Tag: Naxos Records

  • Jenő Jandó Naxos Piano Legend Dies

    Jenő Jandó Naxos Piano Legend Dies

    Jenő Jandó, the pianist who rose to international fame for his prolific efforts on behalf of the Naxos label, has died. Jandó leaves behind many sound-to-excellent recordings of works by Bach, Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Liszt, Chopin, Bartók, and others. When you saw Jandó’s name, you knew you could buy with confidence.

    At its inception described as a super-budget label, Naxos was able to attract plenty of buyers looking to build or fill-out their classical music libraries at a fraction of the cost it would take to assemble a shelf full of identical repertoire from the majors. Many of the performers at the beginning were unknown musicians and ensembles from East-Central Europe.

    The model met with some condescension at the start, as surely they couldn’t compete with costlier alternatives on the majors? Jandó was among those who rose to the challenge and helped sell the idea that just because an album was inexpensive didn’t necessarily mean it wasn’t good. And they only got better.

    Jandó was a professor at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest. Like Glenn Gould, apparently, he had a habit of singing when he played. He was able to get around this by putting an unlit cigarette in his mouth.

    He recorded over 60 albums for Naxos, as solo instrumentalist, concerto soloist, and collaborative chamber musician. Among these was a complete set of the Beethoven piano sonatas. He also recorded for the Hungaroton label.

    Jenő Jandó was 71-years-old. Köszönöm, maestro, and R.I.P.


    Jandó plays Beethoven

    Jandó and traditional performers illuminate Bartók

    Jandó rehearses Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 2

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37CXGOOef4g

  • Stephen Gunzenhauser Steps Down After 40 Years

    Stephen Gunzenhauser Steps Down After 40 Years

    After 40 years, Stephen Gunzenhauser is stepping down as music director of the Lancaster Symphony Orchestra. The conductor has announced that the 2019-2020 season will be his last.

    Gunzenhauser’s name may be a familiar one far beyond his stomping grounds of Pennsylvania and Delaware, thanks to his tireless work on behalf of the Marco Polo and Naxos labels. With over a hundred releases in the current catalogue, Gunzenhauser has recorded works by Ernest Bloch, Antonin Dvořák, Reinhold Gliere, Karl Goldmark, Anton Rubinstein, and many others, carving out a niche for himself by documenting lesser-known repertoire and offering low-cost options to the bigger-named competition, especially at a time when there weren’t many budget alternatives to the “majors.”

    Gunzenhauser worked as an assistant to Igor Markevitch in Monte Carlo and Leopold Stokowski in New York before becoming executive and artistic director of the Wilmington Music School in 1974. Five years later, he was appointed music director of both the Delaware Symphony Orchestra and the Lancaster Symphony. Gunzenhauser led the Delaware Symphony through the end of the 2001-2002 season. He was named principal conductor of the Bogota Philharmonic in 2004.

    Naxos and Marco Polo have sold more than two million copies of his recordings, lending credence to his assertion that he is the fifth most recorded American conductor.

    Gunzenhauser raised the level of the Lancaster Symphony Orchestra from community to professional status. Following his retirement, he plans to focus on the Endless Mountain Music Festival, with which he has been closely involved since its inception in 2006.

    The Lancaster Symphony was founded in 1947. Gunzenhauser is only the second music director in the orchestra’s 72 year history.

    More information about the Lancaster Symphony at lancastersymphony.org.


    Gunzenhauser conducts Anton Rubinstein’s “Ocean” Symphony:

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