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Leonard Bernstein Remastered
Box Set
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Editorial Reviews
On the eve of his centenary in 2018, Sony Classical is proud to announce the most important collection yet released of Leonard Bernstein s classic American Columbia recordings, newly remastered from their original 2- and 3-track analogue tapes. This is unquestionably the most comprehensive display of the legendary American conductor s unparalleled dynamism and versatility ever offered in a single package. Many of Bernstein s most memorable and critically acclaimed interpretations are brought together here for the first time. This has allowed for the creation of a natural balance (for example, between the orchestra and solo instruments) that brings the quality of these half-century-old recordings, excellent for their time, up to the discriminating standards of today s audiophiles. In addition, there has been a meticulous restoration of some earlier masterings in which LP surface noise was too rigorously eliminated at the expense of the original brilliance. In every case, the masterings in this new collection represent the best ever issued of these matchless recordings by one of the greatest musicians of the last century. Space permits only the mention of highlights, but they will give you a sense of the breadth and depth of this astonishing new set. There are his two classic complete opera recordings with the Vienna Philharmonic: Verdi s Falstaff (1966) starring Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and Strauss s Rosenkavalier (1971) with Christa Ludwig, Gwyneth Jones, Lucia Popp and Walter Berry. And his incandescent complete 1966 Haydn Creation from New York. Bernstein s New York Philharmonic recordings that launched the Mahler Renaissance in the 1960s are here, of course, including the 1961 Third Symphony which has arguably never been surpassed. Ditto for Carl Nielsen, whose great works Bernstein brought to a wide new public with interpretations like the 1962 NYP recording of the Fifth Symphony, perhaps the most thrilling account of this 20th-century masterpiece ever committed to disc. The Sibelius Fifth recording from 1961 is another celebrated Bernstein reading. And while we re talking about Fifth Symphonies, Bernstein s Beethoven Fifth from 1961 is still as electrifying now as it was then. His talk about the work is also included, one of many treasurable spoken-word commentaries in this set delivered by one of classical music s most charismatic and influential lecturers and teachers.
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Product Dimensions : 9.78 x 10.4 x 5.94 inches; 12.09 Pounds
- Manufacturer : Sony Classical
- Original Release Date : 2017
- Run time : 85 hours and 53 minutes
- Date First Available : June 1, 2017
- Label : Sony Classical
- ASIN : B072M4GVVB
- Number of discs : 100
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#96,955 in CDs & Vinyl (See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl)
- #2,699 in Symphonies (CDs & Vinyl)
- Customer Reviews:
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Top reviews from the United States
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I was hoping that Sony would finally issue the complete Columbia (and RCA) recordings in a logically assembled, newly remastered package, but this new box has thrown a monkey wrench into the works.
The 100 CD "Leonard Bernstein Remastered" collection is a MESS.
The selection of repertoire is totally arbitrary.
Approximately 1/3 of Bernstein's Columbia legacy.
Packaged in order of original LP release, 1947-1977.
Unless you know the recording date of a specific work, you'll need the index included in the book.
By contrast, Deutsche Grammophon did a user-friendly job of repackaging their complete Bernstein legacy:
DG's Volume One is Composers A-L, Volume Two is Composers M-Z.
Novel idea.
PACKAGING & SOUND
The new box is an "original jacket" collection with original LP covers and program notes.
One improvement: Previously Sony's two and three-disc fold-out jackets were blank on the inside, but now they have program notes printed on all surfaces.
Eighty CDs have content identical to the original LP, with an average playing time of 45 minutes.
Twenty CDs have additional music added to the original LP to bring them closer to the 70 minute mark.
Five CDs are mono, 95 stereo.
Box size is 7x11x8½ inches (height-width-depth)
Two rows of 50 CDs packed side-by-side with an 8½x11 inch hardcover book on top.
The 200 page hardcover book is handsome but vacuous.
Short on information, long on photographs, plus a lot of blank white space.
The essay spends more time discussing Bernstein's personal life than his musical accomplishments.
The only other musician who rates a mention is Glenn Gould:
Two paragraphs about their performance of Brahms' D Minor Concerto (which is not even in this box).
No mention of Gustav Mahler (which is a first in Bernstein scholarship).
No texts or translations for vocal works unless they were printed on the original jacket.
Everything in the "Leonard Bernstein Remastered" box is newly remastered.
Of course, Sony defines "newly remastered" as "Anything remastered in the last eight years."
A bit devious, but I have no complaints.
Andreas K. Meyer's remastering of the Mahler Symphonies date back to 2009.
Over the past eight years, Sony has done a remarkable job restoring early stereo recordings.
By strict definition, the new box is 67% new.
75 of the 232 compositions in the new box are recycled from four earlier boxes:
---- 2009: Mahler: The Complete Symphonies : Symphonies 2, 3, 6 & 9 are recycled in the new box.
---- 2015: Bernstein Sibelius - Remastered : Symphony 5, Pohjola's Daughter & Violin Concerto + Grieg's Peer Gynt Suites are recycled in the new box.
---- 2017: Leonard Bernstein - The Composer : Eighteen Bernstein compositions are recycled in the new box (discs 1, 2, 17, 20, 24, 45, 50, 54, 90, 91, 98, 99, 100). Not carried over are Mass, some piano works & songs, and the stereo recordings of Symphony 2 & the Serenade for Violin. The earlier box also included three Broadway original cast recordings not conducted by Bernstein. Surprisingly, all are carried over to the new box.
---- 2017: New York Philharmonic 175th Anniversary : 54 of 83 Bernstein-conducted selections from the 175th Anniversary collection are recycled in the new box.
2021: Since this review was published, Sony has also issued 24-bit original jacket boxes of “Bernstein Conducts Beethoven” (omits the concerti) and “Bernstein Conducts Stravinsky”.
CONTENTS
New York Philharmonic stereo recordings unless otherwise mentioned.
Recycled "newly remastered" recordings are marked with an asterisk.
