Category: releases

  • Coming in November: Miranda Cuckson Plays Georg Friedrich Haas

    UPDATE: You can download the press release by clicking here.

    The world premiere recording of a major work of one of the world’s most celebrated living composers, Georg Friedrich Haas, will be released worldwide digitally and in CD format on November 21, 2025 on Urlicht AudioVisual.

    Violin Concerto No. 2 was written in 2017 for Miranda Cuckson, with whom the composer has long collaborated, and premiered that year with the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ilan Volkov. The present recording features Miranda’s live performance of Violin Concerto No. 2 at Vienna’s legendary Musikverein with the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Markus Poschner, recorded in concert on November 24, 2023. It is coupled with her recording of de terrae fine for violin solo.

    Miranda has written, “Georg is one of the great musicians of our time and a warm person and friend. The emotion in his music has meant so much to me since meeting him so many years ago as an ensemble player and playing his music for him – his violin piece ‘de terrae fine’, the US premiere of ‘in vain’, and other works. I’ve since performed ‘de terrae fine’ many times. At the release concert for my album including ‘de terrae fine’, I was beyond thrilled when he told me he wanted to write a concerto for me.”

    Digital release worldwide and US CD release date: November 21, 2025.

    Download the press release here.

     

  • Now It Can Be Told! The Team That Remastered Karajan

    Now It Can Be Told! The Team That Remastered Karajan

    A few months before Urlicht AudioVisual recorded Miranda Cuckson’s Világ in August 2022, Sascha von Oertzen (the engineer on Világ) got a hold of me to see if I might be interested in taking on a project. We got together for lunch soon thereafter, and she revealed the details.

    My jaw just about hit the floor when she told me what it was.

    Some years earlier, the Berlin Philharmonic had established its own in-house record label, and set a new standard for quality in both sound and packaging. Most of the focus was and remains on modern recordings of the digital era, including several conducted by their current music director, Kiril Petrenko – their recent release of Shostakovich Symphonies Nos. 8, 9, and 10 is simply sensational.

    But the one release that absolutely floored me was the complete surviving radio recordings made by the orchestra from 1942 through 1944 conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler – a 22-SACD set issued in 2019. Yes, about half of the recordings in the set had been issued two decades earlier by Deutsche Grammophon after the tapes had been recovered from a Russian broadcast archive – but the Berlin Philharmonic’s discs, under the supervision of Christoph Franke, yielded a consistent and substantial improvement in sound quality over any previous releases.

    Sascha told me that the label was beginning work on a second large historical box. It would chronicle live performances of the orchestra from the 1950s and ’60s conducted by Herbert von Karajan. Christoph had already enlisted Emile Berliner Studios to transfer the tapes. Sascha was coordinating with Christof, supervising a portion of the remastering process and doing additional remastering on several of the recordings herself.

    She asked if Urlicht AudioVisual might be interested in helping out with preparing some of the recordings for release.

    (… knowing full well that there was practically no way I would say no to a project this interesting!)

    And so, over the next two years, we worked together on the project. Sascha sent me raw high definition digital transfers. I fired up my many digital toolkits, and worked to improve the overall sound quality as well as remove all manner of glitches large and small – not to mention some of the most sonorous coughs I’ve ever heard (and you’ll never hear).

    There was an especially interesting takeaway from this project: if you think you “know” Karajan from his studio recordings, you will be astonished by some radical interpretive differences. Karajan’s approach in front of an audience is noticeably different than that before the microphones. Compare the plush, rich sound of his Dvořák “New World Symphony” on UK Columbia/EMI with the propulsive outer movements and scherzo – and emphatically rhetorical second movement – from the concert performance from 23 September 1965. The interpretation is a far cry from Talich or Kubelík, and is completely convincing.

