Richard Eilenberg was one of the best light music composers 
      not named Strauss. I said so when he first came to my attention, on two 
      volumes of the Johann Strauss Society’s “
Spirit 
      of Vienna” series. His 
Die Jagd nach dem Glück stood out from 
      the crowd as the most tuneful, joyful, memorable piece in the series. Now 
      here’s a CD-length solo outing for Eilenberg to prove his worth. 
According 
      to ArkivMusic, this all-Eilenberg CD is the first ever.
       
      It’s a treat! From the real and imitative birdcalls of the 
Die Mühle 
      im Schwarzwald idyll to the breezy, oh-so-fashionable step of nearly 
      every march on the program (the arrival of the Cossacks, who come bearing 
      quotes of Brahms and Liszt, is especially fun), there are many delights 
      here. 
Unter Italien’s blauem Himmel proves Eilenberg’s ability 
      to write Strauss-style waltzes with full introductions and lush tunes; the 
      Mandolin Serenade is for anybody who likes Strauss’s Pizzicato Polka. The 
      Prince Heinrich march is a great number.
       
      The acoustic suffers from the same deficiencies as Marco Polo’s old Strauss 
      family series. Despite a totally different orchestra, venue, production 
      team, and label, CPO seems to have replicated the unfortunate sound of the 
      old Slovak Marco Polo discs: reverberant winds and brass paired with recessed 
      strings, wacky balances, and a tiny violin section. Consider the start of 
      the Norwegian galop: the flute and oboe accompanying the violins actually 
      drown them out. Still, if you’re used to the Marco Polo Strauss series, 
      you won’t mind.
       
      One interesting biographical fact about Richard Eilenberg is only hinted 
      at in the booklet. A photograph shows his grave, which he shares with one 
      ‘Dorothea Eilenberg’. I did some digging on Google and found evidence that 
      Dorothea was his wife, which is striking, since Dorothea was born when Richard 
      was 41, so when he died at the age of 79 she was only 38. She lived for 
      over forty more years. Richard Eilenberg was born in 1848, the year of Europe’s 
      great revolutions; his wife died in 1970, two years after the Tet Offensive. 
      Think about that for a moment.
       
      For fans of Viennese light music, a cheerful addition to their shelves.
       
      
Brian Reinhart
       
      One of the best waltz and polka composers not named “Strauss”. For fans 
      of Viennese light music.