Works for String Orchestra Antonio Janigro & The Zagreb Soloists

Cover Works for String Orchestra

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
14.01.2017

Label: audite Musikproduktion

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Antonio Janigro & The Zagreb Soloists

Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Arcangelo Corelli (1653–1713), Gioacchino Rossini, Paul Hindemith (1895-1963), Dmitri Shostakovich, Samuel Barber (1910-1981), Milko Kelemen, Milko Kelemen, Joseph Haydn (1732 -1809)

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  • Arcangelo Corelli (1653 - 1713): Concerto grosso, Op. 6/4:
  • 1 I. Adagio - Allegro 02:32
  • 2 II. Adagio 02:03
  • 3 III. Vivace 01:09
  • 4 IV. Allegro 01:58
  • 5 V. Allegro 00:41
  • Gioacchino Rossini (1792 - 1868): Sonata for Strings No. 6 in D Major:
  • 6 I. Allegro spiritoso 06:32
  • 7 II. Andante assai 02:39
  • 8 III. Tempesta. Allegro 05:12
  • Paul Hindemith (1895 - 1963): Trauermusik:
  • 9 I. Langsam 04:28
  • 10 II. Ruhig bewegt 01:25
  • 11 III. Lebhaft 01:32
  • 12 IV. Choral "Für deinen Thron tret ich hiermit" - Sehr langsam 02:24
  • Dmitri Shostakovich (1906 - 1975):
  • 13 Octet for Strings, Op. 11: II. Scherzo 04:04
  • Samuel Barber (1910 - 1981):
  • 14 Adagio for Strings 05:50
  • Milko Kelemen (1924): Concertante Improvisations for Strings:
  • 15 I. Allegretto 02:20
  • 16 II. Andante sostenuto - Allegro giusto 02:05
  • 17 III. Allegro scherzando 01:15
  • 18 IV. Molto vivace quasi presto 02:05
  • Max Reger (1873 - 1916):
  • 19 Lyric Andante for String Orchestra "Liebestraum" 05:18
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791): Divertimento in B-Flat Major, K. 137/125b:
  • 20 I. Andante 04:10
  • 21 II. Allegro di molto 02:44
  • 22 III. Allegro assai 02:17
  • Joseph Haydn (1732 - 1791), Roman Hofstetter (1742 - 1815):
  • 23 String Quartet in F Major, Hob. III:17/Op. 3 No. 5: II. Andante cantabile 03:34
  • Antonio Vivaldi (1678 - 1741):
  • 24 I. Allegro (Cello Version) (Cello Version) 02:57
  • 25 II. Larghetto (Cello Version) (Cello Version) 05:03
  • 26 III. Allegro (Cello Version) (Cello Version) 02:36
  • Total Runtime 01:18:53

Info for Works for String Orchestra



This recording presents an orchestra steeped in tradition – the Zagreb Soloists performing under their long-standing director, Antonio Janigro. The ensemble’s characteristically pure string sound is created by just twelve musicians. These first releases from the RIAS archive reveal a cross-section of the Zagreb Soloists’ repertoire from their early years with Antonio Janigro as conductor and soloist.

This recording presents the tradition-steeped Zagreb Soloists under their director of many years' standing, Antonio Janigro. The first releases from the RIAS Archive show a cross-section of the repertoire from their early years with Antonio Janigro as conductor and soloist. The simultaneous release of the historical recordings with the new production of the Zagreb Soloists and Marc Coppey as soloist and conductor (aud. 97.716) round off our overview of this richly historical ensemble.

Founded in 1953, the Zagreb Soloists (Zagrebački solisti) were amongst the world's most successful chamber orchestras during the 1960s and 1970s. As ambassadors of their homeland Croatia, part of the former Yugoslavia, they ceaselessly toured the world. Characteristics of this chamber orchestra are their pure string sound and the small ensemble consisting of only 12 musicians.

