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歌剧《奥尔菲斯与尤丽狄茜》中的“旋律”
Orfeo ed Euridice: Melodie
1: 歌剧《奥尔菲斯与尤丽狄茜》中的“旋律”Orfeo .... 03:55
D大调军队进行曲,D.773之1
Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1
2: D大调军队进行曲,D.773之1Marche Mi.... 6:03
春之歌
Spring Song
3: 春之歌Spring Song 2:51
E小调第十四圆舞曲
Waltz No. 14 in E minor
4: E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in .... 03:06
降G大调第十一圆舞曲,作品70之1
Waltz No. 11 in G flat major, Op. 70, No. 1
5: 降G大调第十一圆舞曲,作品70之1Waltz No.... 01:51
降G大调第五练习曲,作品10之5,“黑键”
Etude No. 5 in G flat major, Op. 10, No. 5, Black Keys
6: 降G大调第五练习曲,作品10之5,“黑键”Etud.... 01:33
降A大调第十三练习曲,作品25之1,“竖琴练习曲”
Etude No. 13 in A flat major, Op. 25, No. 1, Harp Study
7: 降A大调第十三练习曲,作品25之1,“竖琴练习曲”.... 02:50
游吟诗人,作品52之4
La jongleuse, Op. 52, No. 4
8: 游吟诗人,作品52之4La jongleuse, .... 1:37
十九首匈牙利狂想曲,S244/R106:降D大调第六匈牙利狂想曲
19 Hungarian Rhapsodies, S242/R105a: No. 6 in D flat major
9: 十九首匈牙利狂想曲,S244/R106:降D大调第.... 08:06
音乐会圆舞曲,作品1
Valse de concert, Op. 1
10: 音乐会圆舞曲,作品1Valse de concer.... 8:06
A大调圆舞曲,作品2
Waltz in A major, Op. 2
11: A大调圆舞曲,作品2Waltz in A majo.... 3:44
四季,作品37b:十一月:雪橇
Les Saisons (The Seasons), Op. 37b: No. 11. November: Troika
12: 四季,作品37b:十一月:雪橇Les Saison.... 02:40
E小调第十四圆舞曲
Waltz No. 14 in E minor
13: E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in .... 02:50
《六首帕格尼尼超级练习曲, S140/3》中的第三曲:升G小调练习曲“钟”
6 Etudes dexecution transcendante dapres Paganini, S140/3: No. 3 in G sharp mino
14: 《六首帕格尼尼超级练习曲, S140/3》中的第三.... 04:55
巴赫的六首管风琴前奏曲与赋格,S462/R119:A小调前奏曲与赋格
6 Praludien und Fugen fur die Orgel, S462/R119: Prelude and Fugue in A minor
15: 前奏曲Prelude 03:21
16: 赋格Fugue 05:55
A大调奏鸣曲,K.113
Sonata in A major, K. 113
17: A大调奏鸣曲,K.113Sonata in A m.... 3:22
歌剧《伊菲姬尼在陶里德》中的加沃特舞曲
Gavotte from Iphigenie en Aulide
18: Gavotte from Iphigenie en.... 3:14
降E大调苏格兰舞曲, WoO 86
Ecossaise in E flat major, WoO 86
19: 降E大调苏格兰舞曲, WoO 86Ecossais.... 2:26
D大调军队进行曲,D.733之1
Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1
20: D大调军队进行曲,D.733之1Marche Mi.... 4:53
E大调随想回旋曲,作品14
Rondo capriccioso in E major, Op. 14
21: E大调随想回旋曲,作品14Rondo capric.... 6:13
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      • 歌剧《奥尔菲斯与尤丽狄茜》中的“旋律”Orfeo ed Euridice: Melodie
        1: 歌剧《奥尔菲斯与尤丽狄茜》中的“旋律”Orfeo .... 03:55
      • D大调军队进行曲,D.773之1Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1
        2: D大调军队进行曲,D.773之1Marche Mi.... 6:03
      • 春之歌Spring Song
        3: 春之歌Spring Song 2:51
      • E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in E minor
        4: E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in .... 03:06
      • 降G大调第十一圆舞曲,作品70之1Waltz No. 11 in G flat major, Op. 70, No. 1
        5: 降G大调第十一圆舞曲,作品70之1Waltz No.... 01:51
      • 降G大调第五练习曲,作品10之5,“黑键”Etude No. 5 in G flat major, Op. 10, No. 5, Black Keys
        6: 降G大调第五练习曲,作品10之5,“黑键”Etud.... 01:33
      • 降A大调第十三练习曲,作品25之1,“竖琴练习曲”Etude No. 13 in A flat major, Op. 25, No. 1, Harp Study
        7: 降A大调第十三练习曲,作品25之1,“竖琴练习曲”.... 02:50
      • 游吟诗人,作品52之4La jongleuse, Op. 52, No. 4
        8: 游吟诗人,作品52之4La jongleuse, .... 1:37
      • 十九首匈牙利狂想曲,S244/R106:降D大调第六匈牙利狂想曲19 Hungarian Rhapsodies, S242/R105a: No. 6 in D flat major
        9: 十九首匈牙利狂想曲,S244/R106:降D大调第.... 08:06
      • 音乐会圆舞曲,作品1Valse de concert, Op. 1
        10: 音乐会圆舞曲,作品1Valse de concer.... 8:06
      • A大调圆舞曲,作品2Waltz in A major, Op. 2
        11: A大调圆舞曲,作品2Waltz in A majo.... 3:44
      • 四季,作品37b:十一月:雪橇Les Saisons (The Seasons), Op. 37b: No. 11. November: Troika
        12: 四季,作品37b:十一月:雪橇Les Saison.... 02:40
      • E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in E minor
        13: E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in .... 02:50
      • 《六首帕格尼尼超级练习曲, S140/3》中的第三曲:升G小调练习曲“钟”6 Etudes dexecution transcendante dapres Paganini, S140/3: No. 3 in G sharp mino
        14: 《六首帕格尼尼超级练习曲, S140/3》中的第三.... 04:55
      • 巴赫的六首管风琴前奏曲与赋格,S462/R119:A小调前奏曲与赋格6 Praludien und Fugen fur die Orgel, S462/R119: Prelude and Fugue in A minor
        15: 前奏曲Prelude 03:21
        16: 赋格Fugue 05:55
      • A大调奏鸣曲,K.113Sonata in A major, K. 113
        17: A大调奏鸣曲,K.113Sonata in A m.... 3:22
