£121.02

UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP Wiener Oktett - The Decca Recordings

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£121 today · usual range £0–£0 · best ever £108

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Price History & Forecast

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Last 434 days • 434 data points (No recent data available)

Historical
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£128.03 £105.91 £110.74 £115.56 £120.39 £125.21 £130.04 01 December 2024 19 March 2025 05 July 2025 21 October 2025 07 February 2026

Price Distribution

Price distribution over 434 days • 5 price ranges

Days at Price
Current Price
10 days 23 days 281 days 107 days · current 13 days 0 70 141 211 281 £108-112 £112-116 £116-120 £120-124 £124-128 Days at Price

Price Analysis

Most common range: £116-120 (281 days, 64.7%)

Price range: £108 - £128

Price levels: 5 price ranges over 434 days

Description

The sweet, silvery tone of the Wiener Oktett and the easy give-and-go of its phrasing helped establish it as one of the most distinguished of Viennese chamber ensembles. Its sound was that of the sublime Vienna Philharmonic in microcosm and the group enjoyed the advantage of Decca's top-of-the-range engineering. The most comprehensive collection of the Vienna Octet's albums ever issued, this set chronicles 25 years of recording, from shellac (July 1948) to stereo (November 1972). LIMITED EDITION. Decca signed an exclusive contract with the Wiener Oktett (Vienna Octet) in the summer of 1948 as a commercially motivated move: a sweetener to the deal that also poached the Philharmonic Orchestra from EMI. The ensemble had been formed only a year or so previously around the Boskovsky brothers, violinist Willi and clarinetist Alfred. Soon enough, audiences at home as well as in concert were enjoying the sound of a quintessentially Viennese ensemble, its members drawn from the ranks of the Philharmonic, in Classical-era music that could have been written for them, starting with the Septet by Beethoven and the Octet by Schubert. The sweet, silvery tone of the Octet and the easy give-and-go of its phrasing established the Octet as the latest in a line of distinguished Viennese chamber ensembles, from the Rose Quartet of Mahler's era to the Barylli Quartet documented by the Westminster label. The Vienna Octet enjoyed the advantage of Decca's top-of-the-range engineering, and they continued to set down classic interpretations of Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert through the course of the 1950s, for the new LP format and then for stereo. In 1956 their Decca albums began to reflect the diversity of their concert programmes, with the Octet written for them by the Belgian composer Marcel Poot. While they continued to enjoy free-spirited partnerships on record with the likes of Clifford Curzon and the Viennese pianist Walter Panhofer in Schubert's 'Trout' Quintet, they also recorded lesser-known Romantics such as Spohr, Kreutzer and Berwald, and modern repertoire by Britten, Hindemith and Egon Wellesz. By the time of the Vienna Octet's final recording in November 1972, only two members of its original lineup were left, including clarinettist Alfred Boskovsky, but critics and record buyers had continued to recognise that, especially in the central repertoire, an unselfconscious authenticity set the ensemble apart from its rivals. "The modern Troyers and Schuppanzighs on Decca AK 2060-65 are a group who call themselves the Vienna Octet; and they bear the title with grace." Musical Times, February 1949 (Schubert: Octet, 1948 recording). "The Grand Septet is quite a find, for its most important movements, the first and last, are excellent within their sphere of discreet style and modest inspiration... Seven members of the Vienna Octet give a performance that would have been worth recording for its own sake." Musical Times, January 1952 (Kreutzer, 1951 recording). "A superlative performance, and the recording is in every way worthy of them." The Times, July 1953 (Spohr: Nonet). "A wholly delightful recording." Musical Times, January 1959 (Schubert: Piano Quintet, 1957 recording). "It is perfectly played... with slightly more alertness than in the 1955 version by the same group." The Times, July 1959 (Schubert: Octet, 1958 recording). "The players of the Vienna Octet as usual turn in an excellent performance." High Fidelity, December 1965 (Mozart, Divertimento K.205, Cassation K.99). "Technically a masterpiece, musically absorbing; superficial, no doubt, but enjoyable in its way - especially in this excellent performance. All members of the Vienna Octet on this record play with distinction." Musical Times, June 1968 (Spohr: Nonet, Double Quartet). FEATURED IN GRAMOPHONE'S REISSUES (Full Page, April 2024) "Completists will be in seventh heaven []. If you want to encounter what the Austrians call Gemütlichkeit in music, this is as good a place as any to start." Gramophone, David Gutman

Key Features

New Store Stock

Product Specifications

Colour
Multi-coloured
Format
Audio CD
Pack Size
27 items
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
26 January 2024
Listed Since
15 December 2023

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