Bach: Concerto 2 for Violin BWV 1042 - Isaac Stern (1966)
Bach: Concerto for Violin & Oboe BVW 1060 - Isaac Stern, Harold Gomberg (1966)
Bach: Concerto for Two Violins BWV 1043 - Isaac Stern, Yehudi Menuhin (1976)
Barber: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1964) *
Bartok: Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (1961)
Bartok: Violin Concerto 2 - Isaac Stern (1958)
Bartok: Violin Rhapsodies 1 & 2 - Isaac Stern (1962)
Beethoven: Symphony 3 'Eroica' (1966) - Sony forgot the lecture included with the LP
Beethoven: Symphony 5 (1961) + lecture "How a Great Symphony Was Written"
Beethoven: Consecration of the House Overture (1962)
Beethoven: Egmont Overture (1970)
Beethoven: Fidelio Overture (1967)
Beethoven: King Stephen Overture (1966)
Beethoven: Leonore No.3 Overture (1960) *
Beethoven: Piano Concerto 1 - Bernstein piano & conducting (1960)
Beethoven: Piano Concerto 3 - Rudolf Serkin (1964) *
Beethoven: Piano Concerto 4 - Glenn Gould (1961) *
Beethoven: Choral Fantasy - Rudolf Serkin (1962) *
Beethoven: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1959)
Berg: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1969)
Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique (1968) * + lecture "Berlioz Takes a Trip"
Berlioz: Harold en Italie - William Lincer viola (1961)
Berlioz: La mort de Cléopâtre - Jenny Tourel soprano (1961)
Bernstein: Symphony 1 'Jeremiah' (1961) *
Bernstein: Symphony 2 'Age of Anxiety' (1950 MONO) * original version, Lukas Foss piano
Bernstein: Symphony 3 'Kaddish' (1964) *
Bernstein: Fancy Free Ballet (1963) *
Bernstein: Three Dance Episodes from On the Town (1963) *
Bernstein: Facsimile (1963) *
Bernstein: Afterthought, Study for Facsimile - Blanche Thebom & Bernstein piano (1947 RCA MONO)*
Bernstein: Serenade for Violin, Strings & Percussion - Isaac Stern, Symphony of the Air (1956 MONO)
Bernstein: Symphonic Suite from On The Waterfront (1960) *
Bernstein: Symphonic Dances from West Side Story (1961) *
Bernstein: Candide Overture (1960) *
Bernstein: Dybbuk (1974) *
Bernstein: Chichester Psalms (1965) *
Bernstein: Prelude, Fugue & Riffs for Clarinet & Jazz Ensemble - Benny Goodman (1963)*
Bernstein: Broadway Shows & Opera:
-- On the Town (1960) *
-- Peter Pan (1950 MONO) * original cast conducted by Ben Steinberg
-- Trouble in Tahiti (1973) *
-- Candide (1956) * original cast conducted by Samuel Krachmalnick
-- West Side Story (1957) * original cast conducted by Max Goberman
Bizet: Symphony in C (1963)
Bizet: L'Arlésienne Suites 1 & 2 (1968)
Bizet: Carmen Suites 1 & 2 (1967)
Borodin: In the Steppes of Central Asia (1969)
Borodin: Prince Igor: Polovtsian Dances (1963)
Brahms: Symphony 4 (1962)
Brahms: Serenade 2 (1966)
Britten: Peter Grimes: Four Sea Interludes & Passacaglia (1973)
Britten: Suite on English Folk Tunes 'A Time There Was' (1976)
Britten: Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra narrated by Henry Chapin (1961)*
Bruckner: Symphony 9 (1969)
Copland: Appalachian Spring (1961)
Copland: Billy the Kid (1959) *
Copland: Four Dance Episodes from Rodeo (1960) *
Copland: El Salón México (1961)
Copland: Music for the Theatre (1958)
Debussy: Images pour orchestre (1958) *
Debussy: Jeux (1960) *
Debussy: Nocturnes: Nuages & Fetes (1960) *
Debussy: Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune (1960) *
Dukas: Sorcerer's Apprentice (1965) *
Dvorak: Symphony 9 'New World' (1962) *
Dvorak: Carnival Overture (1965) *
Dvorak: Slavonic Dances 1 & 3 (1963) *
Faure: Ballade - Robert Casadesus piano (1961)
Gershwin: An American in Paris (1958) *
Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue - Bernstein piano, Columbia Symphony (1959)
Gliere: Red Poppy: Russian Sailor's Dance (1964)
Glinka: Ruslan & Ludmila Overture (1963)
Goldmark: Rustic Wedding Symphony (1968) *
Grieg: Peer Gynt Suites 1 & 2 (1967) *
Grofe: Grand Canyon Suite (1963)
Handel: Ode for St. Cecilia's Day (1959)
Roy Harris: Symphony 3 (1960) *
Haydn: Symphonies 82*, 83*, 88, 102 (1962-63)
Haydn: Mass Hob.XXII:14 'Harmoniemesse' (1973)
Haydn: The Creation (1966)
Hindemith: Concert Music for Strings & Brass (1961)
Hindemith: Symphony in E-Flat Major (1967)
Hindemith: Symphonic Metamorphoses on Themes of Weber (1968)
Hindemith: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1964)
Holst: The Planets (1971) *
Ippolitov- Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches: In the Village & Procession of the Sardar (1965)
Ives: Symphonies 2 (1958) * & 3 (1966) - Sony forgot the lecture included with the LP
Ives: Central Park in the Dark (1962)
Ives: The Unanswered Question (1964)
Liszt: Faust Symphony (1960)
Liszt: Les Préludes (1963)
Liszt: Piano Concerto 1 - André Watts (1963) *
Mahler: Symphonies 2 (1963)*, 3 (1961)*, 6 (1967)*, 9 (1965) *
Mahler: Kindertotenlieder - Jennie Tourel (1960) *
Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn - Christa Ludwig & Walter Berry (1967-69) - Sony forgot the piano accompanied version included with the original American LP (photos 6 & 7)
Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn: 'Das irdische Leben' - Jennie Tourel (1960)
Mahler: Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau & Bernstein piano (1968)
Mahler: Rückert-Lieder: Three Songs - Jennie Tourel (1960)
Mendelssohn: Symphonies 3 (1964), 4 (1958)
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture (1966)
Milhaud: La création du monde - Columbia Symphony (1951 MONO)
Mozart: Concerto for Piano 15 K.450 - Bernstein piano, Columbia Symphony (1956 MONO)
Mozart: Concerto for Piano 17 K.453 - Bernstein piano, Columbia Symphony (1956 MONO)
Mozart: Piano Quartet in G Minor K.478 - Bernstein piano, Julliard Quartet (1965)
Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain (1965)
Mussorgsky: Khovanshchina Prelude (1963)
Nielsen: Symphony 3 - Royal Danish Orchestra (1965)
Nielsen: Symphony 5 (1962) *
Nielsen: Flute Concerto - Julius Baker (1966)
Nielsen: Clarinet Concerto - Stanley Drucker (1967)
Offenbach: Gaîté Parisienne Suite (1969)
Poulenc: Gloria (1976)
Prokofiev: Symphony 1 'Classical' (1968)
Prokofiev: Peter & the Wolf narrated by Bernstein (1960) *
Prokofiev: Lieutenant Kijé: Kijé's Wedding & Troika (1971)
Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges: March (1971)
Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto 2 - Philippe Entremont (1960) *
Ravel: Shéhérazade - Jennie Tourel (1961) *
Rimsky-Korsakov: Snow Maiden: Dance of the Tumblers (1967)
Rossini: L'Italiana in Algeri Overture (1960) *
Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia Overture 1963) *
Rossini: La gazza ladra Overture (1960) *
Rossini: La scala di seta Overture (1963) *
Rossini: Semiramide Overture (1960)
Rossini: William Tell Overture (1963) *
Saint-Saens: Symphony 3 'Organ Symphony' - Leonard Raver (1976)
Saint-Saens: Carnival of the Animals narrated by Bernstein (1962) *
Saint-Saens: Danse Macabre (1967)
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto 4 - Robert Casadesus (1961)
Schubert: Symphonies 8 (1963), 9 (1967)
William Schuman: Symphonies 3 (1960), 5 (1966)
Schumann: Symphonies 1-3 (1960) - Why no Symphony 4?
