
.Marriner Conducts Beethoven: 10CD Boxset
15 April 2024 marks the centenary of the birth of Sir Neville Marriner, widely considered to have the most extensive discography of any single musician. He recorded for most of Deccaâs imprints â LâOiseau-Lyre, Decca, Argo, and by acquisition, Philips Classics. He also recorded extensively for EMI and, in the final chapter of his discographical history, Hanssler Classics.
Known and celebrated for his recordings of Baroque music and of Mozart, Marriner also made highly-desired recordings of Beethoven with âhisâ Academy of St. Martin in the Fields â a chapter in his recorded history being gathered together for the first time.
In September 1970 he set down recordings of Beethovenâs first two symphonies for Philips. These were first included in a 4-LP set entitled âThe Rise of the Symphonyâ (6707 013). One more symphony, No. 4, coupled with a string-orchestra transcription of the âGrosse Fugeâ was set down in December 1974. Perhaps a complete Beethoven symphony cycle was never envisaged at the time, for it wasnât until the 1980s that recordings of Beethoven symphonies gathered momentum, starting with the âEroicaâ in 1982 and concluding with the Ninth in April 1989.
Two recordings of the Violin Concerto were also made: with long-standing leader of the Academy, Iona Brown (herself also a conductor) in January 1980 for Argo, and quite surprisingly, again in December that year with Gidon Kremer for Philips, who incorporated two of the Schnittke cadenzas into his performance. These were rounded out with a disc of a selection of charming Minuets, German Dances and Contredanses, also for Philips, in 1978.
Tracklist:
CD 1: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2
CD 2. Symphony No. 2 âEroicaâ
CD 3: Symphony No. 4; Grosse Fuge
CD 4: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 8
CD 5: Symphony No. 6 âPastoralâ; Overture âDie Weihe des Hausesâ
CD 6: Symphony No. 7; Wellingtons Sieg, Op. 91 âBattle Symphonyâ
CD 7: Symphony No. 9 âChoralâÂ
Karita Mattila · Anne Sofie von Otter · Francisco Araiza · Samuel Ramey
CD 8: Violin Concerto
Iona Brown
CD 9: Violin Concerto
Gidon Kremer
CD 10: 12 Minuets WoO.7; 12 German Dances WoO.8; 12 Contredanses WoO.14
15 April 2024 marks the centenary of the birth of Sir Neville Marriner, widely considered to have the most extensive discography of any single musician. He recorded for most of Deccaâs imprints â LâOiseau-Lyre, Decca, Argo, and by acquisition, Philips Classics. He also recorded extensively for EMI and, in the final chapter of his discographical history, Hanssler Classics.
Known and celebrated for his recordings of Baroque music and of Mozart, Marriner also made highly-desired recordings of Beethoven with âhisâ Academy of St. Martin in the Fields â a chapter in his recorded history being gathered together for the first time.
In September 1970 he set down recordings of Beethovenâs first two symphonies for Philips. These were first included in a 4-LP set entitled âThe Rise of the Symphonyâ (6707 013). One more symphony, No. 4, coupled with a string-orchestra transcription of the âGrosse Fugeâ was set down in December 1974. Perhaps a complete Beethoven symphony cycle was never envisaged at the time, for it wasnât until the 1980s that recordings of Beethoven symphonies gathered momentum, starting with the âEroicaâ in 1982 and concluding with the Ninth in April 1989.
Two recordings of the Violin Concerto were also made: with long-standing leader of the Academy, Iona Brown (herself also a conductor) in January 1980 for Argo, and quite surprisingly, again in December that year with Gidon Kremer for Philips, who incorporated two of the Schnittke cadenzas into his performance. These were rounded out with a disc of a selection of charming Minuets, German Dances and Contredanses, also for Philips, in 1978.
Tracklist:
CD 1: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2
CD 2. Symphony No. 2 âEroicaâ
CD 3: Symphony No. 4; Grosse Fuge
CD 4: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 8
CD 5: Symphony No. 6 âPastoralâ; Overture âDie Weihe des Hausesâ
CD 6: Symphony No. 7; Wellingtons Sieg, Op. 91 âBattle Symphonyâ
CD 7: Symphony No. 9 âChoralâÂ
Karita Mattila · Anne Sofie von Otter · Francisco Araiza · Samuel Ramey
CD 8: Violin Concerto
Iona Brown
CD 9: Violin Concerto
Gidon Kremer
CD 10: 12 Minuets WoO.7; 12 German Dances WoO.8; 12 Contredanses WoO.14
Description
15 April 2024 marks the centenary of the birth of Sir Neville Marriner, widely considered to have the most extensive discography of any single musician. He recorded for most of Deccaâs imprints â LâOiseau-Lyre, Decca, Argo, and by acquisition, Philips Classics. He also recorded extensively for EMI and, in the final chapter of his discographical history, Hanssler Classics.
Known and celebrated for his recordings of Baroque music and of Mozart, Marriner also made highly-desired recordings of Beethoven with âhisâ Academy of St. Martin in the Fields â a chapter in his recorded history being gathered together for the first time.
In September 1970 he set down recordings of Beethovenâs first two symphonies for Philips. These were first included in a 4-LP set entitled âThe Rise of the Symphonyâ (6707 013). One more symphony, No. 4, coupled with a string-orchestra transcription of the âGrosse Fugeâ was set down in December 1974. Perhaps a complete Beethoven symphony cycle was never envisaged at the time, for it wasnât until the 1980s that recordings of Beethoven symphonies gathered momentum, starting with the âEroicaâ in 1982 and concluding with the Ninth in April 1989.
Two recordings of the Violin Concerto were also made: with long-standing leader of the Academy, Iona Brown (herself also a conductor) in January 1980 for Argo, and quite surprisingly, again in December that year with Gidon Kremer for Philips, who incorporated two of the Schnittke cadenzas into his performance. These were rounded out with a disc of a selection of charming Minuets, German Dances and Contredanses, also for Philips, in 1978.
Tracklist:
CD 1: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2
CD 2. Symphony No. 2 âEroicaâ
CD 3: Symphony No. 4; Grosse Fuge
CD 4: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 8
CD 5: Symphony No. 6 âPastoralâ; Overture âDie Weihe des Hausesâ
CD 6: Symphony No. 7; Wellingtons Sieg, Op. 91 âBattle Symphonyâ
CD 7: Symphony No. 9 âChoralâÂ
Karita Mattila · Anne Sofie von Otter · Francisco Araiza · Samuel Ramey
CD 8: Violin Concerto
Iona Brown
CD 9: Violin Concerto
Gidon Kremer
CD 10: 12 Minuets WoO.7; 12 German Dances WoO.8; 12 Contredanses WoO.14














