Michael Rabin: The Studio Recordings 1954-1960

Album cover art for upc 749677147129
Label: Testament
Catalog: SBT1471
Format: CD

Michael Rabin, violin

CD 1
Nicolò Paganini: Violin Concerto No.1 in D, Op.6 / Alexander Glazunov: Violin Concerto in A minor, Op.82 / Camille Saint-Saëns: Havanaise, Op.83 / Introduction & Rondo capriccioso, Op.28
CD 2
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto in D, Op.35 / Felix Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto in E minor, Op.64 / Maurice Ravel: Tzigane (Rapsodie de concert
CD 3
Henryk Wieniawski: Violin Concerto No.1 in F sharp minor, Op.14 / Max Bruch: Scottish Fantasy, Op.46 / Johann Sebastian Bach: Sonata No.3 in C, BWV1005 CD4
Nicolò Paganini: Violin Concerto No.1 in D, Op.6 / Henryk Wieniawski: Violin Concerto No.2 in D minor, Op.22 / Eugène Ysaÿe: Sonata in C minor, Op.27 No.4 / Sonata in D minor, Op.27 No.3
CD 5
Nicolò Paganini: Caprices Nos.1-24, Op.1
CD 6
Mosaics - Wieniawski · Debussy · Ravel · Chopin · Mompou · Scriabin · Sarasate · Elgar · Engel · Prokofiev · Suk / The Magic Bow - Massenet · Kreisler · Dinicu · Sarasate · Paganini · Brandl · Rimsky-Korsakov · Saint-Saëns

Newly re-mastered in 2011!
For the last eleven years of his life Michael Rabin was without an active recording contract. We know from an interview that he gave six months before his accidental death that this hurt him. Rabin longed to record the Beethoven and Brahms Concertos and saw more opportunities to explore the nineteenth-century violinist-composer repertoire, but this was not to be.
Would the ending have been different had Rabin stayed with EMI as Walter Legge wanted? Did his decision to opt for Capitol over EMI, for reasons that were perhaps no more complex than wanting to travel less, hurt his long-term recording prospects by severing a direct connection with someone who had the ability to hear what hard-nosed marketing men could not?
Towards the end of 1964 Rabin accepted a reduced royalty from EMI on the re-issue of his recordings, but within a few years even these meagre offerings were gone. "All but two or three of my records have been deleted" he ruefully informed the Philadelphia Inquirer, "I tried to get [Capitol] to re-issue them or send me the rights to them, but nothing has happened. I guess I can't blame the recording companies for not helping me. The Classical business is in trouble, I hear..." This admission of defeat was not, however, the end of attempts at resurrecting his recorded legacy. After her son's death Jeanne Rabin took up the cause, writing to EMI and Capitol and expressing a wish to reissue the recordings at her own expense. There was mention of Capitol charging her one dollar a pressing with the money generated by sales going to establish a Memorial Trust Fund in her son's name. This too never came to pass. But the truism that great art tends to outlive the artist is borne out by Rabin's posthumous fate. Fifty years after he last set foot in a recording studio as a Capitol artist, we have this new edition of his EMI recordings, and in 2012 Testament will release a further 3-CD set of Rabin performances taken from private tapes belonging to Bertine Rabin (Testament SBT3 1470). The frisson remains. Neither the passage of time nor Rabin's thwarted hopes have diminished his allure.
Extract from the booklet note by Anthony Feinstein

Price: $149.98