Budget recordings of Alfred Scholz/Lists: Difference between revisions
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= Lists of Musicbrainz entities used in the recordings of Alfred Scholz = |
== Lists of Musicbrainz entities used in the recordings of Alfred Scholz == |
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See [[Budget recordings of Alfred Scholz]]. |
See [[Budget recordings of Alfred Scholz]]. |
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===Real artists, names used (possibly) fraudulently=== |
===Real artists, names used (possibly) fraudulently=== |
Revision as of 20:40, 6 July 2015
Lists of Musicbrainz entities used in the recordings of Alfred Scholz
See Budget recordings of Alfred Scholz.
Real artists, names used (possibly) fraudulently
A few of these may in fact be the actual artists behind the music. In many cases the names are simply appropriated.
- Hans Swarovsky. Scholz's conducting professor, a real person with some genuine performances of his own on record, his name was also used by Scholz on recordings which he did not conduct.[1]
- Hans Zanotelli. Another real person whose name was used.
- Hanspeter Gmür
- Bystrík Režucha. Conductor of the Slovenská filharmónia
- Martin Sieghart
- Zdeněk Košler. Conductor of the Česká filharmonie.
- Milan Horvat. Conductor of the Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien
- János Sándor
- Nürnberger Symphoniker
- London Festival Orchestra. Decca studio orchestra from the 1950s, often credited alongside Henry Adolph and Alberto Lizzio (see below). As their history prior to the Ross Pople era (1980s) is a little fuzzy, and given the quantity of fictitious artist names that follow the pattern “(something) Festival Orchestra” this may be at least semi-legitimate.
- Münchener Kammerorchester
- Münchner Philharmoniker
- Philharmonia Orchestra
- Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
- Camerata Salzburg
- Slovenská filharmónia. Not to be confused with the fictitious Philharmonia Slovenska.
- Stuttgarter Kammerorchester
- Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien
- Orchestre radio-symphonique de Paris
- Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
- Symfonický orchester Slovenského rozhlasu
- Eberhard Kraus (organist)
- Kurt Redel (conductor)
- Mozarteumorchester Salzburg
- Dubravka Tomšič (pianist)
- Anton Nanut (conductor)
- Simfonični orkester RTV Slovenija
- Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin
- Liszt Ferenc Kamarazenekar
- István Székely (pianist)
- Wiener Mozart-Ensemble
- Silvia Čápová (pianist)
- Zagrebački solisti
- Enrique Bátiz (conductor)
- Norman Shetler (conductor)
- Wiener Johann Strauss Orchester
- Festivalový orchestr Praha - Does not seem to be fictional.[2]
- Amsterdam Symphony Orchestra
- Frigyes Sándor (conductor)
- Liszt Ferenc Kamarazenekar
“Fake” artists
Some of these are possibly real. More research is needed.
Conductors
- Henry Adolph.
- Cesare Cantieri.
- Eugen Duvier. Probably - needs further investigation.
- Alberto Lizzio. Wikipedia states [3] that Scholz wrote a fictitious biography stating that this was his father.
- Carlo Pantelli. Again, no online photos or bios, recordings mostly with fictitious orchestra Philharmonia Slavonica
- Laurence Siegel.
- Serge Tchaikov.
- Denis Zsoltay.
- Hymisher Greenburg
- Simon Addison
- Francesco Macci
- Alexander von Pitamic
- Takao Matsumo
- Frank Shipway
- Carl Michalski
- Julian Armstrong
- Loic Bertrand
- Pavel Urbanek
- Georg Hlinka
- Jan Zybnovsky
- Sven Bengtson
- Peter Wohlert
- Herbert Kraus
- Heribert Münchner
- Pierre Carbidier
- Luigi Varese
- Paul Kantschieder
- Joseph Francek
- Peter Stern
- Herbert Fleischmann
- Alfred Gehardt
- Pierre Narrato
Ensembles
- Süddeutsche Philharmonie (South German Philharmonic). This "was a short-lived pick-up ensemble assembled by Scholz from members of the Czech Philharmonic in Prague and the Bamberg Symphony around 1968".[1]
- Norddeutsche Philharmonie. You can probably see the pattern here.
- Philharmonia Slavonica. According to one unsourced Wikipedia article[4], “the performances attributed to them are often by the Austrian Radio (ORF) Orchestra."
- Camerata Romana[5]
- The European Philharmonic Orchestra [6]
- The English Philharmonic Orchestra
- Musici di San Marco
- Tokyo Festival Orchestra
- Mozart Festival Orchestra
- Great Festival Orchestra
- London Festival Chorus
- Great Festival Chorus
- “Pro Arte Orchester” (similarly-named to Pro Arte Munich)
- Südwest-Studioorchester
- Baroque Festival Orchestra
- French National Radio Orchestra (compare “Orchestre National de France” / “French National Radio Broadcasting Orchestra”)
- Babelsberg Symphony Orchestra (compare “Deutsches Filmorchester Babelsberg/German Film Orchestra Babelsberg)
- Philharmonic Ensemble Pro Musica
- Royal Promenade Orchestra
- Orchestre de (du) Festival Belgique
Soloists
- M. Bergerich (piano). Apparently drawing on the name recognition of Martha Argerich
- Dieter Goldmann (piano). I can't find any biographical information about him, and he is a frequent performer on Scholz's recordings.
- Mario-Ratko Delorko (piano). Ratko Delorko is a real pianist, but I can’t find any reliable source for him having an omitted “Mario-” in his first name. This artist should probably be split (or the genuine Ratko Delorko should be added)
- Michael Rosengarten (piano)
- Maria Novak (piano)
- René Nuton (organ)
- Kamil Sreter (bassoon, horn)
- Sabine Lenz (bassoon)
- Björn Lundgren (piano)
- Daniel Gerard (piano)
- Svetlana Stanceva (piano)
- Vilmos Fischer (piano)
- Angela Giulini (piano)
- Alexander Permovalsky (violin)
- Peter Jacovic (flute)
- Kurt Berger (flute)
- Ricardo Casinelli (tenor vocals)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Pseudonyms: Alfred Scholz and the South German Philharmonic, John F. Berky, March 12, 2003 (revised January, 2009)
- ↑ Pražský Festivalový Orchestr
- ↑ Wikipedia article for Alberto Lizzio and before cleanup
- ↑ Wikipedia article on the Capriccio Espagnole
- ↑ Internet Cello Society Forums > Cello Chat > Camerata romana
- ↑ Tristan and Isolde discography