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Webern: Passacaglia, Symphony, etc
 
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Webern: Passacaglia, Symphony, etc

Anton Webern , Johann Sebastian Bach , Christoph von Dohnanyi , Cleveland Orchestra Audio CD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Orchestra: Anton Webern
  • Audio CD (January 13, 1998)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Decca
  • ASIN: B0000042D5
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #172,583 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Passacaglia, Op. 1
2. 6 Pieces, Op. 6: I Etwas Bewegt
3. 6 Pieces, Op. 6: II Bewegt
4. 6 Pieces, Op. 6: III Zart Bewegt
5. 6 Pieces, Op. 6: IV Langsam
6. 6 Pieces, Op. 6: V Sehr Langsam
7. 6 Pieces, Op. 6: VI Zart Bewegt
8. Symphony, Op. 21: I Ruhig Und Zart
9. Symphony, Op. 21: II Variationen
10. 5 Pieces, Op. 10: I Sehr Ruhig Und Zart
11. 5 Pieces, Op. 10: II Lebhaft Und Zart Bewegt
12. 5 Pieces, Op. 10: III Sehr Langsam Und Ausserst Ruhig
13. 5 Pieces, Op. 10: IV Fleissend, Ausserst Zart
14. 5 Pieces, Op. 10: V Sehr Fliessend
15. Variations, Op. 30
16. Das musikalischer Opfer: Fuga Ricercata a 6
17. Im Sommerwind

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential recording

This immaculately played disc contains absolutely all of Webern's orchestral music. Grab it while you can. Although it's one of the best Webern compilations ever made, chances are it won't last in the catalog very long. Why? Because Dohnányi and the Cleveland are no longer a marketing "priority," probably because they record almost exclusively "serious" classical music. Webern is about as heavy as it gets, and even though the Cleveland Orchestra plays this music with a sensitivity and precision that no other orchestra can match, if you don't buy it, it's history. Sad, but true. --David Hurwitz

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb disc... by Christoph, not Ernst!, June 25, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Webern: Passacaglia, Symphony, etc (Audio CD)
This is as exceptional a recording of this body of work as ever I have heard. While Dohnanyi exacts the degree of clarity and precision such music requires, he remains ever vigilant of the broader construction of each piece. The results are a performance that is technically outstanding, sophisticated in interpretive depth, and surprisingly accessible for listeners. Since I am here, I thought I'd also point out that numerous official Amazon.com reviews I have read regarding Dohnanyi and Cleveland refer to the maestro as Ernst Dohnanyi. First, it should be pointed out that the Dohnanyi in Cleveland is named Christoph. Moreover, his grandfather, the eminent Hungarian composer/pianist/pedagogue Erno (or, if one must use Ernst, Ernst von) Dohnanyi, does very little work in Cleveland on account of his being deceased.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars exquisite, pellucid, yet enigmatic miniatures, March 24, 2002
By 
R. Hutchinson "autonomeus" (a world ruled by fossil fuels and fossil minds) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Webern: Passacaglia, Symphony, etc (Audio CD)
Webern's "Symphony" (op. 21) is like light passing through a slowly revolving prism, revealing irridescent hues you've never seen before. Following his "Passacaglia" (op. 1), which clarifies but doesn't break with the Romanticism of Brahms, Webern composed 4 masterful orchestral miniatures. "6 Pieces" (op. 6) and "5 Pieces" (op. 10) are incredibly brief, in the atonal style pioneered by Webern's teacher Schoenberg. They met with quite different fates -- the "6 Pieces" provoked a "Le Sacre"-style riot at its Vienna premiere in 1913, and Webern fled into hiding. The "5 Pieces" wasn't publicly performed until 1924, at a festival in Zurich, 10 years after it was written. It was widely acclaimed, establishing Webern's international reputation. (Thanks to John Keillor for these details.) His masterpieces, in my opinion, are the serial works -- "Symphony" (op. 21) and "Variations" (op. 30). Despite their brevity (under 5 minutes and 7 minutes, respectively), these are two of the greatest compositions of the 20th century. Webern here developed Schoenberg's 12 tone rows into something exquisite, far more beautiful than anything his teacher created. These works, along with the String Trio and Quartet (op. 20 and op. 28), became the main influence on the "Darmstadt School" of the 1950s (Boulez, Ligeti, Nono, Stockhausen, & co.).

This disc is one of two that collect Webern's orchestral works. I give Dohnanyi and Cleveland a slight edge over Sinopoli with the Staatskapelle Dresden on Teldec, but they are both suberb recordings. Dohnanyi achieves a smooth, homogenous texture, whereas Sinopoli creates wider dynamics and greater separation of instruments. Dohnanyi's Webern is abstract, cold and restrained, while Sinopoli's Webern is more emotional, warmer and lusher by comparison (not by comparison to Mahler!). The two discs contain the same material, with one exception -- Dohnanyi includes Webern's arrangement of Bach's "Fuga ricercata a 6," a fascinating exercise in pointillism, breaking the music into consituent cells. Sinopoli includes the "Concerto" (op. 24) for 9 instruments, a Bach-influenced composition. On recording quality, the Teldec is superior. The Dohnanyi booklet includes a great photo of Webern, with a tragic expression absolutely apropos to the music, but the cover is a photo of Dohnanyi, and I detest this tradition in classical music. The Sinopoli booklet features instead a photo of a haunting sculpture by the British sculptor Andy Goldsworthy, and keeps the photo of Sinopoli inside, and so it wins the graphic design competition!

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Heavy? As chunky as air..., February 13, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Webern: Passacaglia, Symphony, etc (Audio CD)
These are splendid performances, with a recording quality to match. Dohnanyi brings a warmth to music that has for long escaped many because of its apparent heaviness, as David Hurwitz suggests in his review. "Heavy" is not the word I'd use for a composer who began, like Schoenberg, with the lush legacy of Mahler (Dohnanyi's version of the lovely 'Im Sommerwind' also makes one think of Richard Strauss), to become a great poet -- and an absolute master of brevity! Okay, the later Webern may take some getting into, but if it's heavy, then so is air ... which is not to deny the "chunkiness" of some of the orchestral pieces. Academic accounts can make bones and dust of Webern's late works, but performances like these -- or Karajan's and those of Boulez in mellow moods -- put the marrow right back into the bones. Webern is one of those composers who gives us music in its barest essence, the briefest flights of poetic fancy, in which the silences are perhaps every bit as important as the notes. On a lonely path, he set trends which others have latched on to in various ways and in different musical fields since, playing games with time and space. And also with J.S. Bach! Dohnanyi's version of the Passacaglia is about as delicious as they come. Strongly recommended, spaciously recorded, this single-CD compilation of Webern's orchestral music has earned its place in the repertoire -- and should stay there. "Le loup", Paris.
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