Classical New Releases

Curating the best new classical recordings

There’s always wonderful music to discover, from instrumental to vocal music, new recordings of old favorites, or albums featuring cutting-edge contemporary works. Discover more about each selection below.

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Hilary Hahn: Paris

March 8, 2021

Hilary Hahn’s new recording pays homage to the rich cultural heritage of a city that has been close to her heart throughout her career. Paris sees the American violinist resume her productive partnership with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and its Music Director, Mikko Franck. The three-time Grammy Award-winner’s album presents the world premiere of Einojuhani Rautavaara’s Deux Sérénades, commissioned by Franck. It also includes Ernest Chausson’s ...

Jupiter and Jasper String Quartets

March 7, 2021

The Jupiter and Jasper String Quartets have released a collaborative album on Marquis Classics. This new release features the world premiere recording of Dan Visconti’s Eternal Breath (2011); Felix Mendelssohn’s Octet in E-flat, Op. 20 (1825); and Osvaldo Golijov’s Last Round (1996). Eternal Breath was commissioned by family members of the Jasper and Jupiter Quartets and targets the album’s underlying theme of ...

The Crossing: The Tower and the Garden

March 6, 2021

The Crossing is a Grammy-winning professional chamber choir conducted by Donald Nally and dedicated to new music. It is committed to working with creative teams to make and record new substantial works that explore and expand ways of writing for choir. Their latest album features Gregory Spears’ The Tower and the Garden, Joel Puckett’s I enter the earth, and Toivo ...

Nordic Rhapsody – Johan Dalene, Christian Ihle Hadland

March 5, 2021

Only 20 years old, Johan Dalene has already been hailed as “a musician of special sensibilities”(Gramophone). For his second album, the Swedish violinist has chosen repertoire close to home, with works by six Nordic composers. This is music that lies equally well under the hands of his partner, the Norwegian pianist Christian Ihle Hadland, and together the two offer a ...

French Music for the Stage – Estonian National Symphony Orchestra, Neeme Järvi

March 4, 2021

For their latest album, Neeme Järvi and the Estonian National Symphony Orchestra present a delightful program of lesser-known stage music from the 19th and early 20th centuries. The overtures by Thomas, Auber, and Boieldieu were all composed for works staged at the Opéra-Comique in Paris, and are wonderful examples of the period. Le Roi s’amuse was written by Delibes in ...

Beethoven: Missa Solemnis – René Jacobs

March 3, 2021

Written between 1818 and 1823, Beethoven’s Missa solemnis was the result of intensive theological and musical research in the library of its dedicatee, Archduke Rudolph of Austria. It is, in Beethoven’s own view, his most ambitious composition. On this recording, René Jacobs shows us that it is also his loftiest. This is the work of a composer with deeply held ...

Respighi: Transcriptions of Bach and Rachmaninoff

March 2, 2021

The success of Ottorino Respighi’s “Roman Trilogy” brought the composer international fame as an outstanding orchestrator. One side effect of this are the orchestral transcriptions gathered on this album: all made in 1929-30 and commissioned by eminent conductors such as Arturo Toscanini and Serge Koussevitzky for their American orchestras. Respighi’s wide-ranging musical tastes included an interest in early music which ...

Mahani Teave: Rapa Nui Odyssey

March 1, 2021

After studying at the Cleveland Institute of Music, and the Hans Eisler Music Academy in Berlin, Mahani Teave was destined for a big career on the international concert stage, having won the Claudio Arrau International Piano Competition in 1999, and later being selected as a Steinway & Sons artist. However, she returned to her native Easter Island (Rapa Nui) and ...

Pascal Contet: Tango

February 28, 2021

With his new album “Tango,” accordionist Pascal Contet steps off the beaten track to explore the repertoire of those who inspired the great Astor Piazzolla. Contet pays homage to the finest tango dances with a set of contemporary arrangements, rounding things off with two original works, Stras Medianoche and Valentino Suite. In partnership with Paul Meyer, Contet explores how the ...

