℗ 1960 2016 Countdown Media, a division of BMG Rights Management (US)
Released October 6, 2017
Duration 56m 47s
Record Label Concert-Disc
Genre Classical
 

Schubert: Octet in F Major, Op. 166 (Remastered from the Original Concert-Disc Master Tapes)

Fine Arts Quartet, New York Woodwind Quintet

Available in MQA and 96 kHz / 24-bit AIFF, FLAC high resolution audio formats
  • Select Format
    • AIFF 96 kHz | 24-bit
    • FLAC 96 kHz | 24-bit
    • MQA 96 kHz | 24-bit (source)
Add to cart
discounted price

 
Octet in F Major, Op. 166  
1.1
I. Adagio - Allegro - più allegro
Franz Schubert; Fine Arts Quartet; New York Woodwind Quintet
11:41
1.2
II. Adagio
Franz Schubert; Fine Arts Quartet; New York Woodwind Quintet
11:55
1.3
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace
Franz Schubert; Fine Arts Quartet; New York Woodwind Quintet
5:07
1.4
IV. Andante - Un ooco più mosso - più lento
Franz Schubert; Fine Arts Quartet; New York Woodwind Quintet
12:41
1.5
V. Menuetto. Allegretto
Franz Schubert; Fine Arts Quartet; New York Woodwind Quintet
6:12
1.6
VI. Andante molto - Allegro - Andante molto - Allegro molto
Franz Schubert; Fine Arts Quartet; New York Woodwind Quintet
9:11
Digital Booklet
"One of the gold-plated names in chamber music." - Washington Post Countdown Media presents this legacy recording of the Fine Arts Quartet performing the Octet in F Major, Op. 166 from the short-lived but incredibly prolific Austrian composer of the late Classical and early Romantic eras, Franz Schubert. The Fine Arts Quartet was founded in 1946, although the group's members had actually begun working together as early as 1939 while playing in the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The Quartet's first performance took place in 1940 with Leonard Sorkin, first violinist, Ben Senescu, second violinist, Sheppard Lehnhoff, violist, and George Sopkin, cellist. Military service in World War II intervened, however, and it was not until 1946, now with the new second violinist Joseph Stepansky, that the Quartet began to rehearse and perform regularly. The Quartet released an astonishing quantity of works (over 100) during its first 30 years of existence, including cycles of chamber music by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Brahms. Now, Countdown Media has catalogued and collected the masters of these incredible recordings, remastering and rereleasing them in stunning modern clarity for new listeners.
96 kHz / 24-bit PCM – Concert-Disc Studio Masters

Tracks 1-6 – contains high-resolution digital transfers of material originating from an analogue master source
Track title
Peak
(dB FS)
RMS
(dB FS)
LUFS
(integrated)
DR
Album average
Range of values
-2.58
-3.19 to -2.27
-21.34
-24.04 to -18.13
-17.98
-20.70 to -14.30
13
11 to 14
1
I. Adagio - Allegro - più allegro
0.00-20.36-17.113
2
II. Adagio
-2.29-24.04-20.714
3
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace
0.00-20.46-16.313
4
IV. Andante - Un ooco più mosso - più lento
-2.27-22.17-19.413
5
V. Menuetto. Allegretto
-3.19-22.92-20.113
6
VI. Andante molto - Allegro - Andante molto - Allegro molto
0.00-18.13-14.311

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