      • 歌剧《伊菲姬尼在陶里德》中的加沃特舞曲Gavotte from Iphigenie en Aulide
        18: Gavotte from Iphigenie en.... 3:14
      • 降E大调苏格兰舞曲, WoO 86Ecossaise in E flat major, WoO 86
        19: 降E大调苏格兰舞曲, WoO 86Ecossais.... 2:26
      • D大调军队进行曲,D.733之1Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1
        20: D大调军队进行曲,D.733之1Marche Mi.... 4:53
      • E大调随想回旋曲,作品14Rondo capriccioso in E major, Op. 14
        21: E大调随想回旋曲,作品14Rondo capric.... 6:13
      • 所属厂牌:
      • Naxos Rights International
        2007. All Rights Reserved
        同风格类专辑
          • 米沙·莱维茨基演奏的钢琴曲录音全集,第1辑(1924-1928年录音) / LEVITZKI, Mischa: Complete Recordings, Vol. 1 (1924-1928)
          • 专辑号:8.110688
            发行时间:18/10/2002
            所属厂牌: Great Pianists
            所属分类: 1900—1930
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              • 曲目列表
              • 曲目名称 时间 播放 下载 点播
                • 歌剧《奥尔菲斯与尤丽狄茜》中的“旋律”Orfeo ed Euridice: Melodie
                  1:歌剧《奥尔菲斯与尤丽狄茜》中的“旋律”Orfeo ed Euridice: Melodie 03:55
                • D大调军队进行曲,D.773之1Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1
                  2:D大调军队进行曲,D.773之1Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1 6:03
                • 春之歌Spring Song
                  3:春之歌Spring Song 2:51
                • E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in E minor
                  4:E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in E minor 03:06
                • 降G大调第十一圆舞曲,作品70之1Waltz No. 11 in G flat major, Op. 70, No. 1
                  5:降G大调第十一圆舞曲,作品70之1Waltz No. 11 in G flat major, Op. 70, No. 1 01:51
                • 降G大调第五练习曲,作品10之5,“黑键”Etude No. 5 in G flat major, Op. 10, No. 5, Black Keys
                  6:降G大调第五练习曲,作品10之5,“黑键”Etude No. 5 in G flat major, Op. 10, No. 5, Black Keys 01:33
                • 降A大调第十三练习曲,作品25之1,“竖琴练习曲”Etude No. 13 in A flat major, Op. 25, No. 1, Harp Study
                  7:降A大调第十三练习曲,作品25之1,“竖琴练习曲”Etude No. 13 in A flat major, Op. 25, No. 1, Harp Study 02:50
                • 游吟诗人,作品52之4La jongleuse, Op. 52, No. 4
                  8:游吟诗人,作品52之4La jongleuse, Op. 52, No. 4 1:37
                • 十九首匈牙利狂想曲,S244/R106:降D大调第六匈牙利狂想曲19 Hungarian Rhapsodies, S242/R105a: No. 6 in D flat major
                  9:十九首匈牙利狂想曲,S244/R106:降D大调第六匈牙利狂想曲19 Hungarian Rhapsodies, S242/R105a: No. 6 in D flat major 08:06
                • 音乐会圆舞曲,作品1Valse de concert, Op. 1
                  10:音乐会圆舞曲,作品1Valse de concert, Op. 1 8:06
                • A大调圆舞曲,作品2Waltz in A major, Op. 2
                  11:A大调圆舞曲,作品2Waltz in A major, Op. 2 3:44
                • 四季,作品37b:十一月:雪橇Les Saisons (The Seasons), Op. 37b: No. 11. November: Troika
                  12:四季,作品37b:十一月:雪橇Les Saisons (The Seasons), Op. 37b: No. 11. November: Troika 02:40
                • E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in E minor
                  13:E小调第十四圆舞曲Waltz No. 14 in E minor 02:50
                • 《六首帕格尼尼超级练习曲, S140/3》中的第三曲:升G小调练习曲“钟”6 Etudes dexecution transcendante dapres Paganini, S140/3: No. 3 in G sharp mino
                  14:《六首帕格尼尼超级练习曲, S140/3》中的第三曲:升G小调练习曲“钟”6 Etudes dexecution transcendante dapres Paganini, S140/3: No. 3 in G sharp minor, La Campanella 04:55
                • 巴赫的六首管风琴前奏曲与赋格,S462/R119:A小调前奏曲与赋格6 Praludien und Fugen fur die Orgel, S462/R119: Prelude and Fugue in A minor
                  15:前奏曲Prelude 03:21
                  16:赋格Fugue 05:55
                • A大调奏鸣曲,K.113Sonata in A major, K. 113
                  17:A大调奏鸣曲,K.113Sonata in A major, K. 113 3:22
                • 歌剧《伊菲姬尼在陶里德》中的加沃特舞曲Gavotte from Iphigenie en Aulide
                  18:Gavotte from Iphigenie en Aulide 3:14
                • 降E大调苏格兰舞曲, WoO 86Ecossaise in E flat major, WoO 86
                  19:降E大调苏格兰舞曲, WoO 86Ecossaise in E flat major, WoO 86 2:26
                • D大调军队进行曲,D.733之1Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1
                  20:D大调军队进行曲,D.733之1Marche Militaire in D major, D. 733, No. 1 4:53
                • E大调随想回旋曲,作品14Rondo capriccioso in E major, Op. 14
