Though I missed last year's cut off for Record of the Year, 
                  I won't be so slack for 2010. One appreciates that releases 
                  of this kind speak to a specialised market. And there are duplications 
                  in the discography. And, true, it can be argued that some of 
                  the recordings are themselves rather murky. But not many are. 
                  And the duplications, being live, serve only to enhance, as 
                  so often, that extra communicative spirit that drives a musician 
                  in the throes of concert-giving. And there is the subject of 
                  this 8 CD box, that very special violinist, sometime violist, 
                  chamber colleague and conductor, Szymon Goldberg.
                The first disc is devoted to Bach, a composer (like Mozart) 
                  with whom the classicist Goldberg was much associated. There 
                  are examples of his violin playing and direction of the Netherlands 
                  Chamber Orchestra. In the A minor Concerto one can admire the 
                  great warmth and sense of expression he cultivates in the slow 
                  movement in particular. The E major is undated but has similarly 
                  unforced eloquence. It's a real pleasure to hear the late Marcia 
                  Curcio in the D major Brandenburg Concerto and so too the flautist 
                  Adriaan Bonsel. The sense of communing intimacy cultivated by 
                  these superior and selfless musicians informs the whole concerto. 
                  The Sixth Brandenburg derives from the same concert as the A 
                  minor solo concerto. Here Goldberg plays his viola. 
                The other item that comes from that 1960 concert is the Concerto 
                  in D minor for Oboe and Violin, which opens the second disc. 
                  The oboist is the august Haakon Stotijn. They make as effective 
                  team as did Menuhin and Goossens in their celebrated recording 
                  of around the same time. The remainder of this second disc varies 
                  widely. There's a fine Schubert Adagio and Rondo with the orchestra 
                  from 1966. The next item though offers a surprise. It's the 
                  1953 commercial recording Goldberg made of Schumann's A minor 
                  Violin Sonata in New York with Artur Balsam. It's the only commercial 
                  recording in this otherwise all-live set and was included at 
                  the request of the late Miyoko Yamane Goldberg. Balsam also 
                  recorded this with Louis Kaufman but the Decca he made with 
                  Goldberg is a study in tonal and expressive contrasts. The ensemble 
                  is splendid, the performance tasteful but committed. It may 
                  be anomalous but I'm glad it was included. The Dvo?ák 
                  Romantic Pieces suffer from indifferent sound but are hugely 
                  communicative. The Debussy Sonata again has only so-so sound. 
                  Sleeve note writer Tully Potter rates the performance very highly 
                  but I rate it lower. It's less tense and evocative than Franco-Belgian 
                  performances - those of Dubois or Francescatti, say - and though 
                  it is certainly evocative it's slightly too slow. 
                Disc 3 gives us the 1950 performance of the original manuscript 
                  version of Beethoven's Concerto with Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra 
                  of New York and Dimitri Mitropoulos. The differences are few, 
                  though one does listen out for the novelties. The performance 
                  is noble-seraphic. Coupled with it is the Brahms Double Concerto 
                  with Zara Nelsova and Oakland Symphony under Gerhard Samuel 
                  (1967). They make a formidable team, the two great string players, 
                  and we are fortunate to have this inscription as neither recorded 
                  it in studio conditions. The ensemble is secure and there's 
                  strong, urgent playing especially from Nelsova. The sound is 
                  patchy and a bit torrid in places. 
                Three concertos sit proudly in the fourth disc. The Mendelssohn 
                  is with the Concertgebouw Orchestra and Eduard van Beinum in 
                  1957. It's a beautifully poised and articulate performance of 
                  one of the most difficult concertos successfully to bring off. 
                  Expressive gestures are pure, and once or twice the conductor 
                  lets go with a few emphatic lines that unleash some brisk and 
                  pure articulation from the soloist. There's a very slow Andante 
                  with sculpted wind harmonies. Mozart's D major is played and 
                  directed by Goldberg with his Netherlands Chamber Orchestra. 
                  It's undated. There is fresh interplay here, warmly moulded. 
                  The slow movement is phrased with great feeling. The final concerto 
                  is Berg's. The purity and clarity of the playing stamp it as 
                  an important addition to Goldberg's discography. It's with the 
                  Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and William Steinberg and dates 
