These star-studded recordings represent a sizeable 
          chunk of Horowitz’s pitifully small legacy of concerto performances. 
          Off-air recordings of the second Brahms – from Lucerne in 1939 and a 
          1948 NBC broadcast – have swelled the discography but it’s still a small 
          return for so great a musician. 
        
 
        
The performances on Naxos’s disc – from 1940-41 – have 
          their admirers but I’m not one of them. Nor it has to be said is sleeve-note 
          writer Ian Julier an admirer of the Brahms in particular. His notes 
          are forthright and honest in this respect and a welcome change. I wish 
          more writers were as critically informed. The Brahms is, to my ears, 
          a terrible performance. Julier notes the result to be "detached…brusque...reluctant 
          to engage in true dialogue…" and from its ridiculously over emphatic 
          first entry onwards I am in total agreement. I would add that the first 
          movement features some notably choppy rhythm, mechanical phrasing, both 
          perfunctory and indifferent; that Toscanini’s crisp phrase endings sound 
          more and more unpleasantly enervating; that Horowitz’s descending treble 
          run in this movement is so naughty as to be laughable; that the inflexibility 
          is endemic; that there are distinct tempo strains between soloist and 
          conductor; and also that the infamous lower frequency muddiness in the 
          bass still haunts the entire recording, despite the restoration. 
        
 
        
In the second movement Toscanini is rhetorical and 
          gestural and Horowitz makes precisely nothing of the melting tune; I’ve 
          never heard playing less engaged and there is a cold metronomic malaise 
          over the whole movement. Even Frank Miller, doyen of cellists, sounds 
          constrained and withdrawn in his third movement solo – not unfeeling 
          just not much heart – doubtless the fault of a conductor and a soloist 
          who skate remorselessly over the surface of the music. The finale gives 
          off some heavy accents – albeit with some attractive, quiescent playing 
          – but what an air of sheer triviality hangs over the performance, what 
          remorseless mediocrity. The following year Fischer and Fürtwangler 
          were taped in a live recording of the concerto – fistfuls of wrong notes, 
          indifferent sound, but what a performance, what tangible, extraordinary 
          engagement, next to which Horowitz and Toscanini shrivel to almost total 
          insignificance. 
        
 
        
The Tchaikovsky is better but it’s still not a reading 
          that I enjoyed. In fact by the end I had long since wearied of it. It 
          opens in overwrought, thunderous and hotheaded style – though there 
          is, as Julier says, much that is attractive – tremendous reserves of 
          intensity, colour and weight. There is also an occasional gracefulness 
          that comes as a welcome relief from the high-octane passion and frankly 
          all-too-often hysterical intensity of the reading as a whole. I think 
          it’s true to say that a performance of this kind does considerable damage 
          to the fabric of the concerto – listen to Rubinstein and Barbirolli 
          instead; a performance of real understanding. 
        
 
        
        
Jonathan Woolf