IN MEMORIAM: YEHUDI MENUHIN

Jed Distler

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

None of the material on this compilation has circulated beyond the scope of Japanese and Russian imports. Disc One’s centerpiece is a 1945 broadcast of the Beethoven Concerto, reproduced in dry yet full-bodied sound. Lacking the rapt introspection coloring Menuhin’s 1947 commercial recording with Furtwängler, the performance still remains one of the violinist’s most eloquent and cleanly played versions of a work that was with him throughout his career. Three movements from Lalo’s Symphonie Espagnol follow, impressively reproduced and played with fire and brimstone by the San Francisco Symphony under Pierre Monteux’s expert baton. The second disc is less persuasive. While Menuhin and fellow violin legend David Oistrakh sensitively merge in a 1958 Bach D minor Concerto (BWV 1043), one has to listen past George Georgescu’s slightly plodding Enescu Philharmonic. Poor sound, however, mars an inspired 1947 Lucerne Festival pairing of Menuhin with conductor Ernest Ansermet, who leads his L’Orchestre de La Suisse Romande in Bartok’s Second Violin Concerto. Fortunately, Menuhin recorded the work four times, the best of which is his first stereo version (Dorati/Minneapolis/Mercury). Disc two closes with an interview excerpt where Menuhin speaks to Frederic Maroth about Bartok as both man and musician. The booklet notes reprint Allan Kozinn’s comprehensive and frank obituary on Menuhin published in the New York Times.


Recording Details:

Album Title: IN MEMORIAM: YEHUDI MENUHIN
Reference Recording: None

VARIOUS - Various

    Soloists: Yehudi Menuhin (violin)
    David Oistrakh (violin)

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