Product Description
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Now, completing Jochum’s entire recorded legacy on DG and
Philips, comes Jochum’s Complete Opera and Choral s.
These 38 CDs include creative and inful bonus content,
original jacket presentation plus a newly-remastered and
new-to-DG CD set of Wagner’s Lohengrin with the sensational yet
little-known Lorenz Fehenberger, described by Sir Georg Solti as,
“one of the most extraordinary tenor talents I have ever worked
with.” This latter operatic addition to the catalogue also
becomes a stand-alone digital album. Social tools and a trailer
will be announced shortly. Booklet notes include an introduction
by Jochum’s daughter who clearly understood her her’s art and
musicianship.
• 38 CDs presenting Eugen Jochum’s complete opera and choral
s for Deutsche Grammophon and Philips. This is a
companion edition to Deutsche Grammophon’s COMPLETE EUGEN JOCHUM
S VOL.1: ORCHESTRAL WORKS
• Includes a newly remastered and new-to-DG CD set of Wagner’s
Lohengrin
• Documentation includes an introduction by Jochum’s daughter and
an essay on Jochum as a conductor of sacred and operatic works;
plus intriguing rarely-heard bonus content including a
German-Language audio biography of the conductor’s life.
• Original Jacket presentation
Choral Highlights include:
• J.S. Bach’s major sacred works: The Mass in B Minor, the St.
Matthew and the St John Passions and the Christmas Oratorio.
• A live of Mozart’s Requiem, recorded in Vienna’s
Stefansdom complete with church service.
• Distinguished s of Beethoven’s Missa solemnis and of
Bruckner’s Te Deum recorded twice by Jochum, in 1950 and 1965.
• The reference , made in the presence of the composer,
of Carl Orff’s Trionfi. Also recorded in the presence of the
composer, a classic interpretation of Carmina Burana, to which
has now been appended a speech by Carl Orff thanking the
artists at the end of the 1967 sessions.
Opera Highlights include:
• A newly remastered of Wagner’s Lohengrin, never
before available on DG CD. This includes a sensational
performance by Bavarian farmer’s son Lorenz Fehenberger: as
Gramophone commented in their original LP review: “a really
impressive performance of Lorenz Fehenberger. He has a fine range
of tone-colour, and I cannot for the life of me understand why we
have not heard a great deal more of him.”
• Four more operas, two of which have near-legendary status: Die
Meistersinger (with Ludwig, Domingo, Fischer-Dieskau) and "Così"
(with Seefried, Köth, Prey, Fischer-Dieskau).
• Bonus Content on CD38 includes:
• A German audio biography of Eugen Jochum entitled Erzähltes
Leben which is NEW to CD: English translation available online
for purchasers.
• An improvisation on "I Love Paris in the Springtime" played by
Jochum on the organ of the Herkulessaal in Munich, recorded for
an internal celebratory album in 1974 and never before publicly
released.
About the Artist
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EUGEN JOCHUM It was in his youth that Eugen Jochum formed his
love of the musical works which accompanied the Catholic liturgy
and it was as a church musician he developed his ear for a good
voice. Inspired by his discovery of Wagner’s Tristan he pursued a
career as an opera conductor and developed an extensive
repertoire; the mainstays of which were the Mozart operas,
Beethoven’s Fidelio, Weber’s Freischütz and the complete Wagner
corpus. A further love became the great sacred works of J. S.
Bach, which he perceived as an exalted form of divine service.
With his profound grasp of the organ and his deep understanding
of Bruckner’s works and his Catholic faith he also became the
paradigm of Bruckner exponents and exegetes. Long before the
movement towards historically informed performance practice,
Jochum was concerned to perform, as far as at all possible, in
the manner in which the composer intended and he took a great
deal of trouble with his scores: In a handwritten note on his
conducting copy of the score of Der Freischütz, he noted that the
dynamics and phrasing in the facsimile were not reproduced in his
conducting score: “It is incomprehensible that [the publisher]
did not print it in his edition as it appears in the original!!
The original is thus absolutely correct!!”