So why is he unknown, neglected etc.
Abbedd
Can't answer the question, but I can chip in with a Nonesuch
lp set of the Brandenburg Concertos. Ristenpart gets superb
sonorities out of the Chamber Orchestra of the Saar.
--
Brian Cantin
An advocate of poisonous individualism.
To reply via email, replace "dcantin" with "bcantin".
> I first heard of him via the great Schumann Koncertstuck with George
> Barbetou on Nonesuch, the best available. I also have him on CD doing
> Hadyn Symphonies 31 and 85. They are really quite good. The 85 is second
> only to Ansermet. If I did not have the Ansermet the Ristenpart would do
> very well.
There is an excellent transfer of that Schumann LP on ReDiscovery.
> So why is he unknown, neglected etc.
Because he wasn't signed to one of the """major""" labels?
--
Matthew B. Tepper: WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
My personal home page -- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/index.html
My main music page --- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/berlioz.html
To write to me, do for my address what Androcles did for the lion
Mark Coy tossed off eBay? http://makeashorterlink.com/?M2B734C02
RMCR's most pointless, dumb and laughable chowderhead: Mark Coy.
Ditto the orchestral suites. Does anyone remember his Eroica and
Schubert 1 and 2 which were released on Nonesuch's premium label?
Longevity and the worldwide dearth of conducting talent turned Gunter
Wand into a superstar. He and Ristenpart were featured on many
recordings licensed from small European labels in the sixties. I wonder
whether Ristenpart would have achieved similar cult status if he had
lived longer.
>"Ansermetniac" <anserm...@optonline.net> writes:
>> I first heard of him via the great Schumann Koncertstuck with George
>> Barbetou on Nonesuch, the best available. I also have him on CD
>> doing Hadyn Symphonies 31 and 85. They are really quite good. The 85
>> is second only to Ansermet. If I did not have the Ansermet the
>> Ristenpart would do very well.
>>
>> So why is he unknown, neglected etc.
>
>Can't answer the question, but I can chip in with a Nonesuch
>lp set of the Brandenburg Concertos. Ristenpart gets superb
>sonorities out of the Chamber Orchestra of the Saar.
Likewise for Bach's "Kunst der Fuge" (Art of the Fugue) with the same
orchestra, also on Nonesuch LP's.
--
Steve Hehr
To send me email, replace the "out" in my address with its opposite.
"Steve Hehr" <stev...@outfi.net> wrote in message
news:fn8r7vkmpeqldgnnq...@4ax.com...
The Chamber Orchestra of the Saar (Saarländische Kammerorchester)
appears to have been an ensemble of the Saarland Radio in Saarbrücken.
The Saarland Radio 2 web site (SR 2 Kulturradio)
http://www.sr-online.de/programm/index.jsp?dir=17)
indicates that there is a sound archive of the Ristenpart directing the
"Rundfunk-Kammerorchester Saarbrücken (presumably another name
for the same group) (see listings at links "Das Karl Ristenpart-Archiv des
SR mit Wolfgang Korb" at
http://www.sr-online.de/programm/index.jsp?dir=17&aufklapp=75&akt=183&sonder
Desc=980&archiv=true&sonderDesc=980
Also, see "Karl Ristenpart und das SR-Kammerorchester" at
http://www.asta.uni-sb.de/asta/champus/online/0402/kultur/rso.html
(including, "Karl Ristenpart kam 1953 an die Saar. Als Studio diente ein
muffiger
Wirtshaussaal am Kleinen Markt in Saarlouis. Dort, zwischen umgefallenen
Biergläsern, dem Wochenmarkt vor den Fenstern und einem blechernen Pissoir
vor der Tür, entstand das Saarländische Kammerorchester." - my rough
translation:
"Karl Ristenpart came to the Saar in 1953. A musty pub hall at the small
market in
Saarlouis served as studio. There, between fallen-down beer glasses, the
weekly
market before the windows and a tin pissoir before the door, the Chamber
Orchestra of the Saar emerged/arose].") Antonio Janigro took over after
Ristenpart's death in 1967, until 1971. The Chamber Orchestra seems to have
been merged into the "Sinfonie- und Kammerorchester des SR" in 1971 when
Hans Zender took over.
Frank Decolvenaere
To reply by e-mail, replace NMBR with 1612.
"You are no bigger than
the things that annoy you."
Jerry Bundsen
-david gable
--E.A.C.
Matthew B. Tepper (posts from uswest.net are forged) <o...@earthlink.net>
wrote:
> "Ansermetniac" <anserm...@optonline.net> appears to have caused the
> following letters to be typed in news:_H9fa.172386$b8.37235699
> @news4.srv.hcvlny.cv.net:
>
> > I first heard of him via the great Schumann Koncertstuck with George
> > Barbetou on Nonesuch, the best available. I also have him on CD doing
> > Hadyn Symphonies 31 and 85. They are really quite good. The 85 is second
> > only to Ansermet. If I did not have the Ansermet the Ristenpart would do
> > very well.
>
> There is an excellent transfer of that Schumann LP on ReDiscovery.
>
> > So why is he unknown, neglected etc.
>
> Because he wasn't signed to one of the """major""" labels?
--E.A.C.
> Does anyone remember his Eroica and
> Schubert 1 and 2 which were released on Nonesuch's premium label
The Schuberts are available at our website. We have an entire section
of the catalog devoted to Ristenpart, with more to come shortly.
dg
--
CD issues of long-unavailable classic performances from Scherchen, Stokowski,
Paray, Steinberg, and more, exclusively at: http://www.rediscovery.us
> In article <3E7D889...@verizon.net>, Delmarva LaPoule
><vze2...@verizon.net> wrote:
>
>> Does anyone remember his Eroica and
>> Schubert 1 and 2 which were released on Nonesuch's premium label
>
> The Schuberts are available at our website. We have an entire section
> of the catalog devoted to Ristenpart, with more to come shortly.
I very much enjoy the Schumann disc!
> I very much enjoy the Schumann disc!
Thank you sir. My favorite of the ones we've done so far is the Haydn
"Morning" "Noon" and "Evening".
>
> I very much enjoy the Schumann disc!
The artwork on the cover of the original LP is priceless!
RK