Schumann: Genoveva Overture (1963)
Schumann: Piano Quintet - Bernstein piano, Julliard Quartet (1965)
Harold Shapero: Symphony for Classical Orchestra - Columbia Symphony (1953 MONO)
Shostakovich: Symphony 5 (1959) *
Shostakovich: Age of Gold: Polka (1970)
Sibelius: Symphony 5 (1961) *
Sibelius: Pohjola's Daughter (1964) *
Sibelius: Violin Concerto - Zino Francescatti (1964) *
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture (1963) *
Smetana: Bartered Bride: Three Dances (1965)
Smetana: Má vlast: Moldau (1964) *
J.Strauss: Artist's Life Waltz (1965)
J.Strauss: Blue Danube Waltz (1969)
J.Strauss: Emperor Waltz (1969)
J.Strauss: Roses from the South Waltz (1971)
J.Strauss: Tales from the Vienna Woods Waltz (1975)
J.Strauss: Vienna Blood Waltz (1967)
J.Strauss: Voices of Spring Waltz (1968)
R.Strauss: Der Rosenkavalier - complete opera with Vienna Philharmonic (1971)
R.Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks (1959) + lecture "Humor in Music"
Stravinsky: Firebird Suite (1957) *
Stravinsky: Rite of Spring (1958) *
Stravinsky: Pulcinella Suite (1960) *
Stravinsky: Symphony of Psalms - London Symphony (1972)
Stravinsky: Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments - Seymour Lipkin (1959)
Stravinsky: Octet for Winds - Boston Symphony (1947 RCA MONO)
Stravinsky: The Soldier's Tale Suite - Boston Symphony (1947 RCA MONO)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony 2 'Little Russian' (1967)
Tchaikovsky: Capriccio Italien (1960) *
Tchaikovsky: Francesca da Rimini (1960)
Tchaikovsky: Hamlet - Fantasy Overture (1970)
Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet (1957) *
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave (1963) *
Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture (1962) *
Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite (1960) *
Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake Suite (1969) *
Tchaikovsky: Sleeping Beauty: Waltz (1971) *
Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin: Polonaise (1971*) & Waltz (1975)
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto 1 - Philippe Entremont (1961) *
Verdi: Falstaff - complete opera with Vienna Philharmonic (1966)
Vivaldi: Concerto in C Major for Diverse Instruments RV 558 (1958)
Vivaldi: Concerto in D Minor for Oboe RV 454 - Harold Gomberg (1958)
Vivaldi: Concerto in C Minor for Flute RV 441 - John Wummer (1958)
Vivaldi: Concerto in C Major for Piccolo RV 443 - William Heim (1958)
Wagner: Wesendonck Lieder - Eileen Farrell soprano (1961)
Wagner: Götterdämmerung: Brünhilde's Immolation - Eileen Farrell (1961)
Weber: Invitation to the Dance, orch. Berlioz (1965)
Weber: Euryanthe Overture (1968)
Weber: Freischütz Overture (1963)
Weber: Oberon Overture (1960)
MARCHES (disc 84)
-- Sousa: Hands Across the Sea (1968), Semper Fidelis (1967), Stars and Stripes Forever (1968), The Thunderer (1970), Washington Post (1967)
-- Alford: Colonel Bogey (1970)
-- Arne: Rule, Britannia (1970)
-- Bagley: National Emblem (1970)
-- de Lisle: La Marseillaise (1970)
-- Steffe & Howe: Battle Hymn of the Republic (1970)
-- J.Strauss senior: Radetzky March (1970)
-- J.F.Wagner: Unter dem Doppeladler (1970)
-- Zimmerman: Anchors Away (1970)
-- traditional: British Grenadiers (1970)
* These "new remasterings" appeared previously in the "Mahler Remastered", "Sibelius Remastered", "Bernstein the Composer" or "New York Philharmonic 75th Anniversary" boxes.
-- The "new remasterings" of Glenn Gould's Beethoven, Rudolf Serkin's Beethoven, Andre Watt's Liszt, and Philippe Entremont's Rachmaninov & Tchaikovsky previously appeared in Sony boxes devoted to those pianists.
LEONARD BERNSTEIN COMPLETE EDITION ON SONY
(not the same as the “Leonard Bernstein Remastered Edition”, above.)
All of Bernstein’s Columbia recordings in three LP-sized boxes (198 CDs total).
Not original jackets, but newly created jackets with black-and-white photos.
A mix of 16-bit, 20-bit and 24-bit remasterings:
--- Vol.1 Leonard Bernstein: The Symphony Edition - 60 CDs
--- Vol.2 Leonard Bernstein Edition - Concertos & Orchestral Works - 80 CDs
--- Vol.3 Vocal Works + alternate recordings - 58 CDs
Volumes 1 and 3 are inexpensive.
Volume 2 is out-of-print and pricey (as of May 2021).
There are also a number of super-budget Sony boxes devoted to Bernstein.
They are not “original jacket” productions, do not come with program notes, and (with the exception of the Mahler Symphonies) they do not use the most up-to-date 24-bit remasterings.
By John Fowler on October 27, 2017
I was hoping that Sony would finally issue the complete Columbia (and RCA) recordings in a logically assembled, newly remastered package, but this new box has thrown a monkey wrench into the works.
The 100 CD "Leonard Bernstein Remastered" collection is a MESS.
The selection of repertoire is totally arbitrary.
Approximately 1/3 of Bernstein's Columbia legacy.
Packaged in order of original LP release, 1947-1977.
Unless you know the recording date of a specific work, you'll need the index included in the book.
By contrast, Deutsche Grammophon did a user-friendly job of repackaging their complete Bernstein legacy:
DG's Volume One is Composers A-L, Volume Two is Composers M-Z.
Novel idea.
PACKAGING & SOUND
The new box is an "original jacket" collection with original LP covers and program notes.
One improvement: Previously Sony's two and three-disc fold-out jackets were blank on the inside, but now they have program notes printed on all surfaces.
Eighty CDs have content identical to the original LP, with an average playing time of 45 minutes.
Twenty CDs have additional music added to the original LP to bring them closer to the 70 minute mark.
Five CDs are mono, 95 stereo.
Box size is 7x11x8½ inches (height-width-depth)
Two rows of 50 CDs packed side-by-side with an 8½x11 inch hardcover book on top.
The 200 page hardcover book is handsome but vacuous.
Short on information, long on photographs, plus a lot of blank white space.
The essay spends more time discussing Bernstein's personal life than his musical accomplishments.
The only other musician who rates a mention is Glenn Gould:
Two paragraphs about their performance of Brahms' D Minor Concerto (which is not even in this box).
No mention of Gustav Mahler (which is a first in Bernstein scholarship).
No texts or translations for vocal works unless they were printed on the original jacket.
Everything in the "Leonard Bernstein Remastered" box is newly remastered.
Of course, Sony defines "newly remastered" as "Anything remastered in the last eight years."
A bit devious, but I have no complaints.
Andreas K. Meyer's remastering of the Mahler Symphonies date back to 2009.
Over the past eight years, Sony has done a remarkable job restoring early stereo recordings.
By strict definition, the new box is 67% new.
75 of the 232 compositions in the new box are recycled from four earlier boxes:
---- 2009: [[ASIN:B005SJIP1E Mahler: The Complete Symphonies]]: Symphonies 2, 3, 6 & 9 are recycled in the new box.