                  21:E大调随想回旋曲,作品14Rondo capriccioso in E major, Op. 14 6:13
              • 专辑介绍
              • Great Pianists: Mischa Levitzki: Piano Recordings Vol. 1On 18th October 1916, a review in The New York Times had this to say: "The name of Mischa Levitzki probably means little or nothing to most music lovers in New York. Those who went to his recital in Aeolian Hall yesterday afternoon found that it signifies a genuine talent in pianoforte playing and belongs to a musician whose first public appearance in New York furnished an agreeable surprise and gave much pleasure of a sort none too common in the performances of new and untried artists."The writer was 53-year old Richard Aldrich, the newspaper’s respected critic and a trained pianist himself. Strangely, what he said then still holds true; the name of Mischa Levitzky means little or nothing to most people today. The reasons? Probably because he died young, of a heart attack, at the age of 42, at Avon-by-the-Sea, New Jersey, and did so on 2nd January 1941, when the events of the Second World War overshadowed everything else. But to start at the beginning, 25th May 1898, when Levitzki was born in Kremenchug, in the Ukraine. His parents, though Russian, were naturalised American citizens who were visiting their homeland at the time. Young Mischa’s original instrument was the violin, which he began studying at the age of three or four, but two years later he lost interest, giving the impression that he had no aptitude for music.A piano owned by an aunt rekindled his curiosity, and after trying to play it he asked for formal lessons. His first teacher is said to have been a neighbour, and Mischa’s progress was so rapid that in 1905 he was accepted as a pupil of Aleksander Michalowski (1851-1938) at the Warsaw Conservatory. Michalowski had an impressive musical lineage. He had studied not only with Moscheles and Reinecke but also with Mikuli, a student of Chopin, and it is not fanciful to believe that his influence on one so young was considerable. In 1906, however, the Levitzki family decided to return to the United States and en route, in Antwerp, Mischa gave his first concert. Many years later, he recalled the occasion: "In an unguarded moment, some enthusiastic people arranged for me to give a recital in public. According to the clippings I was a success, but my parents prevented another scheduled concert. They did not permit me to appear again until I was sixteen". Commendably, the child was not exploited. He had a normal schooling in both New York City and Brooklyn, but Levitzki père, also aware of the need for developing his son’s talents, arranged an audition with Walter Damrosch, conductor of the New York Symphony Society. It resulted in a scholarship to study at the Institute of Musical Art in New York, founded in 1905 by Damrosch’s brother Frank. Levitzki’s tutor until 1911 was Sigismund Stojowski (1870-1946) and he too had an impressive musical lineage. He had studied at the Paris Conservatoire with Louis Diémer, whose pupils included Robert Casadesus, Alfred Cortot and Yves Nat, and later with Paderewski. Was it wanderlust, a fine instinct or good advice (possibly from Stojowski) that took Levitzki to Germany, probably in late 1911, to study with Ern? von Dohnányi? Whatever his hopes, they were initially dashed when the master, apparently prejudiced against prodigies, refused to consider him. Not to be outdone, Levitzki played in Brussels in 1912 (he was fourteen, not sixteen as he mistakenly recounted) and in Antwerp on 6th March 1913. The programme was ambitious, Bach’s Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue, Beethoven’s Waldstein Sonata, Schumann’s Kinderszenen, a Chopin group and Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No 13. Dohnányi (1877-1960), described by David Dubal as "the virtual czar of piano teaching", eventually relented and in 1913, enrolled Levitzki as the youngest student in his class at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik. After a three-year course, during which he won the