Neujahr Konzert 2025

Wiener Philharmoniker - Prosit Neujahr! A Viennese New Year's 2025 Concert (2025) [Official Digital Download]

Wiener Philharmoniker - Prosit Neujahr! A Viennese New Year's 2025 Concert (2025) [Official Digital Download]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44.1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 02:30:55 minutes | 1010 MB
Classical | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

It has long been a Philharmonic tradition at the New Year to present a program consisting of the lively and at the same time nostalgic music from the vast repertoire of the family of Johann Strauß and its contemporaries.
Wiener Philharmoniker - Prosit Neujahr! A Viennese New Year's 2025 Concert (2025) [Official Digital Download]

Wiener Philharmoniker - Prosit Neujahr! A Viennese New Year's 2025 Concert (2025) [Official Digital Download]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44.1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 02:30:55 minutes | 1010 MB
Classical | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

It has long been a Philharmonic tradition at the New Year to present a program consisting of the lively and at the same time nostalgic music from the vast repertoire of the family of Johann Strauß and its contemporaries.

Karat - Hohe Himmel (2025) [Official Digital Download]  Vinyl & HR

Posted by pyatak at Feb. 22, 2025
Karat - Hohe Himmel (2025) [Official Digital Download]

Karat - Hohe Himmel (2025) [Official Digital Download]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44.1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 44:24 minutes | 526 MB
Rock | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

Ein bisschen Freiheit für den Kopf: Gleich hinter Dresden, hinter dem südöstlichen Ende der sächsischen Landeshauptstadt, grenzt Heidenau. In den Annalen der Rock- und Popgeschichte taucht das sympathische Städtchen mit seinen rund 17.000 Einwohnern nicht weiter auf, sollte es aber. Denn hier fand am 22. Februar 1975 das allererste KARAT-Konzert statt.

Karat - Hohe Himmel (2025) [Official Digital Download]  Vinyl & HR

Posted by pyatak at Feb. 22, 2025
Karat - Hohe Himmel (2025) [Official Digital Download]

Karat - Hohe Himmel (2025) [Official Digital Download]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44.1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 44:24 minutes | 526 MB
Rock | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

Ein bisschen Freiheit für den Kopf: Gleich hinter Dresden, hinter dem südöstlichen Ende der sächsischen Landeshauptstadt, grenzt Heidenau. In den Annalen der Rock- und Popgeschichte taucht das sympathische Städtchen mit seinen rund 17.000 Einwohnern nicht weiter auf, sollte es aber. Denn hier fand am 22. Februar 1975 das allererste KARAT-Konzert statt.
Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert, Rheinische Kantorei - Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf: Giob (2001)

Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert, Rheinische Kantorei - Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf: Giob (2001)
XLD | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 698 Mb | Total time: 151:56 | Scans included
Classical | CPO | 999 790-2 | Recorded: 2000

After listening to this inspired oratorio, it’s clear why Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf was recognized in his day as Franz Joseph Haydn’s primary competitor. It’s a lovely work, loaded with drama, style, and expertly crafted instrumental and vocal writing. From the dramatic dotted rhythms and churning string sequences of the overture to the resounding spirited choral fugue finale, Dittersdorf’s music masterfully propels his grandiose subject matter, commanding attention more profoundly than any recorded vocal/choral work in recent memory (and this one’s more than two and a half hours long!).
Rheinische Kantorei; Das Kleine Konzert; Hermann Max - Franz Tunder: Concerti (2004)

Franz Tunder: Concerti (2004)
Rheinische Kantorei; Das Kleine Konzert; Hermann Max, conductor

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 299 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 167 Mb | Scans included
Classical, Baroque | Label: CPO | # cpo999943-2 | Time: 01:08:32

