Ida Haendel Brahms Violin Concerto RCA LBC-1051 Celibidache. Concerto In D Op.77

Sold Date: August 7, 2015
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Ida Haendel Brahms Violin Concerto RCA LBC-1051 Celibidache. Brahms: concerto for violin and orchestra in D major, op.77. Ida Haendel plays violin. London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sergiu Celibidache. Superb performance! RCA Bluebird Classics LBC 1051. LP is VG+-Excellent with a few minor surface marks. The album cover has a 2 ½” seam split at the bottom and some foxing predominately on the back of the cover.  RARE!

Ida Haendel, CBE (born 15 December 1928) is a British violinist of Polish birth. Her major label recordings have earned critical praise, particularly her performance of the Sibelius Concerto which elicited a fan letter from its composer: ‘I congratulate you on the great success, but most of all I congratulate myself, that my concerto has found an interpreter of your rare standard’. The Sibelius Society awarded her the Sibelius Medal in 1982. Ida Haendel has said that she has always had a passion for German music.Her recording career began on 10 September 1940 for Decca, initially of short solo pieces and chamber works. In April 1945, she recorded both the Tchaikovsky and Mendelssohn concertos followed in 1947 by the Dvořák concerto. Her recording career spans nearly 70 years for major labels including EMI and Harmonia Mundi. In 1948-49 she recorded Beethoven's Violin Concerto, with Rafael Kubelik conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra. Other acclaimed recordings are her renditions of the Brahms Violin Concerto (including one with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sergiu Celibidache...Celibidache's last studio recording)...and Tchaikovsky's with the National Symphony Orchestra conducted Basil Cameron. She is renowned for her distinguished interpretations of the classical violin repertoire, yet is equally passionate about the music of the 20th century, including Béla Bartók, Benjamin Britten and William Walton. Among her premiere performances have been Luigi Dallapiccola's Tartiniana Seconda, and Allan Pettersson's Violin Concerto No. 2, which was dedicated to her. Paying special tribute to her teacher George Enescu, her Decca recording of his Violin Sonata with Vladimir Ashkenazy in 2000 earned her a Diapason d'Or.