"Here we have recordings from the Golden Age of the Zagreb Soloists, under the direction of their legendary conductor Anonio Janigro. The performances are vivid, colourful, with an extremely rich sound which has come out of a perfect remastering." (Pizzicato)

“In Reger’s Lyric Andante…the players luxuriate in the music’s lyricism. Their fervent expression and rich, velvety tone, makes this a performance to relish. There’s some superb playing from the unnamed solo violist in Hindemith’s Trauermusik. The performance projects the deep sorrow and grief of this poignant score…Despite the mono sound, the audio quality throughout is exceptionally fine on this generously timed disc” (MusicWeb International)

Antonio Janigro, cello, direction
The Zagreb Soloists



Antonio Janigro
the great Italian cellist, was born on January 21, 1918, in the via Guido d'Arezzo in Milan. Janigro said of himself in a 1988 interview with Oreste Bossini: "I was born into a musical, yet tragic, atmosphere. My father had wanted to be a concert pianist, but had lost his left arm to a sharpshooter in a war.

Janigro studied piano first, starting at the age of six, and then began playing the cello in 1926, when he was eight years old. He was given a cello at that time by Giovanni Berti, who also gave him his first lessons. He fell in love with the cello immediately. In less than a year he had progressed enough to be admitted to the Verdi Conservatory in Milan, where he studied cello with Gilberto Crepax.

When he was eleven years old, through the efforts of his mother Nicola, he found the opportunity to play for Pablo Casals (1929). The result was that Casals gave him a recommendation to Alexanian in Paris, who was teaching Casal's classes at the Ecole Normale from 1921 to 1937. Casals wrote: "A brilliant instrumentalist with a fine sense of style, and, I hope, sufficiently determined, he should become a shining exponenet of our chosen instrument."

Janigro waited until 1934, when he was sixteen years old, and then moved to study at the Ecole Normale. Along with Casals and Alexanian, he came into contact with other great cellists and musicians: Cortot, Thibaud, Paul Dukas, Nadia Boulanger, Stravinsky and others. Dinu Lipatti and Genette Neveu were his fellow students.

He began a solo career immediately upon graduation (1937), playing in recitals with Dinu Lipatti and Paul Badura-Skoda, the gifted pianist. He often traveled back and forth between Milan and Paris on the railway, and would search for an empty compartment in which to practice his cello. Once while practicing on the train, the door to his compartment opened, and a music agent appeared, and later organized concerts for the gifted young cellist in France. Janigro was an elegant dresser, and constant cigarette smoker.

When World War 2 broke out in Yugoslavia in 1939 Janigro was on holiday in that country, and was forced to remain there. Zagreb Conservatory offered him a job as professor of cello and chamber music. This turned out to have been providential, in that he founded the school of modern cello playing in Yugoslavia, and also found opportunities for personal development. It was in Zagreb that he met another famous cellist, Rudolf Matz, and together they founded a cello club, and organized two cello "congresses."

After the war he resumed his international career as a soloist, and traveled extensively in South America and the far East.

Janigro wrote from Buenos Aires to Diran Alexanian:

"... ever suis, depuis deux semaines, en tournée en Amérique you Sud. Avant mon départ, j'ai enregistré le Dvorak à Vienne, sous l'excellente direction de Dean Dixon. Ever n'ai passé à Vienne que les quelques jours indispensables pour l'enregistrement et le travail a été assez dur.... Le disque devrait paraître outer mois d'octobre, m'a t on dit. Après Vienne, en of volume, tout de suite: Brésil, Argentine, Urugay (sic), et Dieu sait où encore.... Si Vous me le permettez, for each Vous tiendrai un peu outer courant de mon activité, en Vous envoyant, de temps en temps, quelques program, critiques, etc.. Ce seraaa pour moi une joie."

He also became well-known as a conductor. Radio Zagreb asked him to form a symphony orchestra, and he was soon conducting leading orchestras all over Europe. He founded the leading chamber orchestra of his time, I Solisti di Zagreb, which is still performing, and many cds of which are still available. He made over 50 recordings, and spent the rest of his life living in Zagreb, where he died in 1989.

Booklet for Works for String Orchestra

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