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Rating: Summary: Greatest complete Brahms Concerto and Tzigane on video Review: I bought this DVD as an import from the orient months before it was available here in the USA, sure I paid almost double but its worth it for me to pay more and not have to wait, especially with a great artist like this.Mr. Szeryng needs no introduction, many believe he recorded the greatest solo Bach, arguably the hardest works available to violinists. A mixed bag of repertoire, from blatantly lyrical to dazzlingly technical. Mr. Szeryng has the perfect style of passion and expression combined with effortless technique, the instrument simply does what ever he wants it to. I find his sound to be much more appealing than Heifetz with and equal ability to play even the most difficult works with ease and conviction, like saying "I'm all over this". For this reason, he is in my top five all time recorded violinists category. One thing I respect about Mr Heifetz is that his musicality and sence of conviction is undeniable and also he was able to maintain this standard for about 60 years where Mr. Szeryng was on that level for about 20 or 30 years and fortunately for us these videos were made in his prime, unlike the Huberman Fest video and part of the other DVD available. Presented here is the greatest complete recorded Brahms Concerto available on video, I prefer Oistrakh for the Brahms but there is only a clip of the last movement. For this recording of the Brahms alone makes this DVD worth getting, the soaring melody of the first movement has to be the most beautiful melody ever written to me. It breaks my heart when I read how this concerto was dismissed as inferior and neglected for years, it was shunned so badly that a second violin concerto was burned by Brahms and I will forever be torn by trying to imagine what a second violin concerto would have sounded like. For me this concerto is the most robust and mature ever written. The Tzigane is also noteworthy here, a masterpiece and performed with exceptional emotion and conviction and again effortless technique and flawless intonation. In contrast, the Suk, Debussy, and slow movement of the Le Clair is played with an indescribable singing like quality, displaying his sensitivity and the ability to play with passion, emotion and speak with every note. Complete contents of this video include: Brahms Concerto Bartok Romanian Folk Dances LeClair Sonata in D maj Op9 No3 Brahms Hungarian Dance No 17 in F minor Ravel Tzigane Bach G min Fugue Locatelli Caprice in D maj Op3 No23 Suk Love Song Op7 No1 Novacek Perpetual Motion Debussy La Plus Que Lente, valse Mozart Serenade No7 in D maj K250 Mvt 4 Rondo Allegro Kerisler Recitativo and Scherzo-Caprice Op6 Actually the Hungarian Dance 17 is in F# minor, a printed mistake. Begin rant: I have to say that one thing that I hate about the new EMI DVD's is that the video will not play all the way through without you having to keep pressing play when it gets to the next video, I find this annoying. This leads me to want to transfer the DVD on to VHS so I can watch all the way through without intrerruption but the have found a way to prevent copying which makes me very angry and infringes on my right as a consumer to copy my own property, very unfair! On top of that I lost my remote and there is no way for me to move the cursor to the bonus video so the only way for me to watch that is to go to my mother's house and use her machine! /End Rant This is a 5 star DVD all the way and much better than the other DVD with Mr. Szeryng. Now if I could get my hands on the complete Brahms Concerto video by Oistrakh I would truly be in heaven. Even if I did, I would still treasure this stunning document of Mr. Szeryng's great legacy.
Rating: Summary: Slight error: Hungarian Dance 17 is in F# minor Review: Simply sublime! Mozart Serenade No 7 in D major K250 MvT 4 Rondo Allegro is most exquisite.
