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Grosses Symphonieorchster & Hans Swarowsky

Wagner: Das Rheingold Highlights

Grosses Symphonieorchster & Hans Swarowsky

15 SONGS • 1 HOUR AND 0 MINUTES • JAN 01 2009

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Das Rheingold: Vorspiel / Prelude [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
03:40
2
Das Rheingold: Weia ! Waga ! Woge, du Welle [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
02:21
3
Das Rheingold: Lugt, Schwestern! Die Weckerin lacht in den Grund [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
06:02
4
Das Rheingold: Der Welt Erbe gewänn ich zu eigen durch dich ? [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
01:38
5
Das Rheingold: Verwandlungsmusik [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
01:37
6
Das Rheingold: Wotan, Gemahl, erwache ! [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
03:16
7
Das Rheingold: Nur Wonne schafft dir, was mich erschreckt ? [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
06:26
8
Das Rheingold: Sanft schloß Schlaf dein Aug [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
07:48
9
Das Rheingold: Hör, Wotan, der Harrenden Wort [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
05:07
10
Das Rheingold: Verwandlungsmusik [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
03:24
11
Das Rheingold: Verwandlungsmusik [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
02:31
12
Das Rheingold: Weiche, Wotan weiche [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
05:11
13
Das Rheingold: Schwüles Gedünst schwebt in der Luft [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
02:22
14
Das Rheingold: Zur Burg führt die Brücke [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
05:38
15
Das Rheingold: Rheingold ! Rheingold ! Reines Gold ! [feat. Dadezda Kniplova & Gerald McKey & Rolf Polke & Fritz Uhl]
03:22
℗© 2009 SLG, LLC

Artist bios

Known as widely for his teaching as for his orchestral direction, Hans Swarowsky had much to share with a younger generation of musicians. He studied composition and conducting with several of the twentieth century's greatest icons, absorbing and exercising what he had learned in a respected career as a conductor. Despite an uneven cast, his recording of Wagner's Ring cycle, taped in Prague, has considerable power and poetry.

Born in Hungary, Swarowsky studied in Vienna with composers Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern and trained in conducting with Felix Weingartner, Richard Strauss, and Clemens Krauss. His engagements subsequently took him to many parts of Europe, first to Stuttgart and Hamburg, later to Berlin (1934), Zürich (1937-1940), and Krakow (1944-1946).

Following several harrowing experiences in flight from the Nazis, Swarowsky found his career stabilized once more in the postwar period with an engagement at Graz from 1947-1950. During this time and in subsequent assignments at the Wiener Staatsoper, Swarowsky was recognized as a conductor with a long measure of technical expertise. Thus, his classes at Vienna's Academy of Music and the Performing Arts, where he had been professor of conducting since 1946, drew a remarkable pool of aspiring young musicians. Among them were Claudio Abbado, Jesús López-Cobos, Mariss Jansons, Zubin Mehta, Giuseppe Sinopoli, and Bruno Weil, later to be among the most prominent of their generation. Vienna's Hans Swarowsky International Conductors' Competition has attracted musicians from all parts of the globe, becoming in the process one of the world's most important clearing houses for rising talent.

From 1957 to 1959, Swarowsky served as chief conductor of the Scottish National Orchestra. In 1959, he was appointed chief conductor of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra; together with his service to that ensemble, he continued to appear with the Wiener Staatsoper.

In addition to performing compositions from the Classical and Romantic periods, Swarowsky served his own age with diligence. Aside from Strauss and Webern, composers such as Britten, Einem, Hindemith, Pfitzner, and Stravinsky figured prominently in the conductor's programming. Among his recordings for Concert Hall, Erato, Nonesuch, Vanguard, Vox, and Weltbild, he committed to disc an especially delightful set of orchestral suites from Humperdinck operas.

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Language of performance
English
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