OehmsClassics, the independent German record label, was founded in 2003 by Dieter Oehms. Part of the Naxos Music Group since 2018, the label focuses on productions from opera houses such as the Frankfurt Opera, Deutsche Oper Berlin and Aalto Theater Essen. Among the label’s extensive roster of well-known artists are Stanisław Skrowaczewski, Dimitri Kitaenko, Simone Young, Sebastian Weigle, Ivor Bolton, Markus Stenz and Bertrand de Billy. Identifying promising young artists and helping them develop their careers was at the core of the label’s philosophy when it was launched.
Today, OehmsClassics is one of the world’s most renowned classical record labels that boasts a catalogue of some 800 entries, including numerous debutants, rarities and important work cycles by great composers. It has received numerous citations in international awards, including the ECHO Klassik awards, Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik and International Classical Music Awards (ICMA).
Dark Spring is an opera about four young people under extreme pressures: to overachieve academically, to score high in the popularity contests at school or at college, and to perform romantically or sexually. The pressure has become entirely internalised as parents or teachers are absent and the protagonists are left alone with late capitalism’s demands of permanent self-optimisation. The conflict between the expectation to succeed on the one hand, and the sense of powerlessness and unattainable self-determination in an era of constant stagnation on the other, grows increasingly acute until it eventually flips into violence: into Melchior’s sexual aggression and Moritz’s suicide.
This compilation brings together popular orchestral works and ballet music by Tchaikovsky. Kitajenko, who turned 80 last year and has been closely associated with the Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne as a conductor for many years, sets special standards for the interpretation of Russian music with these recordings.
The accomplished Duo Ingolfsson-Stoupel is dedicated to the performance of rarities by the exiled composers Karol Rathaus, Heinz Tiessen and Paul Arma. Their works, written between 1925 and 1949, reflect the Zeitgeist of Expressionism and the incidents of World War II. The sonatas by Tiessen and Arma are recorded here for the first time.
Since its debut concert in March 1992, Singer Pur – originally five former members of the famous Regensburger Domspatzen cathedral boys’ choir and a soprano – has developed into one of the leading international a cappella ensembles. In 1994, the sextet won First Prize at the German Music Competition in Bonn and a year later was awarded the Grand Prix for Vocal Music at the International Tampere Music Festival in Finland. Regular appearances at distinguished concert series and festivals, including the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, the Ludwigsburg Castle Festival, the Rheingau Music Festival, the MDR Music Summer and the European Weeks in Passau, corroborate the outstanding reputation of this experienced ensemble. Concert tours have taken the sextet to almost 60 countries in six continents.
Singer Pur’s discography consists of 25 albums, several of which have received a range of awards. Two Renaissance recordings were named Best CD Recording of the Year by the French magazine Le Monde de la Musique, and the ensemble has been awarded the ECHO Klassik Prize three times: for the recording of contemporary compositions written exclusively for Singer Pur (2005); for the production SOS – Save Our Songs with newly arranged German folk songs (2007); and for Jeremiah together with the clarinettist David Orlowsky (2011).
‘According to a dictionary, a whirlwind is: 1. A small rotating wind; and 2. A wild person, moving briskly and violently. Both associations inspired us to choose this title for our recordings. In earlier centuries, women composers rocked many conventions, and today women composers sometimes still have to contend with considerable resistance or prejudice. The women who took up the pen for us in this project are all vibrant, strong and inspiring personalities with enormous focus and concentrated creative energy. The selection of works originate from female composers all over the world.’
– Singer Pur
Der Geiger von Echternach (‘The Echternacht Fiddler’) deals with the origins of the Echternach Jumping Procession, which dates back to the Middle Ages and is now included on the UNESCO Intangible Heritage List. The ballad tells the story of the musician Tall Veit, who on his return from the Orient is sentenced to death by hanging for allegedly killing his wife. The composer and poet are equally interested in a detailed description of Veit’s different emotional states, which modulate his violin playing and increasingly move the listener until they fall into a dancing rage, from which only Saint Willibrord can free them.
‘The very intimism of the Singer Pur version underscores the composer’s compassion.’
– Pizzicato ★★★★★
For the full list of SINGER PUR’s discography, please visit oehmsclassics.de.
Recordings from Naxos and its affiliated labels are among the recently announced winners of the 2021 OPUS Klassik Awards, Germany’s most prestigious awards body for classical music.
