Victor Herbert, born in Ireland, trained in Germany, and a star in the U.S., was not only the composer of Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life, but probably the foremost American cellist of his day and a classical composer of some repute. The Cello Concerto No. 2 in E minor, Op. 30, in fact, inspired none other than Antonín Dvorák to compose his own celebrated cello concerto, feeling that Herbert had solved the tricky problem of balancing cello and orchestra. This work is not often played, and still rarer is the Cello Concerto No. 1 ...
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Victor Herbert, born in Ireland, trained in Germany, and a star in the U.S., was not only the composer of Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life, but probably the foremost American cellist of his day and a classical composer of some repute. The Cello Concerto No. 2 in E minor, Op. 30, in fact, inspired none other than Antonín Dvorák to compose his own celebrated cello concerto, feeling that Herbert had solved the tricky problem of balancing cello and orchestra. This work is not often played, and still rarer is the Cello Concerto No. 1 in D major, Op. 8, written in 1884 while Herbert was still in Germany. The second concerto is the more tightly constructed work, but lovers of Herbert's musicals (true, a rarer breed than formerly) may prefer the first one: sample the first movement (track one) and go about five minutes in to the second subject, and you'll quickly learn why Herbert decided to try his hand at writing musicals: he had a considerable gift for lyrical light melody. Cellist Mark Kosower and conductor JoAnn...
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Seller's Description:
Very good in very good packaging. Originally released: 2016. Cat # 8.573517. Made in Germany. The plastic case is intact. The artwork is complete. The disk may have minor marks. Sent within 24 hours. Ref: C1495.