---- 2015: [[ASIN:B00UOFIUDK Bernstein Sibelius - Remastered]]: Symphony 5, Pohjola's Daughter & Violin Concerto + Grieg's Peer Gynt Suites are recycled in the new box.
---- 2017: [[ASIN:B01MPX0CXB Leonard Bernstein - The Composer]]: Eighteen Bernstein compositions are recycled in the new box (discs 1, 2, 17, 20, 24, 45, 50, 54, 90, 91, 98, 99, 100). Not carried over are Mass, some piano works & songs, and the stereo recordings of Symphony 2 & the Serenade for Violin. The earlier box also included three Broadway original cast recordings not conducted by Bernstein. Surprisingly, all are carried over to the new box.
---- 2017: [[ASIN:B01M5FQZCK New York Philharmonic 175th Anniversary]]: 54 of 83 Bernstein-conducted selections from the 175th Anniversary collection are recycled in the new box.
2021: Since this review was published, Sony has also issued 24-bit original jacket boxes of “Bernstein Conducts Beethoven” (omits the concerti) and “Bernstein Conducts Stravinsky”.
CONTENTS
New York Philharmonic stereo recordings unless otherwise mentioned.
Recycled "newly remastered" recordings are marked with an asterisk.
Bach: Concerto 2 for Violin BWV 1042 - Isaac Stern (1966)
Bach: Concerto for Violin & Oboe BVW 1060 - Isaac Stern, Harold Gomberg (1966)
Bach: Concerto for Two Violins BWV 1043 - Isaac Stern, Yehudi Menuhin (1976)
Barber: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1964) *
Bartok: Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (1961)
Bartok: Violin Concerto 2 - Isaac Stern (1958)
Bartok: Violin Rhapsodies 1 & 2 - Isaac Stern (1962)
Beethoven: Symphony 3 'Eroica' (1966) - Sony forgot the lecture included with the LP
Beethoven: Symphony 5 (1961) + lecture "How a Great Symphony Was Written"
Beethoven: Consecration of the House Overture (1962)
Beethoven: Egmont Overture (1970)
Beethoven: Fidelio Overture (1967)
Beethoven: King Stephen Overture (1966)
Beethoven: Leonore No.3 Overture (1960) *
Beethoven: Piano Concerto 1 - Bernstein piano & conducting (1960)
Beethoven: Piano Concerto 3 - Rudolf Serkin (1964) *
Beethoven: Piano Concerto 4 - Glenn Gould (1961) *
Beethoven: Choral Fantasy - Rudolf Serkin (1962) *
Beethoven: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1959)
Berg: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1969)
Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique (1968) * + lecture "Berlioz Takes a Trip"
Berlioz: Harold en Italie - William Lincer viola (1961)
Berlioz: La mort de Cléopâtre - Jenny Tourel soprano (1961)
Bernstein: Symphony 1 'Jeremiah' (1961) *
Bernstein: Symphony 2 'Age of Anxiety' (1950 MONO) * original version, Lukas Foss piano
Bernstein: Symphony 3 'Kaddish' (1964) *
Bernstein: Fancy Free Ballet (1963) *
Bernstein: Three Dance Episodes from On the Town (1963) *
Bernstein: Facsimile (1963) *
Bernstein: Afterthought, Study for Facsimile - Blanche Thebom & Bernstein piano (1947 RCA MONO)*
Bernstein: Serenade for Violin, Strings & Percussion - Isaac Stern, Symphony of the Air (1956 MONO)
Bernstein: Symphonic Suite from On The Waterfront (1960) *
Bernstein: Symphonic Dances from West Side Story (1961) *
Bernstein: Candide Overture (1960) *
Bernstein: Dybbuk (1974) *
Bernstein: Chichester Psalms (1965) *
Bernstein: Prelude, Fugue & Riffs for Clarinet & Jazz Ensemble - Benny Goodman (1963)*
Bernstein: Broadway Shows & Opera:
-- On the Town (1960) *
-- Peter Pan (1950 MONO) * original cast conducted by Ben Steinberg
-- Trouble in Tahiti (1973) *
-- Candide (1956) * original cast conducted by Samuel Krachmalnick
-- West Side Story (1957) * original cast conducted by Max Goberman
Bizet: Symphony in C (1963)
Bizet: L'Arlésienne Suites 1 & 2 (1968)
Bizet: Carmen Suites 1 & 2 (1967)
Borodin: In the Steppes of Central Asia (1969)
Borodin: Prince Igor: Polovtsian Dances (1963)
Brahms: Symphony 4 (1962)
Brahms: Serenade 2 (1966)
Britten: Peter Grimes: Four Sea Interludes & Passacaglia (1973)
Britten: Suite on English Folk Tunes 'A Time There Was' (1976)
Britten: Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra narrated by Henry Chapin (1961)*
Bruckner: Symphony 9 (1969)
Copland: Appalachian Spring (1961)
Copland: Billy the Kid (1959) *
Copland: Four Dance Episodes from Rodeo (1960) *
Copland: El Salón México (1961)
Copland: Music for the Theatre (1958)
Debussy: Images pour orchestre (1958) *
Debussy: Jeux (1960) *
Debussy: Nocturnes: Nuages & Fetes (1960) *
Debussy: Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune (1960) *
Dukas: Sorcerer's Apprentice (1965) *
Dvorak: Symphony 9 'New World' (1962) *
Dvorak: Carnival Overture (1965) *
Dvorak: Slavonic Dances 1 & 3 (1963) *
Faure: Ballade - Robert Casadesus piano (1961)
Gershwin: An American in Paris (1958) *
Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue - Bernstein piano, Columbia Symphony (1959)
Gliere: Red Poppy: Russian Sailor's Dance (1964)
Glinka: Ruslan & Ludmila Overture (1963)
Goldmark: Rustic Wedding Symphony (1968) *
Grieg: Peer Gynt Suites 1 & 2 (1967) *
Grofe: Grand Canyon Suite (1963)
Handel: Ode for St. Cecilia's Day (1959)
Roy Harris: Symphony 3 (1960) *
Haydn: Symphonies 82*, 83*, 88, 102 (1962-63)
Haydn: Mass Hob.XXII:14 'Harmoniemesse' (1973)
Haydn: The Creation (1966)
Hindemith: Concert Music for Strings & Brass (1961)
Hindemith: Symphony in E-Flat Major (1967)
Hindemith: Symphonic Metamorphoses on Themes of Weber (1968)
Hindemith: Violin Concerto - Isaac Stern (1964)
Holst: The Planets (1971) *
Ippolitov- Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches: In the Village & Procession of the Sardar (1965)
Ives: Symphonies 2 (1958) * & 3 (1966) - Sony forgot the lecture included with the LP
Ives: Central Park in the Dark (1962)
Ives: The Unanswered Question (1964)
Liszt: Faust Symphony (1960)
Liszt: Les Préludes (1963)
Liszt: Piano Concerto 1 - André Watts (1963) *
Mahler: Symphonies 2 (1963)*, 3 (1961)*, 6 (1967)*, 9 (1965) *
Mahler: Kindertotenlieder - Jennie Tourel (1960) *
Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn - Christa Ludwig & Walter Berry (1967-69) - Sony forgot the piano accompanied version included with the original American LP (photos 6 & 7)
Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn: 'Das irdische Leben' - Jennie Tourel (1960)
