An outstanding violinist of the twentieth century, Wolfgang Schneiderhan was not only celebrated for his interpretations of the classical repertoire, but he also distinguished himself by his commitment to contemporary music. This is demonstrated in three previously unreleased live recordings from Lucerne including the world premiere of Frank Martin’s Magnificat, performed by its two dedicatees.more
An outstanding violinist of the twentieth century, Wolfgang Schneiderhan was not only celebrated for his interpretations of the classical repertoire, but he also distinguished himself by his commitment to contemporary music. This is demonstrated in three previously unreleased live recordings from Lucerne including the world premiere of Frank Martin’s Magnificat, performed by its two dedicatees.
Details
Wolfgang Schneiderhan plays Mozart, Henze & Martin
LUCERNE FESTIVAL Historic Performances, Vol. X |
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article number: | 95.644 |
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EAN barcode: | 4022143956446 |
price group: | BCB |
release date: | 4. November 2016 |
total time: | 65 min. |
Bonus Material
- digibooklet
-
Producer's comment
First-hand impressions of producer Ludger Böckenhoff [German]
Informationen
Anoutstanding violinist of the twentieth century: Wolfgang Schneiderhan, born inVienna in 1915, was concert master of the Vienna Philharmonic for many yearsbefore turning to his solo career entirely. As a chamber musician - for instance withhis Schneiderhan Quartet or in the trio with Edwin Fischer and Enrico Mainardi- he also proved to be influential. Schneiderhan was one of the definingartists in the history of the Lucerne Festival: between 1949 and 1986 he gavean amazing forty-two concerts; as Georg Kulenkampff's successor, he directedthe masterclasses over several decades; and in 1956, together with his formerstudent Rudolf Baumgartner, he founded the Lucerne Festival Strings.
AlthoughSchneiderhan possessed enormous technical prowess, he never entered theterritory of pure virtuoso concertos or sensational solo pieces. Instead, hisdexterity always underpinned a well-articulated tone, a cultivated breath ofmodulation and a highly differentiated dynamic palette; the natural and genuinenature of his playing was, justifiably, praised again and again. Schneiderhan's"house gods" were Bach, Mozart and Beethoven, but he was also a knowledgeableand committed champion of twentieth century composers, from Boris Blacher, KarlAmadeus Hartmann and Rolf Liebermann through to Frank Martin and IgorStravinsky.
Therange of Schneiderhan's repertoire is also displayed in these three Lucernelive recordings, now released for the first time. His commitment for the musicof his time becomes particularly evident: he performs Henze's highly virtuosicFirst Violin Concerto (which he would go on to record on disc as well, with thecomposer conducting) alongside Martin's Magnificat.The Swiss composer had composed this unusually scored work, which one yearlater would be expanded into his Maria-Triptychon,for Schneiderhan and his wife, the soprano Irmgard Seefried - the Lucerne liverecording of the world premiere with the two dedicatees therefore represents anexceptional archive discovery. The early recording of Mozart's final violinconcerto on the other hand shows Schneiderhan as a representative of theViennese Mozart tradition. Here, his partner at the podium of the SwissFestival Orchestra is Paul Hindemith who can be experienced as a conductor ofclassical repertoire.
The 32-page booklet in three languages providesextensive background information on Wolfgang Schneiderhan in Lucerne, and alsofeatures photos from the festival archives published here for the very firsttime.
In cooperation with audite, LUCERNEFESTIVAL presents the "Historic Performances" series featuring outstandingconcert recordings of artists who have shaped the festival throughout itshistory. The aim of this CD edition is to rediscover treasures - most of whichhave not been released previously - from the first six decades of the festival,which was founded in 1938 with a special gala concert conducted by ArturoToscanini. These recordings have been made available by the archives of SRFSwiss Radio and Television, which has broadcast the Lucerne concerts from theoutset. Painstakingly re-mastered and supplemented with photos and materialsfrom the LUCERNE FESTIVAL archive, they represent a sonic history of thefestival.
