Glass / Rorem: Violin Concertos / Bernstein: Serenade

~ Release by Glass, Rorem, Bernstein; Gidon Kremer (see all versions of this release, 3 available)

Tracklist

CD 1
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Concerto for Violin and Orchestra: I. ♩ = 104 – ♩ = 120
recording engineer:
Rainer Maillard
producer:
Wolfgang Stengel
violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (in 1992-02)
orchestra:
Wiener Philharmoniker (in 1992-02)
conductor:
Christoph von Dohnányi (German conductor) (in 1992-02)
recorded at:
Wiener Musikverein: Großer Musikvereinssaal in Innere Stadt, Wien, Austria (in 1992-02)
recording of:
Violin Concerto no. 1: I. ♩ = 104 — ♩ = 120 (in 1992-02)
composer:
Philip Glass (US composer & pianist) (in 1987)
part of:
Violin Concerto no. 1
Philip Glass6:38
2Concerto for Violin and Orchestra: II. ♩ = ca. 108
recording engineer:
Rainer Maillard
producer:
Wolfgang Stengel
violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (in 1992-02)
orchestra:
Wiener Philharmoniker (in 1992-02)
conductor:
Christoph von Dohnányi (German conductor) (in 1992-02)
recorded at:
Wiener Musikverein: Großer Musikvereinssaal in Innere Stadt, Wien, Austria (in 1992-02)
recording of:
Violin Concerto no. 1: II. ♩ = ca. 108 (in 1992-02)
composer:
Philip Glass (US composer & pianist) (in 1987)
part of:
Violin Concerto no. 1
Philip Glass8:46
3Concerto for Violin and Orchestra: III. ♩ = ca. 150 – Coda: Poco meno ♩ = 104
recording engineer:
Rainer Maillard
producer:
Wolfgang Stengel
violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (in 1992-02)
orchestra:
Wiener Philharmoniker (in 1992-02)
conductor:
Christoph von Dohnányi (German conductor) (in 1992-02)
recorded at:
Wiener Musikverein: Großer Musikvereinssaal in Innere Stadt, Wien, Austria (in 1992-02)
recording of:
Violin Concerto no. 1: III. ♩ = ca. 150 — Coda. Poco meno, ♩ = 104 (in 1992-02)
composer:
Philip Glass (US composer & pianist) (in 1987)
part of:
Violin Concerto no. 1
Philip Glass9:39
4Violin Concerto: I. Twilight: Free and Spacious – attacca:
recording engineer:
Hans-Peter Schweigmann
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1988-11-29)
orchestra:
New York Philharmonic (on 1988-11-29)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1988-11-29)
recorded at:
Avery Fisher Hall (Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) in Upper West Side, New York, New York, United States (on 1988-11-29)
live recording of:
Violin Concerto: I. Twilight: Free and Spacious – Attacca (on 1988-11-29)
composer:
Ned Rorem (composer) (in 1985)
part of:
Violin Concerto
Ned Rorem3:09
5Violin Concerto: II. Toccata-Chaconne: Very Fast
recording engineer:
Hans-Peter Schweigmann
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1988-11-29)
orchestra:
New York Philharmonic (on 1988-11-29)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1988-11-29)
recorded at:
Avery Fisher Hall (Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) in Upper West Side, New York, New York, United States (on 1988-11-29)
live recording of:
Violin Concerto: II. Toccata – Chaconne: Very Fast (on 1988-11-29)
composer:
Ned Rorem (composer) (in 1985)
part of:
Violin Concerto
Ned Rorem3:17
6Violin Concerto: III. Romance without Words: Hardly Moving
recording engineer:
Hans-Peter Schweigmann
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1988-11-29)
orchestra:
New York Philharmonic (on 1988-11-29)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1988-11-29)
recorded at:
Avery Fisher Hall (Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) in Upper West Side, New York, New York, United States (on 1988-11-29)
live recording of:
Violin Concerto: III. Romance Without Words: Hardly Moving (on 1988-11-29)
composer:
Ned Rorem (composer) (in 1985)
part of:
Violin Concerto
Ned Rorem2:52
7Violin Concerto: IV. Midnight: Slow
recording engineer:
Hans-Peter Schweigmann
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1988-11-29)
orchestra:
New York Philharmonic (on 1988-11-29)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1988-11-29)
recorded at:
Avery Fisher Hall (Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) in Upper West Side, New York, New York, United States (on 1988-11-29)
live recording of:
Violin Concerto: IV. Midnight: Slow (on 1988-11-29)
composer:
Ned Rorem (composer) (in 1985)
part of:
Violin Concerto
Ned Rorem6:48
8Violin Concerto: V. Toccata-Rondo: Very Fast
recording engineer:
Hans-Peter Schweigmann
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1988-11-29)
orchestra:
New York Philharmonic (on 1988-11-29)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1988-11-29)
recorded at:
Avery Fisher Hall (Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) in Upper West Side, New York, New York, United States (on 1988-11-29)
live recording of:
Violin Concerto: V. Toccata – Rondo: Very Fast (on 1988-11-29)
composer:
Ned Rorem (composer) (in 1985)
part of:
Violin Concerto
Ned Rorem2:36
9Violin Concerto: VI. Dawn: Wistful
recording engineer:
Hans-Peter Schweigmann
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1988-11-29)
orchestra:
New York Philharmonic (on 1988-11-29)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1988-11-29)
