℗ 2023 Universal International Music B.V.
Released September 22, 2023
Duration 55m 11s
Record Label Universal Music Australia Pty.
Genre Classical
 

Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt Edition 2, Vol. 1)

Henryk Szeryng, London Symphony Orchestra, Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt

Available in 48 kHz / 24-bit AIFF, FLAC audio formats
  • Select Format
    • AIFF 48 kHz | 24-bit
    • FLAC 48 kHz | 24-bit
Add to cart
discounted price

 
Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 61  
1.1
I. Allegro ma non troppo
Ludwig van Beethoven; Henryk Szeryng; London Symphony Orchestra; Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt
25:31
1.2
II. Larghetto -
Ludwig van Beethoven; Henryk Szeryng; London Symphony Orchestra; Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt
10:16
1.3
III. Rondo. Allegro
Ludwig van Beethoven; Henryk Szeryng; London Symphony Orchestra; Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt
9:47
1.4
Violin Romance No. 2 in F Major, Op. 50
Ludwig van Beethoven; Henryk Szeryng; London Symphony Orchestra; Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt
9:37
Supplementary to his legendary Beethoven cycles for Decca are Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt’s recordings for Philips, Mercury, Deutsche Grammophon and Accord. They date from 1944 (Sutermeister) to 1972, when he made his last recording, fittingly by Mozart (Die Gärtnerin aus Liebe) a composer whom he revered above all: “We are too intimate friends … I can’t even explain what it is I feel when I listen to his music, that makes my eyes damp and my breath catch. … At the end of my life I should like to dissolve myself completely in Mozart’s music.” Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt became a household name for many record collectors in the 1970s thanks to the cycle of Beethoven symphonies recorded with the Vienna Philharmonic (newly reissued in a companion box-set by Eloquence). Though he had made recordings and held several significant posts in pre-war Germany, such as directorship of opera houses in Berlin and Hamburg, his career took on a new lease of life after 1945 as the founder-conductor of the Hamburg Radio Symphony Orchestra, now known as the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra. Their account of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade is dynamic and superbly prepared. The complete Hungarian Dances of Brahms is another delightful NDR/Schmidt-Isserstedt rarity revived in the set. The celebrated Vienna Philharmonic cycle of Beethoven piano concertos with Wilhelm Backhaus demonstrated what a sympathetic accompanist Schmidt-Isserstedt was. In this set he lends equally attentive support to Monique Haas in Ravel, Alfred Brendel in Brahms (the pianist’s first recording of the First Piano Concerto), Wolfgang Schneiderhan in Mozart and Henryk Szeryng in Beethoven. After his international profile rose with the growing reputation of the NDR orchestra, he became a welcome guest on the podiums of Europe’s great orchestras. From 1955–64 he was chief conductor of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, and in 1962 recorded with them the First and Third symphonies of Berwald. He gave many first performances of new works, especially by English and German composers; Die Schöpfung by Wolfgang Fortner is a vivid seventeen-minute setting of a poem by the American poet James Weldon Johnson, a contemporary reimagining of Creation, for which Schmidt-Isserstedt and the NDR orchestra accompanied Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. The conductor’s first love was Mozart, and it is fitting that his last major recording project before his death from a heart attack in 1973 was another first on record, the German version (Die Gärtnerin aus Liebe) of Mozart’s early opera La finta giardiniera, for which Philips assembled an all-star cast including Jessye Norman, Hermann Prey and Tatiana Troyanos. This was greeted after his death as the perfect memorial to his unassuming art; unlike many maestros of his generation and background, he got what he wanted not through fear but respect and a spirit of collective endeavour. Included, too, in this set are early (1940s) recordings made by the conductor of music by Mozart, Tchaikovsky and Sutermeister. This Eloquence set is issued with original covers and a new essay by Peter Quantrill on Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt and his career.
48 kHz / 24-bit PCM – Universal Music Australia Pty. Studio Masters

Tracks 1-4 – contains high-resolution digital transfers of material originating from an analogue master source; 44.1 kHz / 24-bit PCM
Track title
Peak
(dB FS)
RMS
(dB FS)
LUFS
(integrated)
DR
Album average
Range of values
-1.69
-4.74 to -0.20
-24.47
-30.67 to -21.66
-20.50
-26.80 to -17.70
14
12 to 16
1
I. Allegro ma non troppo
-0.27-22.74-18.413
2
II. Larghetto -
-4.74-30.67-26.816
3
III. Rondo. Allegro
-0.20-21.66-17.713
4
Violin Romance No. 2 in F Major, Op. 50
-1.57-22.82-19.112

Offers & New Releases

exclusive benefits for mailing list members

Subscribe Now

What is High-Resolution Audio?

High-resolution audio offers the highest-fidelity available, far surpassing the sound quality of traditional CDs. When you listen to music on a CD or tracks purchased via consumer services such as iTunes, you are hearing a low-resolution version of what was actually recorded and mastered in the studio. ProStudioMasters offers the original studio masters — exactly as the artist, producers and sound engineers mastered them — for download, directly to you.

What do I need for playback?

You may need additional software / hardware to take full advantage of the higher 24-bit high-res audio formats, but any music lover that has heard 16-bit vs 24-bit will tell you it's worth it!

Software for Mac OS X

Software for Windows

Hardware Suggestions