    The same held true of the other recordings I processed: Bruckner’s Fourth and Eighth Symphonies, Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, Sibelius’ Symphony No. 5, an enormously satisfying all-Richard Strauss program (the Oboe Concerto with the orchestra’s principal oboist Lothar Koch, Vier letzte Lieder sung by Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, and Ein Heldenleben), and Mozart’s Divertimento No. 15. The same composer’s Concerto for 3 Pianos (with Karajan, Jörg Demus and Christoph Eschenbach at the keyboards) and Richard Rodney Bennett’s Aubade are among items new to the official Karajan discography.

    I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that many of the other recordings were remastered by another member of the team Sascha assembled, Jennifer Nulsen, whose portfolio as an audio engineer is most impressive.

    You can read reviews of Berliner Philharmoniker / Herbert von Karajan: Live in Berlin 1953–1969 in The Guardian and a detailed two-parter at MusicWeb (here and here).

    The set is now available from several vendors, including the Berlin Philharmonic (where you can find a complete list of contents), Presto in the UK, and JPC in Germany.

  • AVAILABLE NOW from Toblach Ausgabe!Alfred Brendel – The SPA Recordings: Beethoven, Liszt, Strauss, Busoni

    AVAILABLE NOW from Toblach Ausgabe!
    Alfred Brendel – The SPA Recordings: Beethoven, Liszt, Strauss, Busoni

    Alfred Brendel’s first recordings were made in early 1950s Vienna forindependent American labels – Period, Vox, and the short-lived SPA label, for whom Brendel made four LP recordings of rare repertoire that he would not record again, discs that have long been prized by lovers of piano music.

    For the first time, all four of these recordings are being reissued together, sonically restored and with new liner notes, for streaming and download.

    Ludwig van Beethoven
    Flute Sonata in B-flat Major, Anh4
    Trio for Piano, Flute and Bassoon in G Major, WoO37
    with Camillo Wanausek, flute & Leo Cermak, bassoon (WoO37)
    Franz Liszt: Weihnachtsbaum, S. 186
    Richard Strauss
    Fünf Klavierstücke, Op. 3, TrV 105
    Piano Sonata in B Minor, Op. 5, TrV 103
    Ferrucio Busoni: Fantasia contrappuntistica, BV 256
    Johann Sebastian Bach arr. Busoni: Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 639 (BV B 27 No. 3)

    Alfred Brendel, piano

    While exact recording date information is not available, these recordingswere made in Vienna between 1951-52 (Liszt) and 1952-54 (Beethoven, Strauss, Busoni)
    Liszt released in 1952 as SPA-26
    Beethoven released in 1952 as SPA-28
    Strauss released in 1954 as SPA-48
    Busoni and Bach-Busoni released in 1956 as SPA-56
    Executive producer for SPA: F. Charles Adler
    Engineer and editor unknown
    Cover image: original SPA Records generic cover graphic
    Reissue produced, restored and mastered for Toblach Ausgabe
    by Gene Gaudette, Urlicht AudioVisual

    Click here to download the liner notes!

  • AVAILABLE NOW! Ethan Iverson: Playfair Sonatas

    AVAILABLE NOW! Ethan Iverson: Playfair Sonatas

    Six new sonatas.

    Six outstanding soloists – teaming up with multitalented composer-pianist Ethan Iverson.

    NOW AVAILABLE! Click here for links to CD purchase, HD downloads, and streaming!

    From the press release:


    Ethan Iverson Announces New Album: Playfair Sonatas

    Cover art by Roz Chast

    with Miranda Cuckson, violin; Makoto Nakura, marimba; Carol McGonnell, clarinet; Mike Lormand, trombone; Taimur Sullivan, saxophone; and Tim Leopold, trumpet

    Release Date on Urlicht AudioVisual: November 15, 2024

    Pianist, composer, and writer Ethan Iverson will release his next album Playfair Sonatas digitally and as a 2-CD set on November 15, 2024 via the Urlicht AudioVisual label. Playfair Sonatas features six sonatas composed by Iverson for six different instruments and piano, and recorded by Iverson with some of today’s most vibrant classical performers – Miranda Cuckson, violin; Makoto Nakura, marimba; Carol McGonnell, clarinet; Mike Lormand, trombone; Taimur Sullivan, saxophone; and Tim Leopold, trumpet. The album is bookended by a Fanfare and Recessional performed by the whole ensemble.