Mahler: Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau & Bernstein piano (1968)
Mahler: Rückert-Lieder: Three Songs - Jennie Tourel (1960)
Mendelssohn: Symphonies 3 (1964), 4 (1958)
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture (1966)
Milhaud: La création du monde - Columbia Symphony (1951 MONO)
Mozart: Concerto for Piano 15 K.450 - Bernstein piano, Columbia Symphony (1956 MONO)
Mozart: Concerto for Piano 17 K.453 - Bernstein piano, Columbia Symphony (1956 MONO)
Mozart: Piano Quartet in G Minor K.478 - Bernstein piano, Julliard Quartet (1965)
Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain (1965)
Mussorgsky: Khovanshchina Prelude (1963)
Nielsen: Symphony 3 - Royal Danish Orchestra (1965)
Nielsen: Symphony 5 (1962) *
Nielsen: Flute Concerto - Julius Baker (1966)
Nielsen: Clarinet Concerto - Stanley Drucker (1967)
Offenbach: Gaîté Parisienne Suite (1969)
Poulenc: Gloria (1976)
Prokofiev: Symphony 1 'Classical' (1968)
Prokofiev: Peter & the Wolf narrated by Bernstein (1960) *
Prokofiev: Lieutenant Kijé: Kijé's Wedding & Troika (1971)
Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges: March (1971)
Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto 2 - Philippe Entremont (1960) *
Ravel: Shéhérazade - Jennie Tourel (1961) *
Rimsky-Korsakov: Snow Maiden: Dance of the Tumblers (1967)
Rossini: L'Italiana in Algeri Overture (1960) *
Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia Overture 1963) *
Rossini: La gazza ladra Overture (1960) *
Rossini: La scala di seta Overture (1963) *
Rossini: Semiramide Overture (1960)
Rossini: William Tell Overture (1963) *
Saint-Saens: Symphony 3 'Organ Symphony' - Leonard Raver (1976)
Saint-Saens: Carnival of the Animals narrated by Bernstein (1962) *
Saint-Saens: Danse Macabre (1967)
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto 4 - Robert Casadesus (1961)
Schubert: Symphonies 8 (1963), 9 (1967)
William Schuman: Symphonies 3 (1960), 5 (1966)
Schumann: Symphonies 1-3 (1960) - Why no Symphony 4?
Schumann: Genoveva Overture (1963)
Schumann: Piano Quintet - Bernstein piano, Julliard Quartet (1965)
Harold Shapero: Symphony for Classical Orchestra - Columbia Symphony (1953 MONO)
Shostakovich: Symphony 5 (1959) *
Shostakovich: Age of Gold: Polka (1970)
Sibelius: Symphony 5 (1961) *
Sibelius: Pohjola's Daughter (1964) *
Sibelius: Violin Concerto - Zino Francescatti (1964) *
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture (1963) *
Smetana: Bartered Bride: Three Dances (1965)
Smetana: Má vlast: Moldau (1964) *
J.Strauss: Artist's Life Waltz (1965)
J.Strauss: Blue Danube Waltz (1969)
J.Strauss: Emperor Waltz (1969)
J.Strauss: Roses from the South Waltz (1971)
J.Strauss: Tales from the Vienna Woods Waltz (1975)
J.Strauss: Vienna Blood Waltz (1967)
J.Strauss: Voices of Spring Waltz (1968)
R.Strauss: Der Rosenkavalier - complete opera with Vienna Philharmonic (1971)
R.Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks (1959) + lecture "Humor in Music"
Stravinsky: Firebird Suite (1957) *
Stravinsky: Rite of Spring (1958) *
Stravinsky: Pulcinella Suite (1960) *
Stravinsky: Symphony of Psalms - London Symphony (1972)
Stravinsky: Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments - Seymour Lipkin (1959)
Stravinsky: Octet for Winds - Boston Symphony (1947 RCA MONO)
Stravinsky: The Soldier's Tale Suite - Boston Symphony (1947 RCA MONO)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony 2 'Little Russian' (1967)
Tchaikovsky: Capriccio Italien (1960) *
Tchaikovsky: Francesca da Rimini (1960)
Tchaikovsky: Hamlet - Fantasy Overture (1970)
Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet (1957) *
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave (1963) *
Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture (1962) *
Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite (1960) *
Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake Suite (1969) *
Tchaikovsky: Sleeping Beauty: Waltz (1971) *
Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin: Polonaise (1971*) & Waltz (1975)
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto 1 - Philippe Entremont (1961) *
Verdi: Falstaff - complete opera with Vienna Philharmonic (1966)
Vivaldi: Concerto in C Major for Diverse Instruments RV 558 (1958)
Vivaldi: Concerto in D Minor for Oboe RV 454 - Harold Gomberg (1958)
Vivaldi: Concerto in C Minor for Flute RV 441 - John Wummer (1958)
Vivaldi: Concerto in C Major for Piccolo RV 443 - William Heim (1958)
Wagner: Wesendonck Lieder - Eileen Farrell soprano (1961)
Wagner: Götterdämmerung: Brünhilde's Immolation - Eileen Farrell (1961)
Weber: Invitation to the Dance, orch. Berlioz (1965)
Weber: Euryanthe Overture (1968)
Weber: Freischütz Overture (1963)
Weber: Oberon Overture (1960)
MARCHES (disc 84)
-- Sousa: Hands Across the Sea (1968), Semper Fidelis (1967), Stars and Stripes Forever (1968), The Thunderer (1970), Washington Post (1967)
-- Alford: Colonel Bogey (1970)
-- Arne: Rule, Britannia (1970)
-- Bagley: National Emblem (1970)
-- de Lisle: La Marseillaise (1970)
-- Steffe & Howe: Battle Hymn of the Republic (1970)
-- J.Strauss senior: Radetzky March (1970)
-- J.F.Wagner: Unter dem Doppeladler (1970)
-- Zimmerman: Anchors Away (1970)
-- traditional: British Grenadiers (1970)
* These "new remasterings" appeared previously in the "Mahler Remastered", "Sibelius Remastered", "Bernstein the Composer" or "New York Philharmonic 75th Anniversary" boxes.
-- The "new remasterings" of Glenn Gould's Beethoven, Rudolf Serkin's Beethoven, Andre Watt's Liszt, and Philippe Entremont's Rachmaninov & Tchaikovsky previously appeared in Sony boxes devoted to those pianists.
LEONARD BERNSTEIN COMPLETE EDITION ON SONY
(not the same as the “Leonard Bernstein Remastered Edition”, above.)
All of Bernstein’s Columbia recordings in three LP-sized boxes (198 CDs total).
Not original jackets, but newly created jackets with black-and-white photos.
A mix of 16-bit, 20-bit and 24-bit remasterings:
--- Vol.1 [[ASIN:B003Z9Q4WG Leonard Bernstein: The Symphony Edition]] - 60 CDs
--- Vol.2 [[ASIN:B00LL4U1TE Leonard Bernstein Edition - Concertos & Orchestral Works]] - 80 CDs
--- Vol.3 [[ASIN:B07CRT9WMN Vocal Works]] + alternate recordings - 58 CDs
Volumes 1 and 3 are inexpensive.
