CLICK HERE TO EXPLORE HOW TO GET FREE MUSIC FROM THE MUSICAL HERITAGE SOCIETY

Our Newest Review & 50 Years of Essays

The MHS and Jazz Heritage Record Labels

What's On Sale!

Hundreds of Selections to Listen To

Title

This beloved pianist - possibly the most recorded pianist of the last century - is known for his nearly "non-virtuosic" style, where he plays in a lyric manner, emphasizing the composer over technique.

 

He also led the acceptance of the performance of J.S. Bach on the piano - once a controversial artistic statement. 

 

This collection features over 4 hours of glorious solo Bach, played with the touch of one of the great lyric pianists who ever recorded.

 

"THE BEST AVAILABLE RECORDING OF THESE WORKS ON PIANO." --GRAMOPHONE MAGAZINE

 

VIVALDI: CONCERTI & CHAMBER MUSIC FROM THE MUSICAL HERITAGE SOCIETY RECORDINGS - New York Sinfonietta, Max Goberman (AN MHS MAIN SELECTION)

A selection of concerti and chamber works performed by one of the first ensembles devoted to baroque music in America - the New York Sinfonietta. 

 

The remarkable Max Goberman, founder and conductor of the New York Sinfonietta was not a man of small musical ambitions. He took on two tasks in the 1950s: his first was to record the entire orchestral works of Antonio Vivaldi. He established the New York Sinfonietta to do just that - and made 17 LPs devoted entirely to the concerti and chamber music of Vivaldi.

 

His second task: to record all of the symphonies of Haydn.

 

The great New York musicians of the 1950s are represented - Felix Galimir, Walter Trampler &  Julius Baker are soloists in many of the recordings, which were world premieres when they were released via Goberman’s own label, and then MHS in the 1960s.

VIVALDI: CONCERTI & CHAMBER MUSIC FROM THE MUSICAL HERITAGE SOCIETY RECORDINGS - New York Sinfonietta, Max Goberman (AN MHS MAIN SELECTION)

CHOOSE YOUR DIGITAL FILE FORMAT
$29.99

EXPLORING MUSIC - SAILING TO THE END OF VIVALDI

SAILING TO THE END OF VIVALDI

by David White

Once upon a time there was a world without Vivaldi – and not simply because he hadn’t been born yet. One of the most remarkable musical stories of the 20th century was the discovery of the entire universe of music composed by Antonio Vivaldi. The story of his neglect and revival has been told – in the early issues of The Musical Heritage Review there are many articles about the dazzling finds that scholars were introducing to a music-loving public, at that very moment.

 

Now, in our century, after nearly 100 years has passed since the vault doors opened to the world, Vivaldi is musical wallpaper – renown, and played and overplayed enough so that opinions of whether “everything sounds alike” (a direct quote from a Vivaldi article in 1992), or whether Vivaldi is best served by being the composer of the most well-known classical music work on the planet.

 

This is not the space for this debate. We’re going to accept that the discovery of the music of Vivaldi might have been the most important or certainly in the discussion as the most important development in “classical” music that took place during the 20th century.

 

So, when Max Goberman began his remarkably ambitious musical journey to record all the works of Vivaldi in the late 1950s, on his own subscription record label, it wasn’t entirely an entirely insane concept. At that time, scholarship around Vivaldi was just barely entering the mainstream – in fact, the essay included in this issue “Vivaldi: Worthy of Rescue” tackles this issue, as the “powers” in control of access to Vivaldi’s music had decreed that instrumental music would be first out, to define Vivaldi’s reputation, and the essay writer makes an impassioned plea for the release of more of Vivaldi’s sacred works, believing them to be the true musical core of Vivaldi’s genius.

 

So when we look today at a “complete works” of Vivaldi, there’s lots of asterisks and quotation marks (as I just used) because it’s BARELY complete – it’s complete as we know it so far. And when Max G started on his journey, the entirety of Vivaldi was probably one-tenth of what is known so far – few major choral works, the barest knowledge of the concerti and chamber music yet to be uncovered, he really was sailing toward the New World with no idea of whether he was ever going to get there, or what he would find along the way.