Although his name might not rate very highly on the recognition meter even of classical music buffs, Franz Tunder was a consequential entity in the early history of the German Baroque. Tunder served as organist at the Marienkirche in Lübeck from 1641 to his death in 1667, and during that time instituted the Abendmusiken, the first series of public concerts to take place in Germany. Seventeen vocal "concertos" exist from Tunder's pen and they were created for these special events; little more than half of them appear on this generous and well-performed CPO disc, Franz Tunder: Concerti. Conductor Hermann Max leads Das Kleine Konzert and the singing group Rheinische Kantorei in 10 concerti, which uses a variety of singers in frontline combinations. Tunder must have had some good basses in his chorus, as they have most of the hardest music in the Concerti, and five of these ten works are sung by bass or basses alone. Both men used here, Ekkehard Abele and Yoshitaka Ogasawara, do an excellent job. The string parts are crisp and do not dawdle, and Max never allows the music to get too grandiose, wisely keeping it within the boundaries of the chamber idiom to which it belongs. The music is never ornately busy and has a relaxed, soothing effect.
Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert - Ferdinand Ries: Die Könige in Israel (2007)

Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert - Ferdinand Ries: Die Könige in Israel (2007)
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue & Log) ~ 467 Mb | Total time: 109:53 | Scans included
Classical | Label: CPO | # 777 221-2 | Recorded: 2005

Some composers have a strong influence on later generations. Sometimes this influence persists a long time after their death. Beethoven is just one example. It took a while before Brahms dared to write a symphony; he wasn't sure he could live up to the standard Beethoven had set. Another is George Frideric Handel. He was a man of the theatre and preferred to compose operas but it was mainly because of his oratorios that he was admired - and feared. Mozart was so impressed by Handel's oratorios that he arranged several of them and Haydn's oratorio 'Die Schöpfung' is unthinkable without the model of Handel's Messiah. The oratorio 'Die Könige in Israel' by Ferdinand Ries shows how long Handel's influence lasted. It shows the traces of Handel's style and yet for all this Ries feared the standard Handel had set. This explains the story behind the oratorio.
Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert, Rheinische Kantorei - Georg Philipp Telemann: Lukas Passion 1748 (2011)

Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert, Rheinische Kantorei - Georg Philipp Telemann: Lukas Passion 1748 (2011)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 438 Mb | Total time: 91:32 | Scans included
Classical | Label: CPO | # 777 601-2 | Recorded: 2010

Last year’s Magdeburg Festival Days were marked by an extraordinary event: the revival of Telemann’s last known extant passion composition, the St. Luke Passion of 1748, by the Rheinische Kantorei and the Kleines Konzert under Hermann Max. In the mid-nineteenth century the autograph made its way to Berlin, where it today is preserved as the only source for this composition. The historical edition was prepared especially for the modern repeat performance in Magdeburg. Every four years Telemann returned to the same passion narrative, always employing the language of music to occupy himself in new ways with the gospel message of each of the four evangelists.
Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert, Rheinische Kantorei - Johann Sebastian Bach: Johannes-Passion (1991)

Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert, Rheinische Kantorei - Johann Sebastian Bach: Johannes-Passion (1991)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 493 Mb | Total time: 47:00+50:04 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Capriccio | # 60 023-2 | Recorded: 1990

Außerordent- lich lebendige, dramatisch gespannte Wieder- gabe durch ein kleines, stimmlich tüchtiges Ensemble. Gute Solisten sowohl im vokalen wie instrumentalen Bereich.
Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert - Hasse: Messe in d & Heinichen: Requiem (1998)

Hermann Max, Das Kleine Konzert - Hasse: Messe in d & Heinichen: Requiem (1998)
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue & Log) ~ 304 Mb | Total time: 67:10 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Capriccio | # 10 570 | Recorded: 1995

Hasse was 52 when he composed the Mass in D minor recorded here, but in every way – in form, affect, and aesthetics – Hasse belongs more to the generation of the much younger Haydn than to that of Bach. His Mass in D minor is thoroughly a work of the Enlightenment: symmetrical, lucidly rational, celebratory rather than penitent, 'public' rather than personal, a concert of elegant music rather than an outpouring of spiritual energy. It's not as great a work as Bach's – let us not be unclear about that – but it's a wonderful composition in its own way. If you have heard and appreciated the Haydn and Mozart masses, you'll find this mass quite as excellent as those. In fact, Hasse's mass sounds very much like Haydn at his best, in the masses that Haydn wrote 40-some years later for Esterhazy occasions.