Volume 2 is out-of-print and pricey (as of May 2021).
There are also a number of super-budget Sony boxes devoted to Bernstein.
They are not “original jacket” productions, do not come with program notes, and (with the exception of the Mahler Symphonies) they do not use the most up-to-date 24-bit remasterings.
SOUND:
I have begun my review with this most important topic to the reader, especially when the word remastered pops up, or does not when clearly the set has been remastered at some time. I compared my Royal edition, the Bernstein Century CD's and Leonard Bernstein Edition, concerto's and orchestral works box set with this new Birthday 100 year set, for Lenny was born in 1918. I compared the Mahler Symphony No 3 Royal edition 46th of 100. 1992. 20 bit technology for high definition with the new 2017 version as well as the Mahler 2nd symphony 1997. 24 bit technology. I found the new recordings to be brighter, clearer and more defined. This I can say about the Bernstein Edition 2014 Fancy free with this Birthday box set, better sound, more forward. The 1950 Bernstein Age of Anxiety with Foss and Stern, the same. However, the Nielsen Sony 1990 1-6 symphonies, Nielsen 3rd Symphony, there was no difference, when comparing the symphony from the 2017 new set.
So I turned to the article in the book accompanying this set " Notes on remastering" "Three, four and even multi-track master tapes of many of Bernstein were still available and useable. This offered the major advantage that we did not have to be content with an existing stereo mix, but were able to take a considerable finer and more differentiated approach with individual tracks. As a result, we were able to do things such as precisely remove external noises present on only one microphone or one sound track. Having these different master tapes also allowed us to reduce analogue hissing because mixing was done digitally. Another thing that also had a positive effect, in the case of older versions of the recordings we had, we accepted slight hissing, so now it is possible to enjoy the entire frequency spectrum of the original recordings."
"However what made our work difficult -was the fact that it was often necessary to splice in from several tapes to find the best material. Some originally were in poor condition. Luckily Columbia often produced several backup copies of the masters. But some of the masters were incomplete. For example, they contained only two of what were really four channels. When were unable to achieve a satisfactory result we requested new transfers. In some cases U-matic tapes (earlier transfers) were better than new transfers from the original tapes, which were too badly damaged during storage. In these cases, only remastering in 24 bit/44.1kHz was possible. However these recordings are fascinating because of how well the balance works. In those days, major orchestral recordings used three or four microphones. nowadays a total of 30 or more microphones are involved in recording the same repertoire." In other words the sound is good. I must mention the fact that Bernstein made over 200 LPs for Columbia records, later CBS, then Sony classical.
BOX SET:
This set reminds me of the Glenn Gould Sony Remastered box set, which I own, but updated. Tough cardboard box which must be held by two hands. The set is white with the pictures of the LP covers surrounding the box set. The lid only covers a third of the top. Inside are two white foam cardboard protection barriers, one in the front and the other at the back of the box. Then two white boxes with the CD's inside them. This is to protect them from damage. The sleeves are the originals. On the back the original essay's with small letters and on the spine the composer, music, orchestra and conductor, or soloist, then CD number. The CD is like a LP with the label in the middle with black disc like colour surrounding it. Three Mono CD's from 1948 -1954 with different colour labels. The rest Stereo. 74 CD's grey labels. 78-97 light brown labels, Then two grey (Stereo) and one green label.(mono) . Five double CD's and one three CD's Sleeves, with the CDs pulled from the top. The rest of the CD's pulled from the side as is usual. The recordings are taken from his earliest recording in 1945 and go up to 1977, and therefore are in that order. Hard covered book placed on top of the CD's with white ribbon underneath, which enables you to pull the bit left over and bring out the heavy book from the box.
BOOK:
A Essay, " I'm overcommitted on all front's". A few insight's into Bernstein's life. Notes on remastering. In English, French and German.Track lists. CD number, Composer, music, track numbers, picture of LP cover. Black and white, plus coloured Photo's. No translations. Index of works. makes it easier to find CD's.
BERNSTEIN:
He studied at Tanglewood in the conducting class of Serge Koussevitzky, who was the major influence on his emotional way of conducting music. He had already learnt his conducting technique from Fritz Reiner at the Curtis Institute of music in Philadelphia, this was after completing his studies at Harvard in 1939 (BA cumlaude). Bernstein always considered Reiner (who awarded Bernstein the only A in his class he ever gave) as his important Mentor. Reiner's mentor was Nikisch , who fired the imagination of a young Koussevitsky and was the only model for Furtwangler. The Hungarian Nikisch changed conducting from that of a time beater, to a subjective art form, whereby the conductor sees the score as merely the beginning and interprets the work in his own way. He gave conducting status. However this conductor was influenced by Wagner's idea's on Conducting. But let us not forget Bernstein composed for the Broadway stage, the musical comedy "On the Town" (1944) and climaxed with "West Side Story" first produced in 1957, and then made into a film. He also wrote the score for the film "On the Waterfront" directed by Elia Kazan about the docks of New York with actor Marlon Brando.
RECORDINGS:
Next to the CD numbers I will show exactly what has been changed about the recording sound. That is why after this, I will place numbers next to the music in the order they are in the box set.
Disc transfers for CD 1, tape transfers for CDs 19, 20, 45, 50, 52, 54, 58/59. 79-81, 90, and for CDs 21, 25/26, 48/49 and 67/68 using Direct Stream Digital.(DSD), mixing and mastering by Andreas K. Meyer, Meyer Media. LLC.
Tape transfers for CD 7, mixing and mastering by Mark Wilder, Battery Mastering Studios.
U-matic tape transfers for CDs 2,3, 34, 92, 96, 99, tape transfers for CDs 4-6, 8-15, 17, 18, 22-24, 27-33, 35-44,46, 47, 51, 53, 55-57, 60-66, 69-74, 75 (tracks1-13), 76-78, 82-89, 91, 93-95, 97, 98 and 100 by Brett Zinn, Iron Mountain Digital Services, mixing and mastering by Martin Kistner, Matthias Erb and Hansjorg Seiler, b-sharp music & media solutions using 24bit/192 kHz technology.
Tape transfers for CDs 16 and 75 (tracks 14-17) using Direct Stream Digital (DSD) and mixing by Andreas K. Meyer, Meyer Media LLC, mastering by Martin Kistner, Matthias Erb and Hansjorg Seiler, b-sharp music & media solutions using 24/192kHz technology.
MUSIC:
The CD's are placed in the order found in the box set, to help you understand the remastering techniques used. Also I will point out the bonus's included with some CD's, and I placed a few remarks next to some recordings. An excellent box set for those thinking of buying Christmas presents for a loved one.