    Playfair Sonatas was born in 2020 during the pandemic, when Iverson met curator, producer, and frequent commissioner of new work Piers Playfair for a summertime outdoor dinner. Like most musicians that year, Iverson had downsized and was concerned about making a baseline income. He had recently moved and rented a smaller, cheaper studio, and when Playfair asked if there was anything he could help with, Iverson replied, “Yeah, I’d love to cover the studio rent for a few months.” The two agreed that in exchange for six months of rent, Iverson would write six sonatas, and that Playfair would be allowed to choose the instrumentation. 

    Writing these Playfair Sonatas led Iverson to composing larger works, including his Piano Sonata, recently recorded as part of his album Technically Acceptable on the Blue Note label. Seth Colter Walls wrote of the piece in The New York Times, “Classical in conception… it also contains traces of crunchy harmonic modernism and the bumptious sounds of vintage American jazz styles.”

    Iverson’s Playfair Sonatas similarly showcase this signature approach. The sonatas intertwine 21st-century jazz gestures with the formal structures of Beethoven, Mozart, and Haydn. While the outer movements are titled with traditional tempo indications (Allegro, Rondo, Scherzo, and similar), the middle movements of each work are dedicated to an artist whose work blended jazz and classical. 

    These dedications came about late in the game,” says Iverson. “I had scrapped a previous Adagio for clarinet, and wrote a new middle movement I really liked. However, was this ‘oom-pah’ rhythm too much like one of Carla Bley’s amusing ‘music hall’ pieces? Well, what if I dedicated the movement to her? That would fix the issue of appropriation. As it turned out, Carla passed away the same day I finished ‘Music Hall’ and devised the ‘dedications’ stratagem. The other five salutations to Ornette Coleman, Eric Dolphy, Paul Desmond, Joe Wilder, and Roswell Rudd came easily, for they had been in the back of my mind the whole time.” 

    Piers Playfair adds, “It’s cool that out of a Covid dinner we were able to put a project together that so encapsulates one of our joint core beliefs, that the divisions that divide music, such as jazz, classical, blues etc, into neat little boxes are really just names that people put on them and shouldn’t define the artists.” 

    Ethan and Piers assembled an absolute dream team of soloists, each of who brought their A game to Oktaven Audio for two days of amazing and inspiring music-making,” says producer Gene Gaudette. “The recording sessions were spirited, crackling with energy, and seemed to fly by in the blink of an eye. The Playfair Sonatas are such terrific music – engaging, witty, and still fresh even after multiple hearings. They will no doubt find not only a wide listening audience via this recording but surely be embraced by players looking for new, challenging, genre-crossing repertoire.”

    • Read Ethan Iverson’s notes on each of the Playfair Sonatas, including the dedication movements, here.

    • Alongside the album, Iverson will publish the scores for all of the Playfair Sonatas, making them available to interested musicians free of charge. 

    • Listen to Movement II, “Music Hall (for Carla Bley)” from the Clarinet Sonata and follow along with the score:

    • Playfair Sonatas are commissioned by Piers Playfair and 23Arts Initiative. 

    • The album is released worldwide on Gene Gaudette’s Ulricht AudioVisual label.

    About Ethan Iverson:

    Pianist, composer, and writer Ethan Iverson was a founding member of The Bad Plus, a game-changing collective with Reid Anderson and David King. The New York Times called TBP “Better than anyone at melding the sensibilities of post-60’s jazz and indie rock.” During his 17-year tenure, TBP performed in venues as diverse as the Village Vanguard, Carnegie Hall, and Bonnaroo; collaborated with Joshua Redman, Bill Frisell, and the Mark Morris Dance Group; and created a faithful arrangement of Igor Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring and a radical reinvention of Ornette Coleman’s Science Fiction.