 

His unfortunate and tragic death at age 51 might, without exaggeration, have kept certain works by Haydn and Vivaldi from the public ears for a decade or more. Goberman was embarking upon recording both - simultaneously - and his cycle of the complete symphonies of Haydn and had a clear and insurmountable lead in the race (that was eventually won by The Musical Heritage Society’s series conducted by Ernst Marzendorfer). So when Goberman died of a heart attack on December 31, 1962, both projects stopped, and efforts to duplicate it were widely scattered. The first complete Haydn symphony cycle was completed in 1971 (Goberman had completed recordings of 52 symphonies of the 107, from 1960 to 1962). And the works of Vivaldi grew to nearly abstract levels – Goberman recorded 70 works for his own label.  These recordings – which you are about to hear revived – were acquired by Musical Heritage Society in the 1960s after his death. And no one has been so maniacal to suggest they could record the complete works of Vivaldi since – it’s almost naïve and charming in retrospect.

 

These recordings – 2 hours’ worth, chosen from the 17 LPs released by MHS in the mid 1960s – are being issued to the public for the first time in 50 years. What you hear probably won’t suddenly change your mind about Vivaldi (good or bad), but you can’t help but get a sense of Lewis and Clark, or the Mercury 7 when you listen.


So MUCH has changed in the 60 years since these recordings were made – performance practices are different, these recordings tend toward a Romantic approach (Goberman’s day job - really his night job - was conducting Broadway shows, most famously “West Side Story”, for which he won a Grammy Award). He draws that from his musicians – the cream of Juilliard and a bit of Curtis as well made up Goberman’s band the “New York Sinfonietta”. Top notch soloists include flautist Julius Baker, violist Walter Trampler, and violinist Felix Galimir. And though the years – and the advent of “historically informed performance” have redefined our aural vocabulary of Vivaldi, these performances offer beautiful moments, and this collection does prove that 2 hours of Vivaldi is better than almost 2 hours of anything else you can pump through your speakers.

 

So much more could be written – but we are told the entire set will be reissued during the course of the next year!

 

TRACK LISTING

Concerto in C Major for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, bassoon, 2 violins, strings and harpsichord, RV 557

Flutes - Julius Baker and Harold Bennett
Oboes - Leonard Arner and Harry Smyles
Bassoon - Elias Carmen
Violins - Paul Gershman and Fred Manzella

 

Concerto in C Major "For The Feast of St. Lawrence" for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 violins, strings and harpsichord, RV 556

Flutes - Samuel Baron and Harold Jones
Oboes - Leonard Arner and Harry Smyles
Clarinets - Charles Paashaus and Walter Lewis
Bassoon - Anthony Checchia
Violins - Felix Galimir and Leonid Bolotine
Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle

 

Concerto in D Minor for viola d'amore, strings and harpsichord, RV 394

Viola d'amore - Walter Trampler

 

Trio Sonata in F Major for 2 violins and basso continuo, RV 68

Violins - Max Goberman and Fred Manzella
Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle
Violoncello - Jean Schneider

 

Concerto for Strings in A Major, RV 158

Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle

 

Sonata in E-Flat Major, "al Santo Sepolcro" for Two Violins, Viola and Figured Bass, RV 130

Violins - Max Goberman and Fred Manzella
Viola - Betty Yokell
Violoncello -Jean Schneider
Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle

 

Concerto for Strings in D Minor, 'Madrigalesco' RV 129

 The New York Sinfonietta

Concerto in D Major for flute, oboe, violin, bassoon and basso continuo, "La pastorella", RV 95

Flute - Julius Baker
Oboe - Harry Shulman
Violin - Max Goberman
Bassoon - Anthony Checchia
Violoncello - Jean Schneider

 

Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77

Violins - Max Goberman, Fred Manzella
Violoncello - Jean Schneider

 

Concerto for Strings in A Major, RV 159

 The New York Sinfonietta

Concerto in E-flat Major for bassoon, strings and harpsichord, RV 483

Bassoon - Frank Schwartz

 

Concerto in D Major for flute, oboe, violin, bassoon and basso continuo, RV 94

Flute - Julius Baker 
Oboe - Harry Shulman
Violin - Max Goberman
Bassoon - Anthony Checchia
Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle
Violoncello - Jean Schneider

 

Concerto in A Major for viola d'amore, strings and harpsichord, RV 396

Viola d'amore - Walter Trampler
Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle

 

Trio Sonata in C minor, RV 83

Violin - Felix Galimir
Violoncello - Charles McCracken
Harpsichord - Eugenia Earle
Bassoon - Anthony Checchia

OUR REVIEW

LINER NOTES

SOUND SAMPLE: VIVALDI: CONCERTO IN D MAJOR, RV 94, I. Allegro 

Poster

SOUND SAMPLE: VIVALDI: SONATA in E-FLAT MAJOR, "al Santo Sepolcro" I. Allegro

Poster
Title

SOUND SAMPLES

LINER NOTES

Title