CD 1. Early recordings. Stravinsky. Histoire du soldat. Octet. Milhaud. La Creation du monde (ballet) for wind instruments. Bernstein Afterthought. CD 2 Bernstein.The age of Anxiety. BONUS: Bernstein. Serenade for Violin, strings and percussion. Stern violin. CD 3 Harold Shapero symphony for Classical Orchestra. CD 4. Mozart Piano concerto No 17 & 15.Bernstein piano. CD 5 Stravinsky.Firebird Suite. Tchaikovsky. Romeo and Juliet overture Fantasy. CD 6. Bartok Concerto for Violin. Stern Violinist. CD 7 Stravinsky. Le Sacre du printemps. CD 8. Beethoven violin Concertos. Stern violin. CD 9. Shostakovitch Symphony no 5.CD 10. Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue. An American in Paris.BONUS. Grofe .Grand Canyon. Suite. CD 11. Debussy. Images for Orchestra. Rondes de printemps. Gigues. Iberia. CD 12 Vivaldi. Concerto in C major for Diverse instruments (with Mandolins). Concerto in D Minor for Oboe, strings and cembalo. Concerto for C minor for flute, strings and cembalo.
CD 13. Ives Symphony no 2. BONUS. Symphony No 3. The unanswered Question. Central Park in the dark. (Bernstein & Ozawa). IVES (1874-1954). All of his music was written before 1928, and most of it in the first decade of the 20th century. What is a mystery is that before Stravinsky , Ives worked with polyrhythms; before Bartok , he utilized agonizing discords, before Schoenberg, he ventured into atonality, and long before Boulez, he introduced music of chance, but with an American voice. For forty years he lived in total creative obscurity and was basically a recluse. Yet when fame arrived near the end of his life, he was not interested, he wanted to remain an amateur, even when Bernstein invited him to a private hearing of his symphony No 2, he refused. Ives did hear it on the radio and was pleased. He gave his money made from his works to young composers and musicians. For the composer was searching for the" inner invisible activity of truth." To Ives musical truth meant the full freedom of expression and to follow any direction he liked without restrictions. . He followed the philosophy of Emerson and Thereau throughout much of his life. Ives owned a insurance business and retired aged 56.
CD 14. Copland. Billy the Kid. Rodeo. CD 15. Prokofiev. Peter and the Wolf. narrated by Bernstein. Tchaikovsky. Nutcracker suite. CD 16. Mahler. Kindertotenlieder. Four songs. Jennie Tourel. CD 17. Bernstein. On the town. CD 18. Handel. Ode for St Cecilia's day. CD 19. R. Strauss. Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks. (Also Bernstein discusses Humour in music).BONUS: L' Apprenti sorcier. Danse macabre. CD 20. Bernstein. Dances from West side story. Symphonic suite from on the Waterfront.
CD 21. Beethoven.Concerto No 4. Glenn Gould -Piano.CD 22. Tchaikovsky. Capriccio Italien. Francesca da Rimini.BONUS: 1812 overture. Marche Slave. CD 23. Debussy, Prelude-afternoon of a Faun. Nocturnes-Nuages and Fetes. Jeux-Poeme Danse. CD 24. Bernstein. Jeremiah symphony. Jennie Tourel. Roy Harris. Symphony no 3. CD 25-26. Mahler . Symphony No 3. CD 27. Stravinsky. Pulcinella Suite. Concerto for Piano & Wind orchestra. CD 28. Wagner. Gotterdammerung. Brunnhilde's Immolation scene. Wesendonck songs. Eileen Farrell. CD 29. Copland. Appalachian Spring/ El Salon Mexico/ Dance from music for the Theatre. CD 30. Berlioz. Harold in Italy. CD 31. Tchaikovsky. Concerto No 1. Entremont-Pianist. CD 32. Bartok. Two Rhapsodies for violin and Orchestra. Berg. Concerto for violin and orchestra. Stern-Violinist.CD 33. Dvorak.Symphony from "the New World."CD 34.Saint-Saens- The Carnival of the animals. Narrated by Bernstein. Britten. The young person's guide to the orchestra. Narrated by Henry Chapin. CD 35. Beethoven. Piano Concerto No 1. Piano Bernstein. BONUS. Rachmaninov piano concerto no 2 Piano Entremont. CD 36. Ravel. Sheherazade. Berlioz. Cleopatre. Jennie Tourel Mezzo soprano.CD 37. Schumann. Symphony No 2. BONUS 3rd Symphony "Rhenish". CD 38. Lizst. Piano Concerto no 1. Andre Watts. Les Preludes. CD39. Beethoven.Symphony No 5. (Bernstein talks about the first movement and what the music left out sounded like). CD 40. Brahms Symphony no 4. CD 41. Rossini overtures.
CD 42. Bartok. Music for strings, Percussion and Celesta. Hindemith. Concert music for strings and Brass. CD 43. Schumann. Spring Symphony. Overture.Genoveva. CD 44. Lizst. Faust Symphony. CD 45. Bernstein. Symphony no 3. " Kaddish". CD 46. Haydn. No 82 & No 83. CD 47. Beethoven. Piano Concerto No 3. Choral Fantasy. Rudolf Serkin- pianist. CD 48-CD 49. Mahler Symphony no 2. Venora. Tourel. CD 50. Bernstein.. Fancy Free. Overture to Candide. On the town. three dance episodes. Prelude, fugue and Riffs. Benny Goodman soloist. CD 51. Barber & Hindemith violin concerto. Stern-violin. CD 52. Sibelius. Symphony NO 5. Pohjola's Daughter. BONUS: Violin Concerto. Francescatti-violin. CD 53. Nielsen symphony No 3. BONUS Nielsen Symphony No 5. CD 54. Bernstein. Chichester Psalms. Facsimile. CD 55. Schubert Symphony No 8 " Unfinished". Mendelssohn symphony No 4. "Italian". CD 56. Beethoven. Symphony no 3. " Eroica" CD 57. Dvorak two Slavonic dances. Carnival Overture. Smetana. Overture. Three dances from the Bartered bride. The Moldau. CD 58-59. Verdi. Falstaff. Vienna Phil. Fischer-Dieskau. Ligabue. Resnik. Sciutti, Oncina, Panerai, Rissel-Majdan, Dickie, Kunz, Stolze. Very fast speeds. Bernstein is faster then Toscanini and this rendition of this opera is full of fun. My favourite Falstaff. ( the sleeve has the details of Haydn's Creation instead of Falstaff) CD 60. Schumann. Piano Quintet in E-flat major. Mozart. Piano Quartet in G Minor. Bernstein and the Julliard String Quartet.