Reviews
www.artalinna.com | 21 October 2017 | Jean-Charles Hoffelé | October 21, 2017 | source: http://www.artal... Magnificat
Ferdinand Leitner règle pour son soliste un orchestre abrupt ou aérien, d’une incroyable variété de timbres et d’atmosphères. Là encore, cette prise en concert me semble supérieure à celle réalisée en studio avec le compositeur. Portrait remarquable d’un violoniste qu’on oublie trop.Mehr lesen
De Gelderlander | 15-07-17 | Maarten-Jan Dongelmans | July 15, 2017 | source: https://www.geld... Belangwekkende wereldpremière met het echtpaar Schneiderhan
De sopraan opent met declamatorische inzetten en trekt meteen alle aandacht. Wat een krachtige, expressieve stem. In de loop van het Magnificat biedt haar strijkende echtgenoot steeds meer tegenwicht. [...] Indrukwekkend stuk, deze 'lofzang van Maria' van de Zwitser Martin. Onbegrijpelijk dat we een halve eeuw op een geluidsdrager met de wereldpremière hebben moeten wachten.Mehr lesen
www.concertonet.com | 05/09/2017 | Sébastien Gauthier | May 9, 2017 | source: http://concerton...
Schneiderhan fait montre de toute l’étendue de sa technique au fil des quatre mouvements de l’œuvre [...]Mehr lesen
Record Geijutsu | May.2017 | May 1, 2017
Japanische Rezension siehe PDF!Mehr lesen
Gramophone | March 2017 | Rob Cowan | March 1, 2017 | source: https://reader.e...
Finding Luzzato’s stylistic polar opposite isn’t easy but Wolfgang Schneiderhan comes pretty close. Best known for his dignified interpretationsMehr lesen
www.musicweb-international.com | March 2017 | Jonathan Woolf | March 1, 2017 | source: http://www.music...
Wolfgang Schneiderhan was a frequent performer at successive Lucerne festivals over the decades. The three works in this disc were recorded in theMehr lesen
I reviewed the earliest known example yet to have surfaced of Schneiderhan performing Mozart’s A Major concerto. That was a wartime inscription where the Orchestra of the German Opera House, Berlin was directed by Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt in 1943. The two men later collaborated on a studio performance, though the one conducted by Leitner and in particular self-directed by the violinist in 1967 are probably better known. Schneiderhan was renowned for his Mozart which was clean as a whistle and pure-toned, sparing with overt expressive devices, but suitably and sufficiently plangent in the slow movement. The playful wit he so suavely delivers in the finale can hardly have been hindered by the substitute conductor, one Paul Hindemith, who took the place of an indisposed Furtwängler. Admirers of the violinist will recall that he and Carl Seeman recorded Hindemith’s Third Violin Sonata.
Henze’s 1947 First Concerto is the work of a precocious twenty-one-year-old. It’s cast in four movements and is heard in this August 1964 traversal where the violinist is accompanied by Ferdinand Leitner, with whom Schneiderhan gave numerous concerto appearances and with whom he recorded in the studio. Though Henze parades a tone row the music is quite resolutely neo-classical in essence. With Leitner extracting a great deal of orchestral colour it’s a perfect vehicle for Schneiderhan’s stylistically apt musicianship. The scherzo is a sardonic march and the slow movement’s communing qualities, reaching a slow-moving threnody, are superbly and movingly realised here. The strong rhythmic charge of the finale, with a paragraph of erotic cantabile, is equally well projected.
Frank Martin had promised the violinist and his wife, soprano Irmgard Seefried, a joint work. Schneiderhan had recorded Martin’s Violin Concerto with Ernest Ansermet in 1952 so maintained a strong affinity for the composer’s music. After a long delay, there came the Magnificat, heard in this 1968 world premiere performance directed by Bernard Haitink. The stridently austere vocal part – no texts, unfortunately, in the booklet – suggests something of an anguished piece but gradually the music lightens in tone to embrace a kind of raptness of spirit, supported by Martin’s alert orchestral palette. Martin later incorporated this piece as the second movement of his Maria-Triptychon, a work the violinist was to perform in 1984 with Edith Mathis.
