
It’s hard not to love Hyperion’s ongoing exploration of the romantic concertante literature. With series devoted to the piano, violin, and viola already in progress,
This highly entertaining Eloquence release returns to the catalog Dohnányi’s Variations on a Nursery Song in a blazing performance by András Schiff with Georg Solti
Those who perceive Ernö Dohnanyi’s chamber works as skillfully crafted Brahms knock-offs are certain to change their tune after hearing this disc. The three-movement Harp
Erno Dohnányi’s solo piano music is slowly but surely getting its due, and listeners are discovering that he’s not just “the Hungarian Brahms” but also
In the course of a long, fruitful career, pianist Andor Földes had the good fortune to work with a substantial list of composers from Alban
Bartók is the invisible presence on this CD of (mostly) 20th century cello music by Hungarian composers since his stylistic fingerprints are on most of
Ernst von Dohnányi’s conservative yet richly idiomatic solo piano works seem to be rebounding from oblivion, as borne out in several Hungaroton collections–and in this
Wow! Annie Fischer captures the gushing rhetoric and youthful passion of Brahms’ sprawling F minor Sonata and delivers its message like one possessed. She makes
In the 1930s, Earl Wild heard his teacher Egon Petri perform the Brahms Piano Quintet with the NBC Symphony’s string section. The occasion instigated Wild’s
The late Julius Katchen took to the Romantic piano concerto repertoire as if all the war-horses in this two-disc set were written especially for him.