- EDITOR’S CHOICE
- 1994 · London Symphony Orchestra, André Previn, Gil Shaham
Erich Wolfgang Korngold
- Hansi Schenk, E W Korngold, Rosl Schwaiger, Herbert Hauk, Egon Jordan, Liane Synek, Franz Böheim, Ravag Orchester, Tonja Sontis, Hilde Ceska, Felix Dombrowsky, Fred Liewehr, Kurt Preger
- Staatskapelle Berlin, Lotte Lehmann, Carlotta Vanconti, Herman Weigert, Anton Paulik, Ernst Hauke, Frieder Weissmann, Karin Branzell, Grete Merrem-Nikisch, Richard Tauber, Vera Schwarz, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Studio Orchestra, Waldemar Stagemann
- Austria State Symphony Orchestra, Wilhelm Loibner, Anton Dermota, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Hilde Zadek
Biography
Few composers have had such a meteoric rise as Erich Wolfgang Korngold. He was born in Brünn (now Brno in the Czech Republic) in 1897, the son of influential Viennese music critic Julius Korngold. Aged nine, his piano playing attracted the attention of Mahler, and he won national acclaim with an operatic double bill when he was barely 20. The premiere of his opera Die tote Stadt (“The Dead City”, 1920) simultaneously in Cologne and Hamburg brought him international fame, but his music’s sumptuous Romanticism was increasingly at odds with the political volatility of Europe between the wars. Korngold took advantage of an association with Warner Brothers to work on the other side of the Atlantic. He spent 12 years writing music for 16 Hollywood movies whose symphonic expansiveness and emotional immediacy redefined just what was possible in a film score. Having taken American citizenship in 1943, he returned to Europe after the Second World War, but found the musical climate unfavourable and spent his remaining years mostly in the U.S. His Violin Concerto in D major was well received at its premiere by Jascha Heifetz in 1947, and has more recently entered the repertoire, but his only completed symphony met with a cool reception when heard on Austrian radio in 1952, and was not given in concert until after Korngold’s death in Los Angeles in 1957. His orchestral music and operas are now being heard regularly, their melodic richness attracting successive generations of listeners.