    Since leaving TBP, Iverson has released critically-acclaimed jazz albums on ECM and Blue Note, often accompanied by bonafide jazz stars such as Tom Harrell or Jack DeJohnette. Downbeat has called Iverson “A master of melody” while Hot House recently raved, “Known for his intellectual depth and adventurous musical spirit, Ethan Iverson has traversed the boundaries of jazz tradition while leaving an indelible mark on its evolution.” After witnessing a 2024 concert of standards spontaneously chosen by the audience, Stereophile wrote, “Iverson is a natural, consistent crowd-pleaser. For his entire career, he has been finding ways to be accessible while pushing the envelope.” 

    Iverson holds down the piano chair in the critically acclaimed Billy Hart quartet and has recorded with other elder statesmen like Albert “Tootie” Heath and Ron Carter. In terms of performing classical music, Iverson has accompanied Mark Padmore in Schubert’s Winterreise and Johnny Gandelsman in the three Brahms Violin Sonatas.

    On top of his activities as a pianist and composer, Iverson has an active career as a writer, publishing significant criticism in The Nation, JazzTimes, The New York Times, and the Culture Desk of The New Yorker. He also posts frequently on his Substack, Transitional Technology

    About the Instrumentalists:


    Miranda Cuckson, violin: www.mirandacuckson.com  


    Makoto Nakura, marimba: www.makotonakura.com  


    Carol McGonnell, clarinet: www.carolmcgonnell.com  
 

    Mike Lormand, trombone: www.deviantseptet.com/mike-lormand   


    Taimur Sullivan, saxophone: www.taimursullivan.com  


    Tim Leopold, trumpet: www.mostlymodernfestival.org/tim-leopold-trumpet




    Playfair Sonatas


    Music by Ethan Iverson

    Fanfare – The Ensemble
    Violin Sonata – Miranda Cuckson, violin • Ethan Iverson, piano
    Marimba Sonata – Makoto Nakura, marimba • Ethan Iverson, piano
    Clarinet Sonata – Carol McGonnell, clarinet • Ethan Iverson, piano
    Trombone Sonata – Mike Lormand, trombone • Ethan Iverson, piano
    Alto Saxophone Sonata – Taimur Sullivan, saxophone • Ethan Iverson, piano
    Trumpet Sonata – Tim Leopold, trumpet • Ethan Iverson, piano
    Recessional – The Ensemble

    Ulricht AudioVisual | Release Date: November 15, 2024



    Recorded December 2 & 3, 2023 at Oktaven Audio, Mount Vernon, NY
    Recording engineer: Ryan Streber
    Piano technician: Shane Hoshino
    Edited by Ryan Streber and Gene Gaudette
    Produced by Gene Gaudette
    Executive producer: Piers Playfair
    Cover art: Roz Chast

     

  • AVAILABLE NOW! Miranda Cuckson on Vinyl!

    AVAILABLE NOW! Miranda Cuckson on Vinyl!

    Available from Waterloo Records, Austin TX
    Available from Everybody’s Records, Cincinnati OH
    Available from The Vinyl Groove, Bedford OH
    Available from Electric Fetus, Minneapolis MN
    Available from Vintage Vinyl, Saint Louis MO
    Available from Target.com
    Available from Amazon
    Available from ImportCDs.com
    Available from Merchbar

    “I have had the privilege and pleasure of working with Miranda Cuckson for over a decade, and take particular pride in her recordings for Urlicht AudioVisual. With the resurgence of the LP format, it is high time to showcase her exceptional insight and talent on vinyl.” – Gene Gaudette

    Violinist Miranda Cuckson has achieved international recognition as America’s leading proponent of new music for the violin. Her career delighting audiences as soloist and collaborator in a wide range of music spans three decades, and her recordings for Urlicht AudioVisual, ECM Records, and Centaur have been received with consistently high critical praise.

    This newest release from Urlicht AudioVisual marks Miranda’s LP debut, and features three works on two very distinctive LP sides.

    Stewart Goodyear‘s “Solo; A Suite for Solo Violin”, commissioned for Miranda and debuted in 2022, comprises one side of the LP – five strongly contrasting movements in one engaging and delightful tonal-centric work drawing not only on on traditional classical forms but Caribbean-influenced melody and rhythm, reflecting Goodyear’s ancestral heritage.

