0028948285372

Wilhelm Furtwangler - The Decca Recordings

Wilhelm Furtwangler; Vienna Phil & London Phil Orchestras

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Format: 3CD

Cat No: ELQ4828537

Release Date:  24 September 2021

Label:  Australian Eloquence

Packaging Type:  Brilliant Case (Jewel Case size, Holds 2 CDs)

No of Units:  3

Barcode:  0028948285372

Genres:  Classical  Orchestral  

  • Description

    Two legendary studio recordings and a 1951 concert from Munich: the small but precious Decca legacy of the 20th century’s greatest recreative conductor, Wilhelm Furtwangler.

    While the performances of Wilhelm Furtwangler issued by Decca have been made available in small and large compilations, they have never been issued in this convenient format. They include a 1948 studio account of Brahms’s Second Symphony with the London Philharmonic, a Vienna Philharmonic studio recording of Franck’s Symphony from 1951, and finally a complete concert which the VPO gave with Furtwangler in Munich on tour, playing Beethoven’s Coriolan Overture, Schumann’s First and Bruckner’s Fourth Symphonies.



    Each recording is precious in its way. First issued by Decca in its Eclipse LP series, the Bruckner makes a fascinating comparison with a performance given by the VPO and Furtwangler a week earlier in Stuttgart, widely available, but the Schumann First is unique within the conductor’s discography: majestic and superbly built, as one would expect, but not without the fiery impetus belonging to a work which the composer had written in less than a week.



    While Furtwangler was more at home in concert than the studio, he knew and appreciated the value of recordings, and cultivated good relationships with broadcast engineers in Berlin. The Decca team found him harder to deal with, but the Brahms Second from Kingsway Hall remains a characteristic example of his art, more muted than his other readings but flowing and lyrical throughout. The Franck, meanwhile, is even more marked by inspirational rubato, a quality now appreciated once again in performances of late-Romantic music.



    With a new essay by Rob Cowan on the context and qualities of these superb interpretations, this new Eloquence set is a definitive collection of Furtwangler’s Decca legacy.


    ‘Meditation, philosophy, the interior life, a quieter tonal fire and a milder, smaller flame than we sometimes feel – these are the qualities in the performance and recording which can best be felt and enjoyed.’ Gramophone, January 1952 (Brahms)



    ‘A stately ceremonial whose jubilation is massive and startling in the Furtwangler conception of a symphony we consider light in a more customary presentation.’ High Fidelity, Summer 1952 (Brahms)



    ‘Furtwangler lives, obviously, in a different time-scale from the rest of us … Technically faultless, this disc has depth, clarity and brilliance over and above that of the competing versions … listeners whose time-scale coincides with Furtwangler’s will certainly prefer it to any other.’ Gramophone, April 1954 (Franck)

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. BEETHOVEN: Coriolan Overture, Op. 62
      • 2. BRAHMS: Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73

      Disc 2

      • 1. SCHUMANN: Symphony No. 1 in B flat major, Op. 38 ‘Spring’
      • 5. FRANCK: Symphony in D minor

      Disc 3

      • 1. BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 4 in E flat major ‘Romantic’