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TheRöhnViolinists
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 1 ก.พ. 2014
Andreas Röhn - Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, iv. Allegro
Deutsche Grammophon debut
Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, iv. Allegro
Andreas Röhn - violin
Karl Bergemann - piano
Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, iv. Allegro
Andreas Röhn - violin
Karl Bergemann - piano
มุมมอง: 1 725
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Andreas Röhn - Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, iii. Larghetto
มุมมอง 5K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Deutsche Grammophon debut Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, iii. Larghetto Andreas Röhn - violin Karl Bergemann - piano
Andreas Röhn - Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, ii. Allegro
มุมมอง 6K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Deutsche Grammophon debut Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, ii. Allegro Andreas Röhn - violin Karl Bergemann - piano
Andreas Röhn - Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, i. Affetuoso
มุมมอง 1.6K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Deutsche Grammophon debut Handel Violin Sonata in D major, HWV 371, i. Affetuoso Andreas Röhn - violin Karl Bergemann - piano
Daniel Röhn - Beethoven Romance No. 1 in G major
มุมมอง 99310 ปีที่แล้ว
Beethoven Romance No. 1 in G major (live recording) Daniel Röhn - violin Capella Istropolitana
Erich Röhn - Beethoven Violin Concerto, iii. Rondo. Allegro
มุมมอง 2.3K10 ปีที่แล้ว
The very last concert in the old Berlin Philharmonie before it was bombed on 30th January 1944 Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61, iii. Rondo. Allegro Erich Röhn - violin Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler
Erich Röhn - Beethoven Violin Concerto, ii. Larghetto
มุมมอง 1.5K10 ปีที่แล้ว
The very last concert in the old Berlin Philharmonie before it was bombed on 30th January 1944 Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61, ii. Larghetto Erich Röhn - violin Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler
Erich Röhn - Beethoven Violin Concerto, i. Allegro ma non troppo
มุมมอง 6K10 ปีที่แล้ว
The very last concert in the old Berlin Philharmonie before it was bombed on 30th January 1944 Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61, i. Allegro ma non troppo Erich Röhn - violin Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler
V nice !!!
This was published in USSR by Melodia - exceptional performance.
meticulous performance1
Brillait !
Increíble, tanta calidad y sentimiento en una época tan caótica para este maestro del violín y para Furtwängler
I was fortunate to find a copy of this record at a Boston record shop called Looney Tunes in october 1995. When I first listened to it words just failed me; what a sublime, meticulous and subtle performance. Even comparing performances like Cluytens/Oistrakh, Jochum/Schneiderhan, Walter/Francescatti and Leinsdorf/Milstein I would say this is the definite performance of the Beethoven concerto!
Beethoven wie aus einer anderen Welt. Eine wunderbare Aufnahme. Die Berliner Philharmoniker unter Furtwängler und Erich Röhn als Solist. In der Zeit waren die Musiker noch eins mit Beethoven, es war ihre Musik.
Grossartig.
Habe noch keine bessere Interpretation gehört.
grazie
The Pristine Classical remastering is well worth a listen: better sound and audience noise cleaned up. Engrossing version, bordering on the surreal, given the circumstances. Furtwangler interpreted Beethoven like no other - before or since. Sad that this gets just over a thousand likes and someone with the genius of a butt swagger gets millions...
Unbelievable sound quality for a live recording from 1944. German engineering! Magnetophon!
It's not yet free from noticeable distortion, but a definite improvement in the recording quality of the time. The German magnetophon recordings with tape recording bias (some in stereo!) I've heard from this period can vary greatly in quality, but when at their best, they could pass for analogue recordings from the 1960s, instead of the 1940s. Biasing tape recordings to improve audio sound was discovered by accident by German audio engineers during the second world war due an equipment malfunction resulting in better sound.
Has anyone else noticed that Erich Röhn plays Fritz Kreisler's cadenzas in the Beethoven Violin Concerto (January 1944) - First movement cadenza @19:40 in this transfer. Kreisler’s cadenza was officially verboten (Kreisler was Jewish). Was this a deliberate act of defiance or just force of habit? I don’t believe anyone was punished for this.