    The other side features two pivotal postwar works for solo violin: Iannis Xenakis‘s “Mikka S“, a breakthrough work with microtonal glissandi and dynamic voicings that places it among the most challenging in the violin repertoire, and Franco Donatoni‘s “Argot“, a work drawing on minimalism and late-20th-century European avant-garde styles, with moods that are at once playful and intense.

    The unique jacket design showcases both sides of the LP with individual front covers.

    This limited-edition release utilizes Direct Metal Mastering for maximum fidelity to the original high-definition sources and is pressed on 180-gram audiophile-quality vinyl by Precision Record Pressing, and includes an insert with complete liner notes and credits.

     

    You can download a .pdf of the release sheet here.

  • AVAILABLE NOW from Toblach Ausgabe: ‘Gesualdo Renaissance’

    AVAILABLE NOW from Toblach Ausgabe: ‘Gesualdo Renaissance’

    If you are a fan of Stravinsky, Varèse, and/or the Second Viennese school – Webern, Berg, and in particular Arnold Schoenberg – you likely recognize the name Robert Craft, a conductor best known as a champion of that esteemed group of composers. You may not be aware that he was also profoundly interested in renaissance- and baroque-era polyphony, particularly the music of Carlo Gesualdo.
    Craft’s first pioneering recording of the Italian master’s madrigals, made before his long-term partnership with Columbia Masterworks, was made with a handful of Hollywood’s most gifted singers – including the young Marilyn Horne. The result of these independent studio sessions proved an important catalyst in the revival of interest in Gesualdo’s unique and revolutionary oeuvre, and a landmark recording at the dawn of “historically informed” early music performance practice.
    Unavailable for over six decades, this recording has been restored and remastered by Urlicht AudioVisual and will be available on our sister label Toblach Ausgabe for streaming, sale on CD, and download in HD formats on February 18.
    You can download the liner notes in .pdf here.

  • AVAILABLE NOW! Kodály: Duo for Violin and Cello, Sonata for Solo Cello – Darvarova, Starker (UAV 5983)

    AVAILABLE NOW! Kodály: Duo for Violin and Cello, Sonata for Solo Cello – Darvarova, Starker (UAV 5983)

    Shortly after our joint performances of the Kodály Duo in Sofia and in Varna, I was able to leave Bulgaria in a daring escape, made possible by an administrative mistake. The communist passport officials erroneously had granted me exit documents for traveling to Germany, but despite quickly realizing their mistake and attempting to call me back to their office, they were just a bit late in their timing, and I managed to slip out of the country. From Germany I easily made it to America, where I had been invited to teach at Indiana University, as one of Josef Gingold’s assistants. ”
    Elmira Darvarova

    Urlicht AudioVisual celebrates the countdown to the centenary of legendary cellist János Starker with the first in a series of releases, making available for the first time a live recording of Zoltán Kodály‘s formidable Duo for Violin and Cello featuring Starker with Bulgarian violinist Elmira Darvarova – a performance that took place days before her daring escape from behind the Iron Curtain in 1986.

    This recording is coupled with a new remastering of Starker’s landmark 1950 recording of Kodály’s Sonata for Solo Cello, restored especially for this release.

    The digital edition of this release is available for download through July from Toblach Ausgabe.

  • AVAILABLE NOW! Best of the New York Piano Quartet

    AVAILABLE NOW! Best of the New York Piano Quartet

    “The interpretation[s] by the New York Piano Quartet can only be described as 𝐞𝐱𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐚𝐫𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠.” – Joachim Wagner, amazon.de
     
    “𝐌𝐚𝐡𝐥𝐞𝐫 𝐰𝐢𝐭𝐡 𝐚 𝐬𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐝 𝐭𝐨𝐧𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐚 𝐬𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐬𝐞𝐧𝐬𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐝𝐢𝐫𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 … they project… diverse styles… with understanding and finesse.” – MusicWeb
     
