Covers + lossless, Not my Rip
1. Chaconne in G minor by Tommaso Antonio Vitali
Performer: David Oistrakh (Violin), Vladimir Yampolsky (Piano)
Period: Baroque
Notes: 1949 - 1951
2. Concerto for Violin no 5 in A major, K 219 "Turkish" by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Performer: David Oistrakh (Violin)
Conductor: Nikolai S. Golovanov
Orchestra/Ensemble: Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra
Period: Classical
Written: 1775; Salzburg, Austria
Notes: 1949 - 1951
3. Concerto for Piano, Violin and Cello in C major, Op. 56 "Triple Concerto" by Ludwig van Beethoven
Performer: David Oistrakh (Violin), Vladimir Knushevitsky (Cello), Lev Oborin (Piano)
Conductor: Nikolai S. Golovanov
Orchestra/Ensemble: Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra
Period: Classical
Written: 1804; Vienna, Austria
Notes: 1949 - 1951
4. Hungarian Dances (21) for Orchestra, WoO 1: no 5 in G minor by Johannes Brahms
Performer: Vladimir Yampolsky (Piano), David Oistrakh (Violin)
Period: Romantic
Written: 1868-1880; Austria
Notes: 1949 - 1951
5. Hungarian Dances (21) for Orchestra, WoO 1: no 8 in A minor by Johannes Brahms
Performer: David Oistrakh (Violin), Vladimir Yampolsky (Piano)
Period: Romantic
Written: 1868; Austria
Notes: 1949 - 1951
6. Hungarian Dances (21) for Orchestra, WoO 1: no 9 in E minor by Johannes Brahms
Performer: David Oistrakh (Violin), Vladimir Yampolsky (Piano)
Period: Romantic
Written: 1868; Austria
Notes: 1949 - 1951
7. Hungarian Dances (21) for Orchestra, WoO 1: no 20 in E minor by Johannes Brahms
Performer: Vladimir Yampolsky (Piano), David Oistrakh (Violin)
Period: Romantic
Written: 1880; Austria
Notes: 1949 - 1951
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3 comments:
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Ugh! Unbelievable. Thank you very much for this gift.
Have you ever seen (and listen to) Rimsky-Korsakov's Sheherazade with Bolshoi Opera Orchestra under the baton of Golovanov with Oistrakh as the violin soloist?
i own a 6 record set (78s, of course) and never have seen it either on LP or on CD...
having no 78 playback device, i've heard it only some 3 or 4 times. that is really great rendition complementary to this one.
BTW, Beethoven's Triple is not among my favourites but such an ensemble like this... fantastic.
the only rendition leaving this far backwards is the Edinburgh one with Michelangeli, de Vito and Mainardi playing & Furtwängler conducting. but it hasn't been recorded at all...
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