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ARC-126
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"Violinist
between the Epochs", A
musical connection between the old Austria-Hungary and the modern,
post-war Germany:
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In
1941, at the age of 19, he became one of the Berlin Philharmonic’s youngest
concertmasters. He so magnetized his audiences that the orchestra used his
portrait to advertise its concert programs. After the war he enjoyed a brilliant
career as a soloist. In Europe, he was seen as the successor to Busch, Huberman
and Kreisler. In South America, he was nicknamed the "Manolete of the
violin" - after Manolete, the renowned bullfighter.
Taschner
married Moravian origins, a stormy temperament and the characteristic musical
imprint of Hubay in Budapest and Huberman in Vienna with an unusually
straightforward, virtually "classical" perception. Experts will
immediately compare his 1944 Bruch violin concerto recording (Berlin
Philharmonic under Hermann Abendroth) with Kulenkampff’s 1941 recording,
thereby sensing the modernity of the 22-year old Taschner. Archiphon has
carefully restored this recording without sacrificing the original sonority.
After
the war was over, the score to Khachaturian’s violin concerto was made
available to Taschner by the Russian occupying forces. It was Taschner who made
the work known in Germany. The Archiphon release is the third recording in an
epoch-making series: Oistrakh 1944 (who premiered the concerto in 1940), Kaufman
1946 (the first American release) and Taschner 1947 (with the RSO Berlin under
Artur Rother) - both the youngest and fieriest of the three recordings. Also
appearing on CD for the first time is Sarasate’s "Zigeunerweisen",
which Taschner recorded in 1944 with Michael Raucheisen. This recording made its
way to Russia as war booty, but was returned in 1991.
Connoisseurs never forgot Taschner. Now, lovers of the violin have rediscovered him too. This is evidenced by a recent book on Taschner as well as articles in ZEIT, FONO FORUM and THE STRAD, not to mention a popular double CD issued by EMI with violin concertos recorded in the 1950s. The Archiphon CD comes at just the right time to fill in the missing 1940s.