Born in Vienna in 1890, Erich Kleiber studied in Prague, where he became chorus master at the German Theatre in 1911. From 1912 to 1919 he was in Darmstadt and then took increasingly important positions at Barmen-Elberfeld, Düsseldorf and Mannheim. In 1923 he was appointed music director of the Berlin State Opera, and over the next 11 years he directed many notable new productions, including Janácek's Jenufa and the world premiere of Berg's Wozzeck. After the advent of Nazi rule, Kleiber left Germany and settled in Argentina. He worked with several South American orchestras and opera companies, and continued to visit Europe until World War II. After the war he returned to the main continental centres and conducted with distinction at the Royal Opera House in London. He made a brief return to the Berlin State Opera in 1954-5, and died suddenly in Zürich in January 1956. Kleiber made numerous recordings between 1921 and 1955, with ensembles including the Vienna, Berlin and London Philharmonic Orchestras.
For collectors,
there are three live performances in this compilation - Schubert's Symphony
No.5 and Strauss's Till Eulenspiegel with the NDR Symphony Orchestra,
Hamburg (1953), and Beethoven's 'Pastoral' Symphony with the Czech Philharmonic
(1955) - none of which have been issued commercially before. The Strauss
and the Schubert are not duplicated by studio recordings, so these performances
will prove especially valuable for Kleiber completists. In addition, there
are three very rare commercial recordings, not available since their original
release on 78s: Dvorák's 'Carnival' Overture, Josef Strauss's Sphärenklänge
Waltz and the Overture to Der Zigeunerbaron, all from 1948 and
with the London Philharmonic. These important recordings have been remastered
from 78s held in a private collection. The recording of Mozart's Symphony
No.40 (from 1949) has not been available on CD for many years and it too
has been carefully remastered. |