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alternatively
CD: Crotchet
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Viennese Waltz Transcriptions
Richard STRAUSS
Till Eulenspiegel - einmal anders (arr. Hasenöhrl) [8:23]
Johann STRAUSS II
Wein, Weib und Gesang, op.333 (arr. Berg) [12:45]
Josef LANNER
Steyrische Tänze, op.165 (arr. Weinmann) [5:27]
Johann STRAUSS II
Rosen aus dem Süden, op.388 (arr. Schoenberg) [9:37]
Johann STRAUSS I
Wiener Gemüts-Walzer, op.116 (arr. Weinmann) [7:09]
Johann STRAUSS II
Schatzwalzer, op.418 (arr. Webern) [8:24]
Berliner
Soloisten, Elisabeth Leonskaja (piano), Philip Moll (harmonium)
rec. April 1989, Teldec Studios, Berlin. DDD
WARNER APEX
2564 68642-1 [52:27]
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I like transcriptions of Viennese Waltzes and I like transcriptions
of classical works by the boys of the Second Viennese School.
Ergo, I love transcriptions of those, by them.
An Apex reissue of a Teldec recording offers just that: The
Berlin Soloists with Elisabeth Leonskaja and Philip Moll (piano
and
harmonium, respectively) tackle J.Strauss II with “Wein,
Weib und Gesang”, “Rosen aus dem Süden”, “Schatzwalzer” in
transcriptions by Berg, Schoenberg and Webern, respectively.
Josef Lanner and J.Strauss I are represented with an Alexander
Weinmann transcription of the Styrian Dances op.165 and the Wiener
Gemüts-Walzer. All that is ably performed and it suffices
for intuitive swaying to and fro while listening. It doesn’t,
however, possess that last bit of keenness and bite that would
lift it above other such collections, of which there are a fair
amount by now. The flimsy, bare-bones presentation - next stop
mp3 - doesn’t help, either. What makes the release noteworthy
at all is the first piece included. Richard Strauss’ “Till
Eulenspiegel” arranged, transformed, and waltzified. There’s
a reason the Viennese composer, musicologist, and teacher Franz
Hasenöhrl (1885-1970; that’s his real name, by the
way, in case you are thinking “surely ‘Bunny-ears’ has got to
be a pseudonym) called it: “Till Eulenspiegel - quite different!”
Perhaps that’s enough of a curiosity to pique your interest.
Or you just want to dip into these transcriptions (MusicWeb’s Paul
Serotsky likes them) at a budget price and you don’t
mind the lack of presentation - in which case the Apex disc
has its obvious attractions. Myself, I rather prefer the Berlin
Classics recording of the Berliner Streichquartett which
contains the same J.Strauss II hits - and a few more - and
is played with a greater affinity for the musical region in
which
the sounds of the Waltz King and the Pantonalists merge and
become one. The Berlin Soloists’ recording, in comparison,
sounds much more like straight-forward Strauss, except with
a harmonium.
If you like either of those discs or transcriptions in general,
do also look for À nos amours, a
disc on Ambroisie by the chamber group Diabolicus (conducted
by Dietrich Henschel). Rather than just going with J.Strauss
II or his musical or actual relatives or his namesake, it adds
Wagner, Schubert, Luigi Denza, and Ferruccio Busoni arrangements
by Schoenberg (four by him - one by Berg, one by Erwin Stein,
and the Siegfried-Idyll doesn’t need transcription)
to the mix. And Diabolicus plays with the verve and edge that
turns each bit from forgettable finger-food into an unforgettable amuse-gueule.
Jens F. Laurson
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