NATHAN MILSTEIN- Lucerne Festival Historic Performances: Nathan Milstein (Mendelssohn & Dvorak: Violin Concertos) [Live]
His vigorous, intensive tone; his unsentimental, straightforward playing; his boundless virtuosity: these are the trademarks of Nathan Milstein, a violin giant of the last century. This album features two Lucerne concert recordings from the 1950s, issued here for the first time, featuring the violin concertos of Felix Mendelssohn and AntonÃn Dvorák, displaying "Nathan the Great" at the height of his art. Milstein had a particular fondness for Dvorák's A minor concerto: in his performance of August 1955, conducted by Ernest Ansermet, the music is ablaze, everything is highly charged. The Mendelssohn concerto was another favorite which Milstein recorded several times. His Lucerne performance of August 1953 alongside kindred spirit Igor Markevitch seems unusual even today. Milstein's tone is piercingly intensive, relentless, unsentimental and yet consumed with grief: high-octane music-making. Added to that are fast tempi, a sinewy tone and razor-sharp accuracy in the realization of filigree figurations. All this seems positively modern. But for exactly that reason Milstein met with a sense of disconcertment from certain contemporaries. Although considered "capable of magical things upon a violin", his playing was also, at times, regarded as overly cool. Milstein performed at the Lucerne Festival from 1949 until 1966.
Tracklist:
- Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 64: I. Allegro Molto Appassionato - (Live)
- Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 64: II. Andante - (Live)
- Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 64: III. Allegretto Non Troppo - Allegro Molto Vivace (Live)
- Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 53: I. Allegro, Ma Non Troppo - Quasi Moderato - (Live)
- Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 53: II. Adagio, Ma Non Troppo (Live)
- Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 53: III. Finale. Allegro Giocoso, Ma Non Troppo (Live)
His vigorous, intensive tone; his unsentimental, straightforward playing; his boundless virtuosity: these are the trademarks of Nathan Milstein, a violin giant of the last century. This album features two Lucerne concert recordings from the 1950s, issued here for the first time, featuring the violin concertos of Felix Mendelssohn and AntonÃn Dvorák, displaying "Nathan the Great" at the height of his art. Milstein had a particular fondness for Dvorák's A minor concerto: in his performance of August 1955, conducted by Ernest Ansermet, the music is ablaze, everything is highly charged. The Mendelssohn concerto was another favorite which Milstein recorded several times. His Lucerne performance of August 1953 alongside kindred spirit Igor Markevitch seems unusual even today. Milstein's tone is piercingly intensive, relentless, unsentimental and yet consumed with grief: high-octane music-making. Added to that are fast tempi, a sinewy tone and razor-sharp accuracy in the realization of filigree figurations. All this seems positively modern. But for exactly that reason Milstein met with a sense of disconcertment from certain contemporaries. Although considered "capable of magical things upon a violin", his playing was also, at times, regarded as overly cool. Milstein performed at the Lucerne Festival from 1949 until 1966.
Tracklist:
- Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 64: I. Allegro Molto Appassionato - (Live)
- Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 64: II. Andante - (Live)
- Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 64: III. Allegretto Non Troppo - Allegro Molto Vivace (Live)
- Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 53: I. Allegro, Ma Non Troppo - Quasi Moderato - (Live)
- Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 53: II. Adagio, Ma Non Troppo (Live)
- Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 53: III. Finale. Allegro Giocoso, Ma Non Troppo (Live)