Hartmut Lück’s sleeve notes are excellent and the tapes, direct from the original masters, are in a particularly well-preserved state. This valuable triptych of performances shows Schneiderhan in the round in Lucerne.
Radio Stephansdom | 20.02.2017 | Michael Gmasz | February 20, 2017 | source: https://radiokla...
BROADCAST CD der Woche
Wolfgang Schneiderhan in Luzern
Wolfgang Schneiderhan gehört unbestritten zu den bedeutendsten Geigern, die unser Land im vergangenen Jahrhundert hervorgebracht hat. KonzertmeisterMehr lesen
Normalerweise sind es runde Jubiläen wie Geburtstage, Premieren oder auch Todestage, die Labels dazu veranlassen, bisher unveröffentlichtes Archivmaterial aus der Taufe zu heben. Bei audite und seinem Leiter Ludger Böckenhoff allerdings gehört es zur Unternehmensphilosophie, alten Aufnahmen neuen Glanz zu verleihen und somit bedeutende Künstler längst vergangener Tage wieder in Erinnerung zu rufen. Genauso geschehen ist das auch bei der jüngst veröffentlichten CD „Wolfgang Schneiderhan in Luzern“, mit Aufnahmen aus den Jahren 1952, 1964 und 1968. Drei Konzertmitschnitte, die natürlich nur ein kleines Schlaglicht auf die vielen Auftritte werfen können, die Schneiderhan in fast 40 Jahren am Vierwaldstättersee gespielt hat.
„Mit welcher tonlichen Noblesse und musikalischen Feinnervigkeit, mit welch unübertrefflichem Stilempfinden, technischer Brillanz und Eleganz wurde hier musiziert!“ So schwärmte 1952 ein Musikkritiker des Luzerner „Vaterlandes“ über Schneiderhans Mozart unter der Leitung von Paul Hindemith. Die CD lässt uns nun dieses Ereignis nacherleben, Mozart in bester Wiener Tradition, auf Manierismen verzichtend, stringent im Tempo und doch den nötigen Raum für kleine Rubati bietend. Dazu gibt es das erste von drei Violinkonzerten von Hans Werner Henze, entstanden 1947, und den Mitschnitt der Uraufführung von Frank Martins Magnificat, komponiert für Violine, Sopran und Orchester, also für Schneiderhan und seine Frau Irmgard Seefried. Sie ist natürlich auch in der Sopran-Solopartie zu erleben. Ein faszinierendes Tondokument, das die Qualität des legendären Geigers Wolfgang Schneiderhan in geeignetster Weise würdigt. Und wenn man, wie eingangs erwähnt, doch einen zeitlichen Grund zur Veröffentlichung dieser CD suchen wollte, sein Todestag jährt sich am 18. Mai zum 15. Mal.
hifi & records | 2/2017 | Uwe Steiner | February 1, 2017
Im lebhaften Mitschnitt musiziert er stürmisch expressiv. Das interessanteste Dokument gibt die von Bernard Haitink dirigierte Uraufführung von Frank Martins »Magnificat« wieder. Der Schweizer Komponist hatte das elfminütige Stück eigens für Schneiderhan und seine Frau, die große Irmgard Seefried, geschrieben. Eine Entdeckung!Mehr lesen
www.musicweb-international.com | January 2017 | Stephen Greenbank | January 30, 2017 | source: http://www.music...
In the spotlight of this latest volume in Audite's Lucerne Festival edition is the Austrian violinist Wolfgang Schneiderhan (1915-2002). He was one ofMehr lesen
Schneiderhan studied with Otakar Ševčík in Pisek and later with Julius Winkler in Vienna. He fulfilled the role of first Concertmaster of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra from 1933 to 1937, and then went on to lead the illustrious Vienna Philharmonic from 1937 to 1951. He later pursued a solo career, becoming one of the mainstays at Deutsche Grammophon. His repertoire focused on the Viennese classics, but he later developed an interest in contemporary music, and made commercial inscriptions of works by Martin, Henze and Stravinsky.