Naxos took the award for Best Opera Recording (20th–21st century) for Jaromír Frühlingsstürme’s Frühlingsstürme (2.110677-78), an audiovisual production of Komische Oper, conducted by Jordan de Souza. ‘An unusual operetta brilliantly sung, danced and staged, with a top-class recording.’ (MusicWeb International)
Pianist Lars Vogt won the award for Instrumental Solo (piano) in recognition of his release of Leoš Janáček’s On an Overgrown Path (ODE1382-2) on the Ondine label. ‘Absorbing listening… music with a vivid and volatile narrative which Vogt relishes and projects with the gift of a storyteller… Vogt has this music’s measure and offers many revelations.’ (Pianist)
Young trumpet player Selina Ott received the award for Concert Recording (trumpet) for her debut album (C200091) on the Orfeo label, with the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra under Roberto Paternostro. ‘Ott’s performance is perfectly sympathetic. Through it all, Roberto Paternostro directs the ORF Vienna RSO terrifically. Orfeo’s sound is excellent too. This is a terrific debut recording.’ (Fanfare)
Pianist Robert Neumann was named Up-and-coming Artist for his debut album on the SWR Classic label, with the SWR Symphonieorchester and conductor Kerem Hasan. ‘Neumann plays the Paganini Rhapsody with playful, sparkling verve, rhythmically very precise, dynamically well controlled and also very alert.’ (Pizzicato)
The Opus Klassik chamber concert was held on 9 October when the winners, including Selina Ott and Robert Neumann, performed at the Villa Elisabeth.
Congratulations go to all the artists involved in these wonderful recordings.
Critically acclaimed violinist Tianwa Yang is a winner of the prestigious ECHO Klassik Instrumentalist of the Year (Violin) 2015 Award for her Naxos recording of Ysaÿe’s 6 Sonatas for Solo Violin, Op. 27 (8.572995), the Best Up-and-Coming Artist 2014 Award and the annual prize of the German Record Critics’ Award Association 2014 for her Naxos recordings of Mendelssohn’s Violin Concertos (8.572662) and her multiple volumes of Sarasate’s complete works for violin. Tianwa Yang is referred to as ‘an unquestioned master of the violin’ by American Record Guide who ‘rises above her competition’ (Fanfare) and a ‘sensationally talented violinist,’ by David Hurwitz of ClassicsToday.com. She has performed worldwide with major orchestras in Germany and USA, the Singapore and New Zealand Symphonies, and the London, Helsinki and Hong Kong Philharmonics. Tianwa Yang has made numerous award-winning recordings over the years, and 2021 marks her 15th anniversary as a Naxos recording artist.
‘...these performances are nothing short of mesmerizing. The music sparkles in the light like glittering diamonds... Yang’s combination of sweetness and glittering steel will absolutely bowl you over.’
– The Art Music Lounge
Prokofiev first became fascinated by the violin upon hearing the playing of his private teacher, Reinhold Glière. A dozen years later Prokofiev wrote his Violin Concerto No. 1 – a work of contrasting open-hearted lyricism and whimsical playfulness that features a wild central Scherzo with dazzling technical gymnastics. By contrast, the Violin Concerto No. 2 is emotionally reserved and sardonic with an inspired plaintive and long-arching slow movement. Composed to an official Soviet commission for an ensemble piece to be played by talented child violinists in unison, the witty and upbeat Sonata for Solo Violin can also be played by a single performer.
To explore Tianwa Yang’s other recordings, please visit her artist page on naxos.com.
To mark the centennial of the composer’s birth, Naxos has released a special 6-disc boxed set of the Complete Symphonies and Dances by Sir Malcolm Arnold (1921–2006), recorded by distinguished conductor Andrew Penny with the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland and the Queensland Symphony Orchestra.
Recorded in the presence of the composer, Andrew Penny’s survey of the Complete Symphonies and Dances by Sir Malcolm Arnold has long been considered to contain benchmark recordings. Born in 1921, Sir Malcolm Arnold quickly established himself as a fluent and versatile composer, a gifted tunesmith and a brilliant orchestrator. His music is typically lucid in texture, rich in melody and clear in draughtsmanship yet there are frequent signs of a complex musical personality and dramatic tensions not far beneath the surface. The Dances are light-hearted, vivid and jaunty, yet the nine symphonies explore the composer’s darker side, painting a picture of his private ‘journey through hell’ as he struggled with physical and mental health issues. They are masterworks which exert continued appeal and stimulate repeated listening.
Le nozze in villa (‘The Wedding in the Villa’) tells the story of Sabina and the young Claudio. They are in love, but this match goes against the will of her father, who wants her to marry the Schoolmaster Trifoglio. Misunderstandings and tensions between city emancipation and provincial narrow-mindedness are resolved, and romance ultimately triumphs thanks to the alliance of ‘gracefulness, faith and youth’. This early and virtually unknown opera buffa by Donizetti is full of Rossini-influenced lyrical inventiveness and beautiful arias.
This early, long-forgotten opera by Donizetti was staged during the 2020 edition of the Bergamo Festival dedicated to the composer, with full COVID-19 safety measures in place. Fondazione Donizetti and its scholars took on the challenge to stage a work which had no original printed copy of the libretto, no autograph score and a second act quintet – Aura gentil, che mormori – which was completely missing. The composition of the latter was commissioned from Elio and Rocco Tanica with the collaboration of Enrico Melozzi, who created a new version which ‘seamlessly blended with the rest of the score.’ (Bachtrack) The mise-en-scène is contemporary, imaginative and playful.