CD 61: Bach. Concerto in E major for violin, in C minor for oboe. BONUS . Concerto in A minor for 2 violins, Issac Stern and Yehudi Menhuin. Violins. Carnegie Hall. " Concert of the century." This can be found in the LP size box set Great moments at Carnegie Hall. CD 62. Mendelssohn. Symphony No 3 " Scottish". Hebrides overture. CD 63. Borodin. Polovetsian dances. Ippolitov-Ivanov. Two Caucasian Sketches. Mussorgsky. Night on the Bald Mountain. Khovantchina Prelude. Glinka. Russlan and Ludmila Overture. Nielsen. Concerto for flute and orchestra./ Julius Baker, soloist. Concerto for Clarinet and Concerto for Clarinet and orchestra/ Stenley Drucker, soloist. CD 65-66. Haydn: The Creation. Judith Raskin soprano, Alexander Young tenor, John Reardon Baritone. CD 67-68. Mahler symphony No 6 & No 9 .You could invest in the DVD box set of DGG'S Mahler's symphonies with the Vienna Philharmonic & LSO Cond Bernstein. Marvellous music making and seeing Lenny in full flight who identified with Mahler. CD 69. Brahms. Serenade in A. CD 70. Prokofiev. Classical symphony. Bizet. Symphony in C. CD 71. . Goldmark. Rustic Wedding Symphony. The andante 4th movement is beautiful. CD 72. Haydn. Symphonies No 88 & 102. CD 73. Berlioz. Symphonie Fantastique. Bernstein . (Berlioz takes a trip. Bernstein describes the idee fixe- Berlioz's lady friend Harriet Smithson). Strauss the second. Waltz's. The Blue Danube, The Emperor Waltz. Vienna Blood waltz. Artist's life. Voices of spring. BONUS Rose from the south. Tales from the Vienna woods. Mahler. CD 75. Das knaben Wunderhorn. Ludwig and Berry. BONUS: Mahler. Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen. Fischer-Dieskau. Pianist Bernstein. CD 76. Hindemith. Symphony in E-flat. Symphonic Metamorphosis of themes by Carl Maria von Weber. CD 77. William Schuman. Symphony for strings no 5. Symphony no 3. CD 78. Tchaikovsky Swan lake ballet suite. CD 79-81. R. Strauss. Der Rosenkavalier. Ludwig, Gwyneth, Berry, Popp, Domingo. The Vienna Philharmonic Orch. I do recommend the DVD of this opera with Gwyneth Jones, Fassbaender, Popp, Jungwirth, Araiza. Bayerisches Staatsorchester Con Carlos Kleiber. Traditional staging. Brilliant.
CD 82. Beethoven Overtures.Leonore no 3. Consecration of the house. King Stephen. Fidelio. Egmont. CD 83. Bruckner. Symphony No 9. CD 84. Great marches. Sousa. Rule Britannia. Marseillaise. This music is played fast, so if you were marching you would run. Great to play before you go off for a racing cycle ride. CD 85. Schubert symphony no 9 "the Great'. CD 86. Offenbach.Gaite Parisienne. Bizet. L' Arlesienne Suite nos 1&2. CD 87. Tchaikovsky. Symphony No 2. " Little Russian". CD 88. Bizet. Carmen suite Nos 1 & 2. Grieg. PeerGynt Suite No 1 & 2. CD 89. Holst. The Planets. CD 90. Bernstein. Dybbuk. CD 91. Bernstein. Trouble in Tahiti.CD 92 Haydn. Harnoniemesse. Blegen. Von Stade. Riegel. Estes. Westminster Choir. CD 93. Weber. Invitation to the dance. Overture to Der Freischutz. Euryanthe overture. CD 94.The age of Gold. Famous Russian composers. CD 95.Britten. Four sea interludes. From Peter Grimes. Passacaglia. From. Peter Grimes CD 96. Poulenc. Gloria. Judith Blegen soprano. Stravinsky. Symphony of Psalms. London symphony Orchestra. CD 97. Saint-Saens. Organ symphony. BONUS Piano Concerto No 4. Faure. Ballade for piano and orchestra in F-sharp minor op 19. Piano Casadesus. CD 98. West side Story. Bernstein was certainly switched on and understood the social mores of his time. CD 99. Bernstein. Candide. CD 100. Bernstein. Peter Pan
I hope you enjoy this set as much as I did. I must mention that I usually review on the Amazon.co.uk website and I am a top reviewer there, ranked between 139 -270 . I specialize in reviewing Classical box sets.
Have listened to all 100 discs. Lots of treasures to behold. Sound quality generally good throughout. Such youthful performances too. Impressed enough to be interested in more and to spend coin on such. Am actually happy they scaled back on the Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikovsky in favor of other composers and works such as Goldmark's Rustic Wedding Symphony. And unlike Mercury boxes we have been spared marches, marches, marches.
Now Sony, this is your fourth swing a Bernstein done thoroughly are you going to put out a Volume 2 for his actual 100 birthday late in 2018? Your Royal Edition, Bernstein Century, the two big boxes of Symphonies and Concertos fell short. Opportunity knocks at your door. Please open it to us music lovers.
Top reviews from other countries
The choice of music in this collection seems rather haphazard, although there is a reasonable mix of core repertoire and more off-beat fare such as symphonies by Goldmark, Roy Harris and Shapero. There is plenty of music by Bernstein himself - all three symphonies, the ballets, the musicals and Candide, plus other bits. There are works that aren't replicated in DG's box of complete LB recordings, although there is much that is common to both sets - symphonies and concertos by the core Austro-Germans, Debussy's key orchestra works etc. Whilst one wouldn't expect Sony and DG to co-ordinate the contents of their respective editions, it's perhaps a pity that Sony didn't take the opportunity to include more of the works that LB never re-visited in the studio for the Yellow Label. Why more Beethoven and not Elliott Carter, Larry Austin, Blitzstein and Denisov?
That brings me on to other disappointments in the choice of recordings. First, there are some CDs that have had extra music added to take the duration beyond the average 45 minutes, but others where the duration is well under 50 minutes. I initially thought the policy must have been to add a "bonus" if the original contents didn't make 40 minutes, but then I found the CD of "Great Marches" which lasts only 33 minutes and the one with Bartok's second violin concerto lasting only 36 minutes. So there's no co-ordinated policy on the duration of the CDs. Secondly, there are many CDs here that are already available in other Sony boxes, particularly the "Bernstein - the Pianist" and "Bernstein - the Composer" boxes. But also, and whilst I appreciate that accompaniment is an essential part of a conductor's art, why are there so many concerto recordings? The CD of Bernstein playing Beethoven's first piano concerto (which by itself would have lasted 38 minutes) has a "bonus" of Entremont playing Rachmaninov's second - which is available in the "Entremont - complete concertos" box. Why include that, and the Entremont Tchaikovsky 1 (another 35 minute CD), as those recordings have already been released in original jacket form? And did we really need another release of "The Exciting Debut of Andre Watts", when the same CD is in Watts' own Sony box? Isaac Stern appears on five CDs (including the aforementioned 38 minutes long Bartok CD), which makes me suspect that a large original jacket "complete Isaacs Stern" box is in the works and Sony are saving some remastering cash by doubling-up here. Thirdly, two recordings actually appear twice in the set - the Dance of the Polovtsian Maidens from "Prince Igor" and the Procession of the Sardar from Ippolitov-Ivanov's first set of Caucasian Sketches both appear in CD63 (as part of their respective complete orchestral suites) and then in CD94 (a collection of Russian "bonbons") - with only 100 CDs to play with, why on earth feature the same recordings twice?
So this is a missed opportunity, unless Sony intended to market this set to people who want a "Bernstein highlights" set and don't mind about duplication with other Sony artist boxes and short durations of most of the CDs. I note that for the same price you can buy the second and third volumes of the complete edition - probably a much better investment than this set. The recordings here are wonderful, but Lenny deserved better. Unless Sony are planning a "Bernstein Remastered - Volume 2" this time next year...
Jeder der sich die Box zulegen möchte, dem Wünsche ich viel Freude beim Erkunden vieler toller Aufnahmen!
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