                  from 1952. There's pellucid precision in his playing and the 
                  ex-concertmaster, unlike some eminent soloists, retained his 
                  impeccable sense of rhythm. 
                The fifth disc is largely terra cognita if you are a Casals 
                  collector. Goldberg and Serkin join Casals for Beethoven's E 
                  flat major trio and all three play with spirit; the power, affection 
                  and sensitive elasticity of the slow pages in the long opening 
                  movement is a real highlight. The Kakadu Variations (June 1954) 
                  is equally effective, Goldberg making a good fist of ensemble 
                  tonal pairing with Casals - not easy by this stage. Music & 
                  Arts CD-1113 has both these performances in a big 13 CD box 
                  of live Prades material. This disc ends with a real rarity however. 
                  The pianist Victor Babin accompanies Goldberg in his own Konzertstück, 
                  a twenty minute piece that varies from Passacaglia-like seriousness 
                  to jaunty march themes and concentrated reflective slower sections. 
                  You could hardly hope to encounter a more authentic performance 
                  of the Babin than that one; how many have played it since? 
                We return to Prades in the sixth disc for the Ghost Trio 
                  with Casals and Horszowski. The violinist is in excellent form 
                  once again managing the difficult feat of a decent ensemble 
                  with Casals whose sepulchral entries in the Largo assai 
                  are tremendously intense. Again this is on the M&A set referred 
                  to above. Goldberg plays Haydn's Concerto in C major with exemplary 
                  purity of tone and sustained legato in the slow movement over 
                  the pizzicato accompaniment. Schwarzkopf is the soprano visitor 
                  in the scena Non parti bell' idol mio - Berenice, che fai? 
                  and proves regal under Goldberg's direction. There is one solo 
                  Bach Partita and one Sonata, both recorded in the BBC studios 
                  in 1970. Though he was quite well past his best and his tempi 
                  are considered he still retained directional security in the 
                  G minor Sonata, vesting its Presto finale with fire. In the 
                  D minor Partita he reserves the greatest sense of drama, naturally, 
                  for the Chaconne. He alternates legato with biting lower 
                  string articulation, and plays in a linear way with hugely effective 
                  drone effects. Again the Beethoven sonata, that ends this disc, 
                  is available in the Casals Prades box. I greatly admired the 
                  Goldberg-Horszowski partnership in the Op. 30 No.1. There's 
                  freshness, lithe attack, expressive tone colour, beautiful shaping, 
                  and real characterisation.
                The final disc is another treat, all recorded at the Aspen 
                  Festival in the mid 1960s. There are patrician elements to his 
                  playing of the rigorous and exacting Bartók solo sonata 
                  and these lend the performance quite a refined sense. It contrasts 
                  with those grittier, more folkloric traversals. There are some 
                  buffeting noises on the tape. His Stravinsky Duo Concertante 
                  is cleverly textured - the Dithyrambe in particular is 
                  unusually expressive in his hands. His colleague here is Brooks 
                  Smith. For the Webern Four Pieces he teamed up with Beveridge 
                  Webster for the elucidation of these elliptical and concentrated 
                  masterpieces. The performance of Schoenberg's Fantasy, again 
                  with Webster, dates from 1966.
                In the extensive booklet there is a complete non-commercial 
                  discography. Idly flipping through, my eye was drawn to the 
                  following; a performance of the Bach Double with Jan Damen in 
                  1950 (once on a Radio Nederland transcription LP but never CD); 
                  the Brahms Concerto with Ormandy (1967); the Handel Op.1 No.13 
                  sonata with Brooks Smith, released on a rare LP and CD; Hindemith's 
                  solo sonata Op.31 No.1 and a 1978 performance of the Kammermusik, 
                  as violist, with Charles Mackerras and the BBC SO; Milhaud's 
                  Second Violin Sonata and Concerto de Printemps - both on Goldberg 
                  Memorial Fund limited edition CDs; and the Mozart Sinfonia Concertante 
                  with Abraham Skernik and Walter Susskind conducting. And before 
                  I make myself more lustful of the things that may yet emerge, 
                  I'd better stop there.
                As I noted above, boxes such as these are not for everyone, 
                  or even for every specialist. But for me it's a Record of the 
                  Year. 
                Jonathan Woolf
                Full track list
                  CD 1 [77:33] 
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
                  