The Mozart A major Concerto is the earliest surviving example of Schneiderhan at Lucerne, dating from August 1952. At the helm of the Swiss Festival Orchestra is none other than Paul Hindemith, who had stepped in at short notice for an indisposed Wilhelm Furtwängler. I've long been familiar with Schneiderhan's DG recording of this work from February 1967, where he directs his own performance with the Berlin Philharmonic. In fact, on that occasion, he set down all five concertos, the Adagio in E and the two Rondos. The same poise, refinement and elegance informs this earlier live airing. Tempi feel comfortable, and phrasing natural and unforced. The slow movement is beautifully realized, with Schneiderhan eloquently shaping the phrases, and Hindemith providing sensitive support.
Hans Werner Henze wrote three violin concertos, and the first dates from 1947 when he was twenty-one. This live performance was taped in August 1964. The violinist later went on to record it for DG in May 1968 with the composer, himself, conducting. The work, with its echoes of Hindemith, Bartók and Stravinsky, is set in four movements, and covers a wide emotional range. It makes formidable technical demands on the soloist. Schneiderhan delivers a confident and assured performance. The opening movement is deftly scored with some colourful orchestration, which Ferdinand Leitner points up effectively. Schneiderhan brings energy and panache to the scherzo-like second movement. The slow movement which follows has a dream-like quality, and reminded me very much of the second movement of the Berg Concerto. The finale has a neo-classical flavour, and is here performed with verve and vigour. The success of the performance is confirmed by the enthusiastic applause at the end.
The live performance of Frank Martin's Magnificat for soprano and solo violin from 1968 happens to be the premiere. The vocalist is the distinguished German soprano Irmgard Seefried (1919-1988). Seefried was married to Schneiderhan and the work was written for and dedicated to the couple. The conductor on this occasion is Bernard Haitink. Schneiderhan had already performed the composer's Violin Concerto with Haitink at the Festival two years earlier. Martin originally set out to write a Stabat Mater, but changed course. Seefried adopts a declamatory tone in the opening pages, with the violin very much consigned to the background. Four minutes in, the mood becomes more settled, with the violin emerging from the shadows. After a while the music becomes more rhythmically charged and strident. I was surprised how well the violin and singer blend in the mix. Martin's orchestration is brilliantly scored and colourful. The work ends in an atmosphere of serenity and peace. It's regrettable that no text is provided.
Transferred from the original master tapes, the performances sound very fine. Audite are to be commended for restoring these archival treasures.
Opera Nederland | 25.01.2017 | Dr. Mark Duijnstee | January 25, 2017 | source: http://operanede...
Het ‘Magnificat’ stuwt naar een intense gevoel van vreugde en overweldigende achting als Maria het één en ander doorziet en haar zending aanneemt. De terughoudende Schneiderhan en de expressieve Seefried geven een enorme zeggingskracht aan het stuk. Ieder woord en elke noot is duidelijk en krijgt de juiste lading.Mehr lesen
BBC Music Magazine | January 2017 | Julian Haylock | January 1, 2017
Live performances from the 1950s and '60s that mark out Schneiderhan as a first-rate Mozartian and a valued champion of contemporary music in aMehr lesen
Musik & Theater | 01/02 Januar/Februar 2017 | Werner Pfister | January 1, 2017 Elf Minuten für die Ewigkeit
In Mozarts Violinkonzert Nr. 5 [...] exzelliert Schneiderhan in kantablen Geigenwonnen, und gleichzeitig musiziert er [...] seinen Mozart schlank und sehr agil. Solche Vorzüge bewähren sich auch im ersten Violinkonzert von Henze [...] das hier [...] eine rundum beeindruckende, stimmige Interpretation erfährt.Mehr lesen
Luzerner Zeitung | 14. Dezember 2016 | Fritz Schaub | December 14, 2016 | source: http://www.luzer... Geiger Wolfgang Schneiderhan – Ungestüm über die Klassikgötter hinaus
«Mit welcher tonlichen Noblesse und musikalischen Feinnervigkeit, mit welchem unübertrefflichen Stilempfinden, technischer Brillanz und Eleganz wurde hier musiziert!»Mehr lesen
Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk | KONZERT HISTORISCH | 13.12.2016 | 10:05-12:00 Uhr | December 13, 2016 | source: http://www.mdr.d...