‘The stage direction by Davide Marranchelli kept the action moving swiftly, and the sets by Anna Bonomelli and the costumes by Linda Riccardi were well conceived. Stefano Montanari conducted the Donizetti opera with elegance and brio.’ – Classical Music Daily
Dramma buffo in two acts
Critical Edition by Edoardo Cavalli and Maria Chiara Bertieri
Newly-composed Quintet by Elio, Rocco Tanica and Enrico Melozzi © Fondazione Teatro Donizetti
Sabina | Gaia Petrone |
Don Petronio | Omar Montanari |
Trifoglio | Fabio Capitanucci |
Claudio | Giorgio Misseri |
Anastasia | Manuela Custer |
Rosaura | Claudia Urru |
Anselmo | Daniele Lettieri |
Conductor and fortepiano | Stefano Montanari |
Orchestra | Gli Originali |
Chorus | Coro Donizetti Opera |
Chorus master | Fabio Tartari |
Director | Davide Marranchelli |
Costume designer | Linda Riccardi |
Set designer | Anna Bonomelli |
Light designer | Alessandro Carletti |
Theater | Donizetti Festival 2020 |
Video director | Matteo Ricchetti |
Recording place: Festival Donizetti Opera 2020
Recording date: 22 November 2020
More full-length videos? NaxosVideoLibrary.com brings you an extensive streaming video library of classical music performances, opera, ballet, live concerts and documentaries. Watch the world's greatest opera houses, ballet companies, orchestras and artists perform on demand!
Florent Schmitt (1870–1958) was a strikingly original composer whose influences were as varied as his own restless and imaginative music. A number of his solo piano works are little known and offer an important insight into his compositional development. Neuf Pièces, Op. 27, which includes a Spanish-infused Gitanella movement, was composed during his first period of travel. The expressive and vivid elements of Crépuscules, Op. 56 are infused with harmonic richness and quiet melancholy, while Ritournelle, Op. 2 No. IIbis displays an airiness and wit characteristic of French music of the Roaring Twenties. Internationally renowned pianist, Biljana Urban, presents a selection of neglected gems of French piano literature including many world première recordings.
‘It has been an extraordinary adventure to bring to life Florent Schmitt’s unknown piano pieces. A contemporary of Debussy and Ravel, Schmitt was a prominent figure of the Golden Age of French music, during which a pluralism of styles – Romanticism, Impressionism, Symbolism, Cubism, Ballet Russes, Orientalism etc. – influenced his prolific output.’ – Biljana Urban
Boris Giltburg talks with International Piano’s Owen Mortimer about recording the complete cycle of Beethoven piano sonatas to mark the composer’s 250th anniversary.
Boris Giltburg is lauded worldwide as a deeply sensitive, insightful and compelling interpreter, with critics praising his impassioned approach to performance. This project to record all of Beethoven’s 32 piano sonatas is a personal exploration for Giltburg, driven by curiosity and his profound respect for the composer. These exceptional performances received widespread critical acclaim upon their original digital release and this premiere CD release includes extended personal and informative booklet notes written by the pianist. From the vivid energy of the early sonatas, through the dark passions and enchanted lyricism of Beethoven’s middle period, to the awe-inspiring transcendence of the final sonatas – this cycle runs the full gamut of human emotion.
Learn more about Boris Giltburg’s Beethoven 32 project on www.Beethoven32.com.
Visit naxos.com to view Boris Giltburg’s complete discography.
Looking for new music? Our selection of curated playlists has you covered with music to complement the season, moment, or activity! Boost your brainpower with Smart Kids Classical, get cozy and chill out with Coffee & Chill, find the perfect soundtrack for your Halloween festivities in unCLASSIFIED’s Spooky Classical for Halloween, and explore the romance of Russia in Grand Piano’s From Russia with Love. Happy listening!
The award-winning duo ensemble of Christian Tetzlaff and Lars Vogt returns to the masterworks of European chamber music with this new album that includes Beethoven’s three Op. 30 violin sonatas. The expressive and intimate chamber music recordings by the star duo have gathered numerous awards; their previous album also received an ECHO Klassik award in 2017.
Beethoven wrote his three Violin Sonatas Op. 30 in 1801 and 1802. They are relatively early works but already pointing towards the direction of Beethoven’s revolutionary third Symphony, Eroica, which was completed in 1803. Although the influence of Haydn can still be heard, in all these sonatas Beethoven created movements that are completely untypical in a way that had never existed before. No wonder that these delightful works belong to the artists’ favourite works by the great composer.
Loki, the god of mischief (starring Tom Hiddleston) is back and has to fight his way through a timeline chaos. The Marvel Studios Original Series is now available on Disney+.
If you follow the series, look out for our recordings of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and Beethoven’s Piano Sonatas in episode 6.
Need to license some music for a project and don’t know where to start? Visit Naxos Licensing to find out how!