Atrium Musicae de Madrid: Al Andalus

February 27, 2021

This recording transports the listener into the world of classical Arabic and Andalusian music with highly elaborate musical sequences. Musician Beatriz Amo says, “In recreating this music [which dominated Granada from the eighth century until the fall of the Caliphate in January 1492], we steeped ourselves in the atmosphere that still reigns in the Alcazar, the Alhambra, and the mosque ...

Imani Winds: Bruits

February 26, 2021

Bright Shiny Things Records presents Bruits by the acclaimed Imani Winds. The album’s title is a medical term for a vascular murmur, an abnormal sound that is generated by the turbulent flow of blood in an artery that has been obstructed. Imani Winds write: “We are bruited. Our passages are raw, blocked. And we cannot continue this way.” The album ...

Mozart: Violin Concertos, Volume 1 – Aisslinn Nosky, Handel and Haydn Society

February 25, 2021

Mozart’s violin Concertos need little introduction. From No. 3 in G major featuring the 19-year-old Mozart at his elegant, witty, and beguilingly changeable best, to the Sinfonia Concertante with its masterly mixture of noble strength and tender lyricism, these are some of Mozart’s most well-known and best-loved works. The Handel and Haydn Society Orchestra with its inspirational concertmaster, Aisslinn Nosky, ...

Contrapunctus: The Sweetest Songs

February 24, 2021

The richest single source of Tudor polyphony, preserving almost 170 works many of which survive nowhere else, is a set of manuscript partbooks copied between about 1575 and 1581 by John Baldwin, a lay clerk at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor. This album is the third and final installment in a series of recordings by Contrapunctus exploring contrasting aspects of this ...

Lara Downes: Remember Me to Harlem

February 23, 2021

Inspired by her own mixed-race heritage and career-long engagement with diverse musical traditions, pianist Lara Downes creates and curates a new digital recording initiative, Rising Sun Music, that sheds a bright light on the music and stories of Black composers over the past 200 years. The first installment in the series celebrates Harlem as a mecca of migration, a center ...

La Serenissima: Settecento

February 22, 2021

“Settecento” is the style of art, music, and architecture that emerged in Italy in the early 18th century, celebrated here by La Serenissima and Adrian Chandler with a collection of works from that era. The pieces are grouped by the areas of Italy where each composer worked. La Serenissima is recognised as the United Kingdom’s leading exponent of the music ...

Emerald Brass Quintet: Danzón

February 21, 2021

Since forming in 2006 at the Eastman School of Music, the Emerald Brass Quintet has gained recognition as a dynamic and virtuosic collection of performers and educators. Their debut album, “Danzón,” is a recording of reimagined masterworks arranged for brass quintet by Chris Van Hof. The idea of dance is a significant influence throughout, highlighting Baroque forms, popular Central and ...

Soundtrack of the American Soldier

February 20, 2021

Navona Records presents an album of contemporary works for wind band performed by the United States Army Field Band and Soldier’s Chorus. Led by Colonel Jim R Keene, the Army Field Band is the U.S. Army’s premier touring musical organization. In “Soundtrack of the American Soldier,” the band presents music of classic American films and video games, and in doing ...

Benjamin Grosvenor: Liszt

February 19, 2021

British pianist Benjamin Grosvenor is internationally recognized for his electrifying performances, distinctive sound, and insightful interpretations. The album Liszt signifies his most substantial solo recording to date, centered around the works of the Romantic piano virtuoso and composer Franz Liszt. Grosvenor says, “The music of Liszt has been central to my repertoire since I was introduced to it as a ...

Saint-Saëns: Music for Wind Ensemble

February 18, 2021

Camille Saint-Saëns was involved in every aspect of French music during his long lifetime, and his frequent travels led to a fascinating mixture of Western music with Moorish and African elements in works such as Orient et Occident and the Suite algérienne. Saint-Saëns wrote few works for winds, but the grand biblical themes of Samson et Dalila, patriotic military traditions, ...

Modigliani Quartet: Haydn, Bartók, Mozart

February 17, 2021

From the peak of the classical era to the hectic years of the 20th Century, the string quartet has established itself as the genre to which composers entrust their most innovative ideas. The Modigliani Quartet highlights three masterpieces of dazzling originality, each of which bears witness to a pivotal moment in the lives of their creators: Haydn, Mozart, and Bartók. ...

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