "Hussite Overture" - one of the very best in the set, and one of the very best performances of the work anywhere - is nowhere to be found.

How much better it would have been had Decca seen fit to include the "Hussite Overture" and with the very real expectation that the regrettable sidebreaks would not have occurred! This is reason enough for me to give this release only 4 stars. And it is a shame because it needn't have been that way!

There is every appearance that Ivan Fischer (interestingly, another Hungarian and not a Czech) is in the process of doing his own (and very new) traversal of these works, with the Budapest Festival Orchestra and on the Philips label. The little I've heard has me very excited. But Fischer does not "put Kertész in the shade." And the price is considerably higher.

Aside from the aforementioned nits about saving a disc or two and its side effects, I doubt very much that you'd be disappointed in this bargain boxed set.

Bob Zeidler
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25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kertesz or Kubelik in the Dvorak symphonies?, May 2, 2006
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This review is from: Dvorak: The Symphonies [Box Set] (Audio CD)
Although decades old, the two analog sets of Dvorak symphonies from Kertesz and Kubelik remain the front-runnters. From the mid-Sixties onward Decca has been so satisfied with the groundbreaking Kertesz cycle, the first to bring Sym. 1-6 to the general listening public outisde Czechoslovakia, that the company has rarely re-recorded any but the last three, most famous symphonies. DG, on the other hand, didn't release Kubelik's Sym. 1-6 until the digital era (1988, I believe), keeping them in the vualts and out of competiiton with Kertesz.

Now both sets are offered at basically the same price on 6 mid-line discs, with deep discounts on the used market. The difference between the two is quite marked musically, however. Kertesz comunicates the thrill of discovery in the early symphhonies. Amazingly, he had never conducted them before, and their vibrancy and inner life lift my spirits every time I hear them. The LSO didn't know these pieces, either, but play with rousing commitment and vivacity.

By comparison, Kubelik sounds rather correct and staid. He often chooses marginally slower tempos, and his enthusiasm for letting the dance rhytyms become exciting is limited. The Berlin Phil. seems not to catch on to the Slavonic folk idiom, which gets played far too straight (Dvorak had the same problem with Greman orchestras in his lifetime and was only accepted in Vienna and Berlin at first as a kind of naive, folk-flavored Brahms). As to sonics, the Decca set holds up well, being a bit bright at times but otherwise detailed and forward. DG, unforunately, gave Kubelik's later symphonies (#7-9) harsh, glaring sound that makes his readings sound brash; there's an unpleasant sting to the sound at higher volumes. This problem seems less in the earlier symphonies (the cycle was recorded over a longer period than Kertesz's and thus has more variable sound). I do not know if the current re-issue also includes remastering.

It's regrettable that in the interest of economics Decca has cut out several of Kertesz's most interesting fillers, such as the Hussite Over., though they can be found on other CDs from him. We get the Carnival Over. on both sets, after which Kertesz gives us the "My Homeland" and "In Nature's Realm" Over., while Kubelik offers the Scerzo capriccioso and The Wild Dove tone poem, both performed by his Bavarian State Orchestra rather than the Berliners.

As msut be obvious by now, I don't feel the two sets are competitive artistically. Kubelik was a major conductor and dedicated to Dvorak, but his best work isn't here. Kertesz, though not native born to the composer as Kubelik was, found a special affinity for Dvorak, and his cycle is one of the small miracles of Sixties recording. Perhaps not so minor considering that no one has bettered him in the early symphonies for forty years.
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Dvoák: The Symphonies is London Symphony Orchestra's fourth studio release.
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