    “[𝐔]𝐥𝐭𝐫𝐚-𝐢𝐦𝐩𝐚𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐞𝐝, 𝐯𝐢𝐯𝐢𝐝𝐥𝐲 𝐝𝐞𝐭𝐚𝐢𝐥𝐞𝐝 𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐊𝐨𝐫𝐧𝐠𝐨𝐥𝐝 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐱 … the players dig into the music with alacrity, the strings often employing juicy vibrato and slides to emphasise the composers’ expressive points. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐲 𝐡𝐚𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐞𝐱𝐜𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐭𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐨𝐟𝐭𝐞𝐧 𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐧𝐬𝐩𝐢𝐫𝐞𝐬 𝐰𝐡𝐞𝐧 𝐬𝐨𝐦𝐞𝐭𝐡𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐬𝐢𝐠𝐧𝐢𝐟𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐧𝐭 𝐡𝐚𝐬 𝐛𝐞𝐞𝐧 𝐮𝐧𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐝 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐬𝐚𝐯𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐞𝐝.” – Gramophone
     
    Now available through online and select physical retailers as well as all major digital streaming and download platforms.
  • In search of the “authentic” Mahler style…

    In search of the “authentic” Mahler style…

    This is cross-posted from Synaphaï.


    A century ago, Ludwig van Beethoven was by near-universal consensus the most admired composer among lovers and performers of classical music; at the time, little if any consideration was given to the issue of “authentic” performance practice. Keyboard instruments of Beethoven’s era had for the most part been discarded in favor of what we know as the modern piano; orchestral wind, brass, and percussion instruments were similarly superseded by more evolved models. Conductors of the era, including Gustav Mahler, were prone to adjust orchestration to compensate for forces larger and quite different in sound than those of Beethoven’s era.

    Today, there is a strong argument that Mahler occupies the pedestal that had been held by Beethoven during the transition from the 19th to 20th centuries, when his great champions included names such as von Bulow, Paderewski, Rachmaninoff, Weingartner, Toscanini — and, of course, Mahler himself. Likewise, there has been enormous change in orchestral instruments of every family, the biggest being the replacement of gut with metal in the string section, along with technical refinements to wind, brass, and particularly percussion instruments. Today’s orchestra sounds far different than that of Mahler’s era.

    The fact that a small but artistically signifiant number of recordings of Mahler’s music were made during the acoustic and “shellac” (electrical pre-LP) recording eras — including several by artists who worked closely with Mahler — gives modern listeners the opportunity to hear these works as they had been sung and played during an era when, contrary to earlier assumptions, their reputation and popularity were on the rise until political and social upheaval – and war – swept Europe in the 1930s.

    These early studio recordings, naturally, have given rise to speculation about whether or not it is possible to determine an “authentic” performance style for Mahler.

    Several years ago, when I produced “The Music of Gustav Mahler; Issued 78s, 1903-1940” — the first comprehensive anthology of every commercially-issued Mahler 78s released between 1903 and 1940 and listed in Peter Fülöp’s exhausive Mahler discography — my intent was not only to present these recordings in the context of the era in which they were issued and in the best sound possible, but to also offer informed insight into historical, technical, and artistic facts surrounding these recordings in the form of thorough liner notes authored by Sybille Werner.

    The set and the accompanying notes were not conceived to answer questions about “authentic” Mahler performance practice — nor for that matter do I believe an answer to the question exists, though one can discern that there were significant artistic and interpretive characteristics unique to the era, particularly in instrumental playing.   Additionally, one cannot ignore overall differences among authoritative studio recordings made by Mahler’s conducting colleagues and protégés: Bruno Walter, Willem Mengelberg, and Oskar Fried. Likewise, the voices of Leopold Demuth, Lula Mysz-Gmeiner, and Sara Charles-Cahier, three singers who had sung under Mahler’s direction, shed light not only to the composer’s music but the vocal style and tradition of Mahler’s world, along with the many other singers represented in the set.

    I have in recent months received several inquiries about the future availability of the set. I have completed most of the technical work on a follow-up set that will include the remaining 78s and several important recordings issued during the early LP era, but good quality copies of two discs have proven elusive. I expect this situation to be resolved in the next few months, and am speaking with my strategic partners about a short run of the original set once the second volume is completed. 