Mendelssohn prize and also appeared in concerts in a number of cities, Levitzki simply said, "I know of no greater teacher". Levitzki’s acclaimed Aeolian Hall début in 1916, and his subsequent decision to settle in the United States, might have been partially responsible for his high standing in that country. Just how high it was may also be gauged by his standing with Steinway & Sons, who, in the prosperous years before the economic depression of the 1930s, graded the artists using their pianos into four categories, A to D. Levitzki, along with Hofmann, Yolanda Mer? and Paderewski, was in category A. Even the likes of Horowitz and Rachmaninov had to settle for category B. All the pianists in these two tiers enjoyed the best service from the company, though the four in group A also benefited from a $100 subsidy for each concert. Popularity had a slightly bizarre side effect too. In the 1920s, Levitzki was briefly involved with Leopold Godowsky, Leo Ornstein and Artur Rubinstein in making and promoting piano rolls for the Ampico Company. In Rubinstein’s words, "We had a funny and a little shameful concert tour together. We were obliged to listen on the stage to a piece played by us on the pianola and then repeated by a live performance". Thus, by comparing a piano roll recording with reality, the fidelity of the Ampico system could be demonstrated. Conventional appearances, however, were anything but "shameful" and Levitzi travelled the United States (over twenty tours), Europe, the Far East, Australia and New Zealand. The published programmes that span the period 1913 to 1933 show that Levitzki tended to play a recital with one major work and then fill it out with small pieces, or excerpts from larger works that were popular; and the likes of the Gluck-Sgambati Mélodie d’Orfée, the Gluck-Brahms Gavotte (played on many occasions, including at his United States début), Moskowski’s La jongleuse, Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 and La Campanella, Tchaikovsky’s Troika, Scarlatti’s Sonata Kk113, Beethoven’s Ecossaise and Levitzki’s own compositions were doubtless also recorded (some more than once) to satisfy his fans. Of the principal works, he chose from five Beethoven sonatas (three of them with the 32 Variations in C minor formed an all-Beethoven concert in Carnegie Hall on 25th November 1920), Chopin’s B minor Sonata and Schumann’s Etudes Symphoniques. He also offered Schumann’s Piano Concerto; and the Sonata in G minor, Op. 22, was set down for HMV, as was the pioneering recording of Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1. Tantalisingly, Levitzki’s repertoire, which could have included Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 3 for which he wrote a first movement cadenza, might have been larger than we have been led to believe. Had he lived longer, it would probably have been revealed, because his concerts and, consequently, recorded output would have reflected the tastes of post-war generations who preferred continuously substantial fare. Detractors, though, felt that Levitzki’s musicianship was emotionally sterile, and so might have considered him unfit for new challenges. Horowitz was particularly scathing: "I heard another pianist in Berlin who had a big success and I thought he was awful — Mischa Levitzki. Just fingers, and you cannot listen only to fingers. There is a difference between artist and artisan. Levitzki was an artisan."Others disagreed. Abram Chasins said, "His compelling force resided in the greatness of his talent and the greatness of his heart", and, on a personal level, the singer Grace Moore wrote in her autobiography, "He was melancholy and romantic and we were happy and imagined ourselves in love". But to return to the musician: was he — who was also keen on baseball and dancing — only a shallow virtuoso? Dispassionate listeners need only listen to this disc to realise that there was more to Mischa Levitzki than "just fingers". Nalen AnthoniWard MarstonIn 1997 Ward Marston was nominated for the Best Historical Album Grammy Award for his