The Kreisler cadenza was so well-known, so often played that the Nazis gave it a pass.
The only concrete evidence I have about how ideologically committed the orchestra was towards National Socialist worldviews, is that Furtwangler was neither a committed National Socialist, nor was he particularly anti-nazi either... unlike what some like to portray. This ambivalence is probably reflected in the choice of cadenza. This was a similar attitude to Nazism by Composer/Conductor Richard Strauss and a number of other famous conductors who worked in the Third Reich.... yet they either have to be portrayed as Nazi or anti-Nazi.... as if being somewhat ambivalent was not an option. I have read defences of Furtwangler saying he was really an anti-nazi... but that argument clearly doesn't stick with the fact that he was perfectly comfortably building his career in the Third Reich and showed plenty of compliance towards it's ruling elite. Using the Kreisler Cadenza was probably not a form of defiance,.. it was most likely a "Richard Straussian" type of ideological and political ambivalence.
Regarding Furtwangler's political views, there have been LOTS and LOTS of discussions. I personally very much enjoyed watching a movie called Taking Sides (2001) which seems to be now available on TH-cam: th-cam.com/video/4KpP4Wx2Ar4/w-d-xo.html It attemps to present a neutral view on the subject for each viewer to make up their mind... I will NOT say what conclusion I had, to avoid any big argumentation here, but again, it is a very nice movie on the subject!
@@nagibbadre8143 Thanks for the link
@@clavichord If you do watch the movie, I would love to know what impression it made on you. Again, if you like to say it here, fine with me, but if you prefer, as I did, to minimize public argumentation, you are welcome to send me an email: nbadre@gmail.com
Ha! I bought this LP today: Andreas Röhn, DG Debut 642 103. Perfect condition (which means someone either listened too seldom or cherished the copy like a jewel), non-tulip label but quite heavy vinyl so I think the pressing must be very near-tulip, 1969-70. Beyond Händel -- both the Debussy and Brahms No. 1 sonatas! A strong chamber recital for such a young violinist. I must quote from the DG record cover: "The young man of 23, who has so far repaired six old cars which he has driven all over Europe, and who would prefer to live in 'swinging London', replies to questions about himself with ironic objectivity. In fact, however, Andreas Röhn is not a young man drifting aimlessly along -- he is a young virtuoso who ..." Became a violin professor and leader of the Bavarian RSO!
grazie di nuovo
Erich Röhn, 1er violon des Berliner Philharmoniker, et Furtwängler en font une symphonie concertante, tant Röhn fait corps avec l'orchestre. Il joue sur un Peter Garnerius de 1750 semble-t-il.
merci...c'est sublime!! Fait a Cremona, n'est ce pas? Bonne dimanche.
Grazie
Grazie di nuovo !!!!!
Hi, does anyone know who made the violin played by Rohn? To me it sounds like an Amati... anyone else?
What! You can guess the make of the instrument. Oh, yeah!
Peter Garnerius de 1750 semble-t-il. 2 Reply
Woah, nice job!!! BTW, do u still make vids???
...ein historisches Juwel in meiner Schallplattensammlung: Deutsche Grammophon, Serie "debut" 642103, Händel/Debussy/Brahms. Ein toller Geiger, klanglich, wie optisch stets mein Vorbild als Konzertmeister, außerdem ein sehr liebenswerter Kollege....
Hi, does anyone know what instrument Rohn is playing??? Thank you!!!
+francescaemc2 Drums
+Ian Ellis funny. I will rephrase above
Just wanted to attract your attention to a comment 3 months ago by Michel Ponte, mentioning his belief that the instrument is apparently a Peter Garnerius from 1750.
@@ian230570 Don't be silly, it's definitely an harmonica
A Koster I think you may be right. Had to wait a while for your input, but worth it.
WOW
grazie
grazie
Thank you for posting this, I have been looking for it for a long time. It is the best.
Beautiful!!!
Thank you for the wonderful upload ....such a great performance from Röhn ...I prefer this one to the many recordings of Menuhin