BROADCAST
Gerühmt für sein natürliches Spiel – Wolfgang Schneiderhan
Herausragende Aufnahme mit Schneiderhan und Hindemith<br /> <br /> Mozarts A-Dur-Violinkonzert hören Sie in unserer Sendung "Konzert Historisch" in einem Mitschnitt vom 13. August 1952 aus dem Kunsthaus Luzern. Kein Geringerer als Paul Hindemith dirigierte dabei das Schweizer Festivalorchester. Als Solist ist Wolfgang Schneiderhan zu erleben.Mehr lesen
Mozarts A-Dur-Violinkonzert hören Sie in unserer Sendung "Konzert Historisch" in einem Mitschnitt vom 13. August 1952 aus dem Kunsthaus Luzern. Kein Geringerer als Paul Hindemith dirigierte dabei das Schweizer Festivalorchester. Als Solist ist Wolfgang Schneiderhan zu erleben.
www.pizzicato.lu | 02/12/2016 | Remy Franck | December 2, 2016 | source: http://www.pizzi... Hommage an Wolfgang Schneiderhan
Der österreichische Geiger Wolfgang Schneiderhan war 38 Jahre alt, als er unter Paul Hindemiths Leitung in Luzern das 5. Violinkonzert von MozartMehr lesen
Danach ist Schneiderhan in dem ebenfalls erstmals veröffentlichten Luzerner Live-Mitschnitt mit Henzes Erstem Violinkonzert zu hören, in dem er die verspielten Passagen mit den harscheren Formulierungen und den lyrischen Passagen spannungsvoll verbindet.
Abschließend erklingt Frank Martins ‘Magnificat’ für Sopran, Solovioline und Orchester. Der Schweizer Komponist schuf dieses außergewöhnlich besetzte Werk, das er ein Jahr später zu seinem Marien-Triptychon erweiterte, eigens für Schneiderhan und dessen Ehefrau, die Sopranistin Irmgard Seefried. Der hier veröffentlichte Mitschnitt der Welturaufführung mit den beiden Widmungsträgern ist also ein besonders wichtiges Tondokument. Martin vertonte den Text der Lutherbibel (also nicht die Einheitsübersetzung). Der Text ist im Booklet nicht enthalten, kann aber hier abgerufen werden: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnificat.
Das Werk hat nichts Freudiges, es ist eher eine fast fanatisch klingende Verehrung Gottes, und Irmgard Seefried zeichnet Maria, als sei sie in Transe.
With three very different works, this is a welcome homage to Austrian violinist Wolfgang Schneiderhan. His Mozart is extremely fresh and spontaneous, the high-contrast Henze Concerto well shaped. The Martin Magnificat, dedicated to the violinist and his wife Irmgard Seefried, is a truly special work, presented here in a very intense performance, recorded during the creation of the piece in Lucerne.
www.opusklassiek.nl | december 2016 | Aart van der Wal | December 1, 2016 | source: https://www.opus...
Mozarts laatste Vioolconcert gedijt in de typische Weense Mozart-traditie van de jaren vijftig. Dat we het nu anders gewend zijn doet aan het gloedvolle maar ook intieme karakter van Schneiderhands interpretatie niets af. Dit is een uitgave om te koesteren! Mehr lesen
Audiophile Audition | November 12, 2016 | Gary Lemco | November 12, 2016 | source: http://www.audau...
[...] utilizing explosive brass, percussion and piano – Schneiderhan’s violin tone remains rounded and secure, lustrous even in the provocative syntax and daunting shifts of bow application the composer requires.Mehr lesen
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