    The original run of “The Music of Gustav Mahler; Issued 78s, 1903-1940” — 1000 copies — was warmly received by the press, and my distributors sold out of the set within less than five weeks of its release date. Used copies that turn up on eBay and Amazon command insanely high prices.

    Releasing the set as a digital item through online retailers has proven problematic, despite the dogged efforts of my worldwide distributor, Alto Distribution, and my outstanding digital aggregator, Entertainment One.

    Some of the major players in digital music for direct sale and download, most notably iTunes, have introduced logistical obstacles that make it next to impossible to make sets with a large number of tracks available for download or streaming.

    As a result, I have decided to make the entire set available through a small-scale strategic partner for purchase in lossless download formats: Apple Lossless for iTunes users and flac for most other listeners.

    The original English-language liner notes and all German texts with English translations are included in .pdf format.

    You can download the entire package here.

    You can also stream the set if you are a subscriber to Qobuz

    I will leave any conclusions concerning Mahler’s “authentic” style to you, the listener.

  • AVAILABLE NOW! Violin Declamations from the Twilight of the Workers’ Paradise – Elmira Darvarova

    AVAILABLE NOW! Violin Declamations from the Twilight of the Workers’ Paradise – Elmira Darvarova

    Now available for download!
    HD and CD quality from mEyeFi — click here!
    Also on iTunes — click here!

    An empire in collapse. A daring escapee.
    A deeply personal program of music from a time of turmoil — and hope.

    Violinist Elmira Darvarova was communist Bulgaria’s worst-kept artistic secret. News of the young virtuoso’s talent had circulated in the West during the 1970s — even coming to the attention of Jascha Heifetz. An artistic collaboration with legendary cellist János Starker led to her daring escape from Bulgaria. She emigrated to the United States, where she eventually became the concertmaster of the MET Orchestra and founder of the New York Chamber Music Festival. Darvarova has extensively recorded both classical and world music, championing scandalously underexposed works by such composers as David Amram, Amanda Maier, Franco Alfano, and Joseph Marx.

    Violin Declamations from the Twilight of the Workers’ Paradise is her most personal recording to date — a program of solo violin works from the waning years of the Warsaw Pact and Soviet Union by composers, including several that had been denounced as dissidents in their own countries, whose music was exposing the cracks in the “glorious workers’ revolution” — but also expressing glimmers of hope. The program includes four world premiere recordings. Darvarova also includes a detailed essay on the music and a first-hand account of artistic life behind the Iron Curtain.

    Aram Khachaturian (1903-1978): Sonata-Monologue for solo violin (1975)
    Sylvie Bodorova (b.1954):Dža More – Gypsy Ballad (1990)
    Grigory Zaborov (1935-1985): Improvisation (1978)
    Afrodita Kathmeridou (b. 1956): Two Miniatures for solo violin (1978) — World Premiere Recording
    Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998): Praeludium in memoriam D. Shostakovich (1975)
    Dmitri Smirnov (b. 1948): Two Fugues for solo violin, Op. 6 (1970)
    Nikolai Badinski (b. 1937): Dialoghi per violino solo (1973) — World Premiere Recording
    Elena Firsova (b. 1950): Fantasia for solo violin, Op. 32 (1985) — World Premiere Recording
    Konstantin Soukhovetski (b. 1981): Postcard from the Edge (1990) — World Premiere Recording

    Recorded on June 16 and 17, 2013 at Edith Chapel, Lawrenceville, New Jersey
    Recording Engineers: John C. Baker and Samuel Ward
    Edited by John C. Baker
    Mastered by Gene Gaudette
    Produced by Elmira Darvarova and Gene Gaudette

    Visit Elmira Darvarova’s Web site and Facebook page
    Visit Urlicht AudioVisual’s Web site and Facebook page

    Urlicht AudioVisual UAV-5984 (783583260442)

    Digital release date: Nov. 27, 2017

    CD available in January 2018