Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Nikolaus Harnoncourt|Walzer Revolution (Mozart, J. Strauss, J. Lanner)

Walzer Revolution (Mozart, J. Strauss, J. Lanner)

Concentus Musicus Wien - Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Digital booklet

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Listening to an album by conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt, even in his ninth decade, is a bit like attending a Richard Pryor show: you know you're going to be outraged at some point, but you're also going to get a radically new perspective on the subject matter. So it is with this Waltz Revolution, which the invigorated Sony Classical label deserves kudos for issuing. Hearing the album, you are in a world that's just about as far as possible from New Year's Eve Viennese waltz specials on television. The album begins with Mozart, who didn't write waltzes, and the initial contradances are not even in triple meter. This is the weakest part of Harnoncourt's argument here. It's true that Mozart wrote a lot of dances during the last years of his life, seems to have enjoyed doing so, and was esteemed in this field by the people who commissioned him, but what's not so clear is the implied line from Mozart to Joseph Lanner and Johann Strauss I. It seems unlikely that Mozart's German dances and the like were being much performed in the 1820s. Harnoncourt seems to put Mozart first largely because their instrumentation, with winds and percussion, works well to set up the main attraction, namely the authentic-instrument performances of Strauss and Lanner with Concentus Musicus Wien. As usual with Harnoncourt, you may like or hate these, but the album is undeniably fresh, with lots of music that has rarely been heard outside Austria. Sample the familiar Radetzsky March, Op. 228, of Strauss I for an idea of what's happening. First of all, this is not the version usually heard, which comes from a later arrangement; the work as Strauss wrote it is less brass and percussion heavy and generally a bit more transparent. Harnoncourt's reading is characteristically astringent. Second, you'll hear the sounds of Harnoncourt's assorted period brasses and winds, which add color where a modern section strives for homogeneity. In general, they have a somewhat rougher sound than usual, but as compared with other Harnoncourt recordings there's nothing too shocking about this one. It's more like a pastry with the Schlag scraped off than an intentionally sour dish. The pieces by Lanner on the second CD are uniformly enjoyable, with such details as a shouted part for the musicians in the Malapou-Galopp (named for a locale in New Caledonia). Unreservedly recommended for Harnoncourt fans, and even for waltz lovers with plenty of antacid on hand.

© TiVo

More info

Walzer Revolution (Mozart, J. Strauss, J. Lanner)

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From £10.83/month

1
Kontretanz in D Major, K. 603, No. 1
00:01:09

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

2
Kontretanz in C Major, K. 609, No. 1
00:01:14

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

3
Kontretanz in C Major, K. 609, No. 4
00:02:05

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

Sechs Deutsche Tänze, KV 571 (Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart)

4
Deutscher Tanz Nr. 1 in D Major
00:01:29

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

5
Deutscher Tanz Nr. 2 in A Major
00:01:23

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

6
Deutscher Tanz Nr. 3 in C Major
00:01:35

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

7
Deutscher Tanz Nr. 4 in G Major
00:01:41

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

8
Deutscher Tanz Nr. 5 in B-Flat Major
00:01:32

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

9
Deutscher Tanz Nr. 6 in D Major
00:03:06

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

10
Radetzky-Marsch, Op. 228 (Urfassung)
00:03:38

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Johann Strauss, Sr., Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

11
Erste Kettenbrücke-Walzer, Op. 4
00:06:43

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Johann Strauss, Sr., Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

12
Schäfer-Quadrille, Op. 217
00:05:49

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Johann Strauss, Sr., Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

13
Der Carneval in Paris, Galopp, Op. 100
00:02:33

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Johann Strauss, Sr., Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

14
Walzer a la Paganini, Op. 11
00:07:56

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Johann Strauss, Sr., Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

DISC 2

1
Pas de neuf nach Saverio Mercadante, WoO
00:14:23

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

2
Sehnsuchts-Mazur, Op. 89
00:09:05

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment Sony Music Entertainment

3
Hans Jörgel-Polka, Op. 194
00:03:44

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

4
Malapou-Galopp, Op. 148a
00:01:25

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

5
Hexentanzwalzer, Op. 203
00:09:36

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

6
Marsch (from the ballet Corso Donati)
00:04:14

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

7
Cerrito-Polka, Op. 189
00:03:57

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

8
Jagd-Galopp, Op. 82
00:02:39

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

9
Die Schönbrunner, Walzer, Op. 200
00:09:08

Concentus Musicus Wien, Performer - Josef Lanner, Composer - Martin Sauer, Producer - Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Conductor - René Möller, Recording Engineer

(P) 2012 Sony Music Entertainment

Album review

Listening to an album by conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt, even in his ninth decade, is a bit like attending a Richard Pryor show: you know you're going to be outraged at some point, but you're also going to get a radically new perspective on the subject matter. So it is with this Waltz Revolution, which the invigorated Sony Classical label deserves kudos for issuing. Hearing the album, you are in a world that's just about as far as possible from New Year's Eve Viennese waltz specials on television. The album begins with Mozart, who didn't write waltzes, and the initial contradances are not even in triple meter. This is the weakest part of Harnoncourt's argument here. It's true that Mozart wrote a lot of dances during the last years of his life, seems to have enjoyed doing so, and was esteemed in this field by the people who commissioned him, but what's not so clear is the implied line from Mozart to Joseph Lanner and Johann Strauss I. It seems unlikely that Mozart's German dances and the like were being much performed in the 1820s. Harnoncourt seems to put Mozart first largely because their instrumentation, with winds and percussion, works well to set up the main attraction, namely the authentic-instrument performances of Strauss and Lanner with Concentus Musicus Wien. As usual with Harnoncourt, you may like or hate these, but the album is undeniably fresh, with lots of music that has rarely been heard outside Austria. Sample the familiar Radetzsky March, Op. 228, of Strauss I for an idea of what's happening. First of all, this is not the version usually heard, which comes from a later arrangement; the work as Strauss wrote it is less brass and percussion heavy and generally a bit more transparent. Harnoncourt's reading is characteristically astringent. Second, you'll hear the sounds of Harnoncourt's assorted period brasses and winds, which add color where a modern section strives for homogeneity. In general, they have a somewhat rougher sound than usual, but as compared with other Harnoncourt recordings there's nothing too shocking about this one. It's more like a pastry with the Schlag scraped off than an intentionally sour dish. The pieces by Lanner on the second CD are uniformly enjoyable, with such details as a shouted part for the musicians in the Malapou-Galopp (named for a locale in New Caledonia). Unreservedly recommended for Harnoncourt fans, and even for waltz lovers with plenty of antacid on hand.

© TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Schubert : Symphonies 1-8

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Schubert : Symphonies 1-8 Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Bach: Matthäus-Passion, BWV 244 (Remastered)

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Mozart: Requiem

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Mozart: Requiem Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Mozart: Orchestral Works

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Mozart: Orchestral Works Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Mozart: Requiem, K. 626

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Mozart: Requiem, K. 626 Nikolaus Harnoncourt
You may also like...

Haydn 2032, Vol. 13: Horn Signal

Giovanni Antonini

Visions of Prokofiev

Lisa Batiashvili

Visions of Prokofiev Lisa Batiashvili

Schubert: Symphonies Nos. 8 "Unfinished" & 9 "The Great"

Herbert Blomstedt

Gershwin : Rhapsody in Blue, An American in Paris...

Leonard Bernstein

Sibelius: Symphony No. 5

San Francisco Symphony

Sibelius: Symphony No. 5 San Francisco Symphony