028948449040

Lorin Maazel: The Radio-symphonie-orchester Berlin Recordings

RIAS Kammerchor; Evelyn Lear; Christa Ludwig; Teresa Stich-Randall; Anna Reynolds; Ernst Haefliger;

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Format: 14CD

Cat No: ELQ4844904

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

Release Date:  14 November 2025

Label:  Eloquence

Packaging Type:  Box Set

No of Units:  14

Barcode:  028948449040

Genres:  Classical  Orchestral  

Composer/Series:  Lorin Maazel

  • Description

    Maazel took over the Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin after the death of Ferenc Fricsay in 1963. He and the orchestra had already worked together extensively, both in concert and on record, ever since he made his Berlin debut with them in 1955. The DG albums of Falla, Franck and Stravinsky are all enduring examples of Maazel's art at its most sonically brilliant and dynamic, cultivating performances of the greatest agility and contrasts of colour from his players. For Philips, Maazel and the RSO Berlin recorded mostly Baroque-era repertoire in an intensive series of sessions shortly after the beginning of his tenure as music director in September 1965. The Philips engineers had found an acoustically optimal venue at a church in the Spandau suburb of Berlin, and they set down several major works by Bach as well as the Water and Fireworks Music of Handel and the Stabat Mater by Pergolesi, with a magnificent vocal duo in Evelyn Lear and Christa Ludwig. Even at the time, the symphonic grandeur of Maazel's interpretations was regarded as running counter to commonly accepted notions of Baroque style. Maazel's manner is not so much old-fashioned as individualistic in its contrasts of tempo, smoothly cultivated string sound and high-impact attacks: this is hi-fi spectacular Bach. The Philips series continued with symphonies by Mozart (Nos. 38-41) and Dvorak (No. 9), also raised to rare peaks of expressive intensity. These recordings have never been compiled before, and they shed fresh light on the spectacular early career of a prodigy of the baton. Original Cover artwork is complemented by archive photography and a new essay on Maazel's Berlin years by Peter Quantrill.

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