production work on BMG’s Fritz Kreisler collection. According to the Chicago Tribune, Marston’s name is ‘synonymous with tender loving care to collectors of historical CDs’. Opera News calls his work ‘revelatory’, and Fanfare deems him ‘miraculous’. In 1996 Ward Marston received the Gramophone award for Historical Vocal Recording of the Year, honouring his production and engineering work on Romophone’s complete recordings of Lucrezia Bori. He also served as re-recording engineer for the Franklin Mint’s Arturo Toscanini issue and BMG’s Sergey Rachmaninov recordings, both winners of the Best Historical Album Grammy.Born blind in 1952, Ward Marston has amassed tens of thousands of opera classical records over the past four decades. Following a stint in radio while a student at Williams College, he became well-known as a reissue producer in 1979, when he restored the earliest known stereo recording made by the Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1932.In the past, Ward Marston has produced records for a number of major and specialist record companies. Now he is bringing his distinctive sonic vision to bear on works released on the Naxos Historical label. Ultimately his goal is to make the music he remasters sound as natural as possible and true to life by ‘lifting the voices’ off his old 78 rpm recordings. His aim is to promote the importance of preserving old recordings and make available the works of great musicians who need to be heard.Producer’s NoteAmong the fifty-three published 78rpm sides of Mischa Levitzki, there are no rarities. Yet, sixty-one years after his death, his records are still sought by collectors world-wide and his artistry is held in high esteem. Admittedly, Mischa Levitzki does not rank among the twentieth century’s greatest pianists, for that distinguished honor belongs to only a handful. His records, however, are distinguished for their directness of approach without ever being the least bit dull. They demonstrate a formidable technique, always under control, as well as a lovely sound guided by an unerring ear for subtlety and nuance.Mischa Levitzki’s first recordings were made for U. S. Columbia during the final two years of the acoustic recording era. They are excellent recordings for the time with just enough room ambiance to allow the piano tone to bloom. This is especially evident in Gluck’s Melodie (track one.) Fortunately, all ten sides were pressed on smooth shellac which yields reasonably quiet surfaces. For the present transfers, several mint condition copies of each disc were on hand. Mendelssohn’s Spring Song (track 3), published here for the first time was transferred from a single faced shellac test pressing. The only serious flaw in this group of records is the distortion heard during the final bars of Schubert’s Marche Militaire. This was caused by over modulated grooves and is probably evident on all copies of the original disc.Levitzki’s second recording of Chopin’s E minor Waltz, track thirteen, transferred from a white label test pressing, was recorded at the time when Columbia was just beginning to experiment with the electrical recording process. Several months later, Columbia adopted this method of recording and late in 1925, Mischa Levitzki made his only published electric Columbia, Liszt’s La campanella, transferred here from a mint American pressing.In 1927, Levitzki was to begin an association with His Master’s Voice which endured until 1933. Many of the resulting recordings were available on Australian pressings which are superior to their English counterparts. A sizable number were also issued by US Victor on quiet shellac. Wherever possible, I have used Australian and American pressings for the present transfers. This compact disc concludes with eight of Levitzki’s HMV sides and volumes two and three will conclude the chronology. Volume Three will also contain Mischa Levitzki’s two sides made by RCA Victor and two American broadcasts from the mid-1930s. Please stay tuned!Ward Marston
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