FREE UK SHIPPING OVER £35!

Daniil Shafran: More Cello Masterworks (Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, etc.) | Parnassus PACL95016

Daniil Shafran: More Cello Masterworks (Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, etc.)

£10.58

In stock - available for despatch within 1 working day

New Item

Label: Parnassus

Cat No: PACL95016

Barcode: 5055354409165

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Release Date: 3rd October 2025

Contents

Artists

Daniil Shafran (cello)
Nina Musinyan (piano)
Anton Ginsburg (piano)
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra
USSR State Symphony Orchestra

Conductors

Kirill Kondrashin
Gennady Rozhdestvensky

Works

Popper, David

Concert Etude, op.55 no.2
Spanish Dances, op.54
» no.5 Vito

Prokofiev, Sergei

Sinfonia Concertante in E minor for cello and orchestra, op.125

Saint-Saens, Camille

Carnival of the Animals
» The Swan (version for cello and piano)

Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Ilyich

Variations on a Rococo theme, op.33

Tsintsadze, Sulkhan

Pieces (5) on Folk Themes for cello and piano

Artists

Daniil Shafran (cello)
Nina Musinyan (piano)
Anton Ginsburg (piano)
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra
USSR State Symphony Orchestra

Conductors

Kirill Kondrashin
Gennady Rozhdestvensky

About

Parnassus presents legendary recordings of cello masterworks from one of the greatest cellists of the early 20th century, Daniil Borisovich Shafran. It was a quirk of fate that the Soviet Union should have produced, within the space of four years, two of the greatest cellists of the age, Mstislav Rostropovich and Daniil Borisovich Shafran. It was a particular misfortune for Shafran that Rostropovich should have been so visible a musician, culturally and politically, as Shafran was largely overlooked. These recordings look to shine a spotlight on this great artist in full remasterings by Paul Arden-Taylor.

Shafran was born on 13 January 1923 in St Petersburg, then Petrograd/Leningrad, where his father, Boris, was principal cellist in the Leningrad Philharmonic. Studies with his father were followed by lessons with Aleksander Shtrimer (who had also taught Shafran’s father), first at the Special Music School, and then at the conservatoire two years later. Shafran made his concerto debut with the Philharmonic at the age of eleven, performing Tchaikovsky’s ‘Rococo’ Variations conducted by Albert Coates and three years later, in 1937, the same year that he won the All-Union Competition, he recorded the work with Alexander Gauk. His competition prize was a 1630 Amati cello (reputedly), slightly on the small side, that he used for the rest of his life. After his death, it turned out that it was, in fact, probably eighteenth-century German or Bohemian.

“Sebastian Comberti had the best description …like finding the last member of a lost tribe of cellists. His playing takes you right back to a different era.” - Stephen Isserlis

“Comparisons in the Prokofiev are especially telling, Rostropovich is earnest but suave, Shafran more colourful but unremittingly intense. Rozhdestvensky’s mastery of the score is a bonus: this was the period when he made his greatest Prokofiev recordings”  - Gramophone

“every bar holds its own brand of magic.” - Gramophone (Tsindzadze)

Error on this page? Let us know here

Need more information on this product? Click here