Cuba Material collection · Colección Cuba Material
Powered by CatalogIt · Gestionada con CatalogIt
Catalog
LP record album — Beethoven, Appassionata (Op. 57) & Sonata No. 32 (Op. 111), Josef Páleníček, piano (Supraphon SUA 10096), jacket and disc
Audio Recording
A 12-inch (33⅓ rpm) mono LP with its printed paperboard jacket. Front jacket: a bold red/black graphic design with a stylized cream line-drawing of Beethoven's profile against a black panel, over an angular "keyboard/cityscape" pattern; a red title band below carries composer, works, and performer; a Supraphon paper logo sticker with catalog number at upper right. Back jacket: trilingual (English/German/French) musicological note on the two sonatas and a short performer biography, plus a copyright caution; Supraphon logo and catalog number; handwritten inventory marks. Disc: black vinyl with the blue Supraphon label; Side 1 shown (Appassionata).
LP record album — Beethoven, Appassionata (Op. 57) & Sonata No. 32 (Op. 111), Josef Páleníček, piano (Supraphon SUA 10096), jacket and disc
LP record album — Beethoven, Appassionata (Op. 57) & Sonata No. 32 (Op. 111), Josef Páleníček, piano (Supraphon SUA 10096), jacket and disc - Image 2
LP record album — Beethoven, Appassionata (Op. 57) & Sonata No. 32 (Op. 111), Josef Páleníček, piano (Supraphon SUA 10096), jacket and disc - Image 3
PDF Viewer
Close ×Profile Viewer
Close ×2025.1.203
33 RPM Record
Instrumental
The Cabrera Arús family collection
Leopoldo Arús Gálvez collection
2025.1
Ludwig van Beethoven
Composer
Josef Páleníček
Pianist
Supraphon Music Publishing
Czechoslovakia
Eastern Europe
Europe
Date: Circa 1958–1960 (uncertain). The "SUA 10xxx" mono series and the cover style point to the late 1950s/around 1960; the back carries a copyright notice citing the Czechoslovak Copyright Act of 1953 (an earliest-possible reference, not a pressing date). SUA 10096 falls right at the 1959 boundary (a 1958 pressing is possible). Flagged for verification — see Research Notes.
Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 "Appassionata"
VM 1705
Sonata No. 32 in C minor, Op. 111
VM 1706
Note
Back cover top left
19
Pen
Note
Back cover top right
541
Pen
Marker
Likely cataloguing number in owner's collection
Front: "LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN / SONATA No. 23 IN F MINOR, Op. 57 'APPASSIONATA' / SONATA No. 32 IN C MINOR, Op. 111 / JOSEF PÁLENÍČEK (Piano)"; Supraphon logo; "SUA 10096." Back: same title/works in three languages; performer biography (paraphrased: born 1914 in Travnik; studied piano with Hoffmeister at the Prague Conservatory and at the École Normale in Paris, and composition with Vítězslav Novák; active as soloist and chamber musician at home and abroad); copyright caution referencing the Czechoslovak Copyright Act, 1953; Supraphon logo; "SUA 10096"; handwritten "19" and "541" (inventory/price marks). Disc label: "SUPRAPHON"; "Ludwig van Beethoven / SONATA No. 23 IN F MINOR, Op. 57 'APPASSIONATA'"; "SUA 10096"; matrix (approx.) "VM 1703"; "33"; "LONG PLAYING"; "MIKRODRÁŽKA" (microgroove); "ALL RIGHTS RESERVED"; movement listing; "JOSEF PÁLENÍČEK (piano)."
Works (as printed): Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 "Appassionata" (I. Allegro assai; II. Andante con moto; III. Allegro ma non troppo – Presto); Sonata No. 32 in C minor, Op. 111 (Maestoso – Allegro con brio ed appassionato; Arietta. Adagio molto semplice e cantabile).
31 x 31 cm.
vinyl, paper sleeve, album cover
Fair
Leopoldo Arús Gálvez
owner
Ludwig van Beethoven
composer
Havana
Cuba
Caribbean
Central America
acquisition, use
Dating — needs verification (range boundary). No firm year was located. The catalog number sits at the very start of the collection's window, so it's genuinely ambiguous whether this is a 1958 (out-of-range) or 1959–1960 (in-range) pressing. Recommend confirming against a dated Supraphon discography or the matrix number before finalizing the Date and the classification decision. One discographic mention pairs SUA 10096 with a different pianist (Panenka), which may be a listing error or a reissue/matrix variant; the object itself unambiguously credits Josef Páleníček, which takes precedence here.