Rating: Summary: Something Which No Music Lover Could Aford to Miss! Review: The quality of the films are slightly above average only. The picture is slightly grainy but they cover the hands quite a lot, and the angle of the camera is good, some from the aerial. Audio-wise, they can amply let you distinguish and even enjoy all the intensity and colours of this most beautiful sound of violin. Some minor drawbacks. There are a lot of things in common between Szeryng and Arrau. Both are are great musicians both are top Brahms players, both are steadfast to let music (instead of virtuosity ) take precedence. And unlike Richter, both take very good care their partner, the orchestra. So both had to hold back a lot. Moreover, the recorded sound of the orchestra is not very ideal, and I don't like the sound of the oboe which had a number of dialogues with the violin--but that is quite off the point. One may not take delight in seeing the camera zoom out to cover the whole orchestra either. Fortunately that is rare. On the other hand, viewers could take consolation to note that the accompanist for the other pieces is the regular one for Thibaud (one of the mentors of Szeryng) before his tragic death. Well, Menuhin once queried and asked where is life in Karajan's music? With Szeryng, that is simply out of the question, for there is so much life, not just beauty, in Szeryng's music. (One wonders if Szeryng hadn't been baptized by his whole hearted involvement in helping the Jews in WWII, if his music would still remain the same.) Menuhin is also very particular about tone colour when he said Heifetz could make scales of colour. Here Szeryng plays with (in almost every piece and not just his Brahms) even more colour than Heifetz and perhaps with no less colour than Menuhin himself, albeit that Szeryng only does it well within the bound of a great tradition, and not just those more acceptable to the Gypsies. No wonder Mr Perlman is so jealous while Rubininstein is so impressed by him. There are things in Szeryng that could make even Menuhin or Heifetz blush or even jealous as well. This DVD runs 104 minutes, covering one of the greatest violin concerti plus some other great German, French and even some Hungarian violin music, interpreted by one of the greatest violinists of the golden age. Hilary Hann quite rightly says Szeryng's Bach has everything a violinist would aim for. Here we have much fuller magnitude than just Bach, giving us a whole cross section of the art of the violin and this pre-eminent artist. This DVD should fairly and squarely be called the Art of Szeryng or else the Art of Violin, if those titles do not pre-exist.
Rating: Summary: Excellent DVD Review: Yet another one of these hit-and-miss EMI "Classical Archive Series" DVD's is on the menu, although this is most certainly a hit, a very palpable hit. Henryk Szeryng, though not as famous as his other illustrious colleagues, was an excellent violinist in his own right. Despite the fact that he came to fame a little bit later in his career than expected (through Sol Hurok, with Isaac Stern's mediation I believe), his recorded video legacy is quite large. An unabashed performer, Szeryng believed in the video medium, and cameras were welcomed (unlike Kogan, who apparently abhorred the damn things). Thus, what we have here is a pretty good selection, covering the gamut of the violinist's art, from virtuosic trifles to magnum opuses for the instrument, and much in between. The Brahms is, as the other reviewers say, quite weak in terms of orchestral support, and it is a shame that a better rendition of this piece was not available for inclusion. The Brahms is also marred by occasionally moronic camera angles, although this is a small gripe in what is still a very good performance. Generally speaking, the remaining pieces are excellent, especially the Tzigane (played with great verve). The bonus clips are also quite interesting, in that they are in color, and they're also taken at a later point in Seryng's career. It is gratifying to see the great artist in fairly fine form, although his Scherzo Caprice does lack some polish (not to mention the fact that he looks kind of drunk). This rates as my second favourite DVD of this series, and is a worthy addition to anyone's violin library.
Rating: Summary: Excellent DVD Review: Yet another one of these hit-and-miss EMI "Classical Archive Series" DVD's is on the menu, although this is most certainly a hit, a very palpable hit. Henryk Szeryng, though not as famous as his other illustrious colleagues, was an excellent violinist in his own right. Despite the fact that he came to fame a little bit later in his career than expected (through Sol Hurok, with Isaac Stern's mediation I believe), his recorded video legacy is quite large. An unabashed performer, Szeryng believed in the video medium, and cameras were welcomed (unlike Kogan, who apparently abhorred the damn things). Thus, what we have here is a pretty good selection, covering the gamut of the violinist's art, from virtuosic trifles to magnum opuses for the instrument, and much in between. The Brahms is, as the other reviewers say, quite weak in terms of orchestral support, and it is a shame that a better rendition of this piece was not available for inclusion. The Brahms is also marred by occasionally moronic camera angles, although this is a small gripe in what is still a very good performance. Generally speaking, the remaining pieces are excellent, especially the Tzigane (played with great verve). The bonus clips are also quite interesting, in that they are in color, and they're also taken at a later point in Seryng's career. It is gratifying to see the great artist in fairly fine form, although his Scherzo Caprice does lack some polish (not to mention the fact that he looks kind of drunk). This rates as my second favourite DVD of this series, and is a worthy addition to anyone's violin library.
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