                  Violin Concerto No. 1 in A minor, BWV 1041 [15:45]1
                  rec. 1960
                  Violin Concerto No. 2 in E major, BWV 1042 [19:42]
                  rec. undated
                  Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D major, BWV 1050 [23:18]2
                  Brandenburg Concerto No. 6 in Bb major, BWV 1051 [18:46]3
                  rec. 1960
                  Janny van Wering (harpsichord)1,3, Marcia Curcio 
                  (piano)2, Adriaan Bonsel (flute)2/ Netherlands 
                  Chamber Orchestra
                  CD 2 [76:24]
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
                  
                  Concerto in D minor for Oboe and Violin, after BWV 1060 [15:41]
                  Sinfonia to Cantata BWV 21, "Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis" 
                  [3:24]
                  Haakon Stotijn (oboe), Janny van Wering (harpsichord)/Netherlands 
                  Chamber Orchestra
                  rec. 1960
                  Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828) 
                  Adagio and Rondo in A major, D. 438 [12:40]
                  Netherlands Chamber Orchestra
                  rec. 1966
                  Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
                  Violin Sonata No. 1 in A minor, Op. 105 [17:31]
                  Artur Balsam (piano) [American Decca LP]
                  rec. 1953
                  Claude DEBUSSY (1862-1918)
                  Violin Sonata in G minor [13:07]
                  Antonín DVORÁK 
                  (1841-1904) 
                  Four Romantic Pieces, Op. 75 [10:21]
                  Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714-1787) 
                  
                  "Melodie" from Orfeo ed Euridice arranged Fritz Kreisler 
                  [3:31]
                  Artur Balsam (piano)
                  rec. 1951
                  CD 3 [76:36]
                  Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
                  Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61 (original version) [44:22]
                  Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York/Dimitri Mitropoulos
                  rec. 1950
                  Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
                  Double Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra in A minor, 
                  Op.102 [33:11]
                  Zara Nelsova (cello)/Oakland Symphony Orchestra/Gerhard Samuel
                  rec. 1967
                  CD 4 [77:45]
                  Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
                  Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64 [26:45]
                  Concertgebouw Orchestra/Eduard van Beinum
                  rec. 1957
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
                  
                  Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major, K. 218 [24:37]
                  Netherlands Chamber Orchestra
                  rec. undated
                  Alban BERG (1885-1935)
                  Violin Concerto [26:18]
                  Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra/William Steinberg
                  rec. 1952
                  CD 5 [74:45] 
                  Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
                  Variations in G major on "Ich bin der Schneider Kakadu", 
                  Op. 121a [21:52]
                  Piano Trio in E flat major, Op. 70, No.2 [34:55]
                  Pablo Casals (cello), Rudolf Serkin (piano)
                  rec. 1954
                  Victor BABIN (1908-1972)
                  Konzerstücke [20:03]
                  Victor Babin (piano)
                  rec. 1966
                  CD 6 [63:18]
                  Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
                  Piano Trio in D major, Op. 70 No. 1, "Geister" [29:59]
                  Pablo Casals (cello), Mieczyslaw Horszowski (piano)
                  rec. 1954
                  Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
                  Violin Concerto in C major, Hob. VIIa: 1 [20:42]
                  Netherlands Chamber Orchestra (1966)
                  Scena, "Non parti bell' idol mio - Berenice, che fai?", 
                  Hob.XXIVa: 10 [11:30]
                  Elizabeth Schwarzkopf (soprano)/Netherlands Chamber Orchestra
                  rec. 1958
                  CD 7 [68:33] 
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
                  
                  Sonata in G minor for Unaccompanied Violin, BWV 1001 [18:18]
                  Partita in D minor for Unaccompanied Violin, BWV 1004 [25:55]
                  rec. 1970
                  Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
                  Sonata for Violin and Piano in A major, Op. 30 No.1 [24:11]
                  Mieczyslaw Horszowski (piano)
                  rec. 1954
                  CD 8 [57:09]
                  Béla BARTÓK (1881 
                  - 1945) 
                  Sonata for Solo Violin [27:23]
                  rec. 1965
                  Igor STRAVINSKY (1882-1971) 
                  
                  Duo Concertante [15:18]
                  Brooks Smith (piano)
                  rec. 1968
                  Anton WEBERN (1883-1945) 
                  Four Pieces, Op. 7 [5:16]
                  Beveridge Webster (piano)
                  rec. 1966
                  Arnold SCHOENBERG (1874-1951) 
                  Fantasy, Op. 47 [8:59]
                  Beveridge Webster (piano)
                  rec. 1966
                  Szymon Goldberg (violin solo and conductor) on all recordings 
                  unless otherwise indicated. 
                  Notes in English and Japanese; includes a complete discography 
                  of non-commercial recordings. Released with the kind permission 
                  of the Szymon Goldberg Estate.