Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Danacord
Catalogue: DACOCD851
Release: 2020
Size: 333 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover
Veracini: 12 Sonate accademiche, Op. 2
01. No. 7, Largo (Arr. M. Corti for Violin & Piano)
02. Chiabrano: La caccia
03. Dinicu: Hora staccato (Arr. J. Heifetz for Violin & Piano)
Hubay: Impressions from Puszta, Op. 44
04. No. 3, Les fileuses
Schumann: 3 Romances, Op. 28
05. No. 2, Einfach (Arr. E. Telmányi for Violin & Piano)
06. Hubay: Scènes de la csárda No. 4, Op. 32 “Hejre kati”
07. Hubay: Scènes de la csárda No. 2, Op. 13
08. Saint-Saëns: Introduction & Rondo capriccioso, Op. 28
Handel: Sonata in B Minor, Op. 1 No. 9, HWV 367b
09. VI. Andante (Arr. J. Hubay for Violin & Orchestra)
Bach: Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV1068
10. II. Air (Arr. for Violin & Orchestra)
Hubay: 10 Character Pieces, Op. 79
11. No. 9, Berceuse
Hubay: The Violin-Maker of Cremona, Op. 40
12. Intermezzo
13. Hubay: Scènes de la csárda No. 12, Op. 83 “My Little Turtle Dove”
14. Hubay: Scènes de la csárda No. 5, Op. 33 “The Waves of Lake Balaton”
15. Hubay: Ugye Jani, Op. 92
Danish violinist Emil Telmányi, son-in-law of composer Carl Nielsen, was one of the famous pupils of the Hungarian Jenö Hubay, himself close friend to Liszt and the leading violinist of his day. He only recorded a small handful of recordings and they are here collected in new transfers. Known for his recordings of Bach, Telmanyi was also an enthusiast of his father-in-law Carl Nielsen’s music. He recorded Nielsen’s violin sonatas and concerto and after settling in Copenhagen he married Nielsen’s daughter, Anne Marie from 1918 to 1933. Later in life, Telmányi became most well-known for his 1954 recording of Bach’s solo violin sonatas and partitas performed with the Bach (or Vega) bow, which could be adjusted for violinists to play three to four strings of the instrument simultaneously. He died at aged 95 in Denmark. Telmányi was the leading violinist in Denmark and some of his rarest recordings are here presented for the first time in new digital transfers, some featuring Ferenc Fricsay and pianist Gerald Moore.