recorded at:
Avery Fisher Hall (Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) in Upper West Side, New York, New York, United States (on 1988-11-29)
live recording of:
Violin Concerto: VI. Dawn: Wistful (on 1988-11-29)
composer:
Ned Rorem (composer) (in 1985)
part of:
Violin Concerto
Ned Rorem5:08
10Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: I. Phaedrus – Pausanias: Lento – Allegro marcato
recording engineer:
Karl-August Naegler (balance engineer)
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1979-10-14)
orchestra:
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (Israeli orchestra) (on 1979-10-14)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1979-10-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Deutsche Grammophon GmbH (this is the company; for release labels, use "Deutsche Grammophon") (in 1990)
recorded at:
Frederic R. Mann Auditorium (formerly Frederic R. Mann Auditorium) in Tel Aviv, Tel-Aviv, Israel (on 1979-10-14)
live recording of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: I. Phaedrus: Pausanias. Lento – Allegro (on 1979-10-14)
composer:
Leonard Bernstein (in 1954)
part of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”
Leonard Bernstein6:49
11Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: II. Aristophanes: Allegretto
recording engineer:
Karl-August Naegler (balance engineer)
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1979-10-14)
orchestra:
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (Israeli orchestra) (on 1979-10-14)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1979-10-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Deutsche Grammophon GmbH (this is the company; for release labels, use "Deutsche Grammophon") (in 1990)
recorded at:
Frederic R. Mann Auditorium (formerly Frederic R. Mann Auditorium) in Tel Aviv, Tel-Aviv, Israel (on 1979-10-14)
live recording of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: II. Aristophanes. Allegretto (on 1979-10-14)
composer:
Leonard Bernstein (in 1954)
part of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”
Leonard Bernstein4:12
12Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: III. Eryximachus: Presto
recording engineer:
Karl-August Naegler (balance engineer)
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1979-10-14)
orchestra:
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (Israeli orchestra) (on 1979-10-14)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1979-10-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Deutsche Grammophon GmbH (this is the company; for release labels, use "Deutsche Grammophon") (in 1990)
recorded at:
Frederic R. Mann Auditorium (formerly Frederic R. Mann Auditorium) in Tel Aviv, Tel-Aviv, Israel (on 1979-10-14)
live recording of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: III. Eryximachus. Presto (on 1979-10-14)
composer:
Leonard Bernstein (in 1954)
part of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”
Leonard Bernstein1:31
13Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: IV. Agathon: Adagio
recording engineer:
Karl-August Naegler (balance engineer)
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1979-10-14)
orchestra:
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (Israeli orchestra) (on 1979-10-14)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1979-10-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Deutsche Grammophon GmbH (this is the company; for release labels, use "Deutsche Grammophon") (in 1990)
recorded at:
Frederic R. Mann Auditorium (formerly Frederic R. Mann Auditorium) in Tel Aviv, Tel-Aviv, Israel (on 1979-10-14)
live recording of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: IV. Agathon. Adagio (on 1979-10-14)
composer:
Leonard Bernstein (in 1954)
part of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”
Leonard Bernstein6:34
14Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: V. Socrates – Alcibiades: Molto tenuto – Allegro molto vivace
recording engineer:
Karl-August Naegler (balance engineer)
executive producer:
Günther Breest (producer for classical music) and Hanno Rinke
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer)
solo violin:
Gidon Kremer (violinist) (on 1979-10-14)
orchestra:
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (Israeli orchestra) (on 1979-10-14)
conductor:
Leonard Bernstein (on 1979-10-14)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Deutsche Grammophon GmbH (this is the company; for release labels, use "Deutsche Grammophon") (in 1990)
recorded at:
Frederic R. Mann Auditorium (formerly Frederic R. Mann Auditorium) in Tel Aviv, Tel-Aviv, Israel (on 1979-10-14)
live recording of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”: V. Socrates: Alcibiades. Molto tenuto – Allegro molto vivace (on 1979-10-14)
composer:
Leonard Bernstein (in 1954)
part of:
Serenade after Plato’s “Symposium”
Leonard Bernstein10:33

Credits

Release

part of:20/21 (Deutsche Grammophon) (order: 6)
Discogs:https://www.discogs.com/release/5919433 [info]
ASIN:DE: B00001X596 [info]
discography entry:http://www.deutschegrammophon.com/en/cat/4451852 [info]