The earliest known recording of any movement of Hungarian Dances was a condensed piano-based rendition of Hungarian Dance No. 1, from 1889, played by Brahms himself, and was known to have been recorded by
Theo Wangemann, an assistant to
Thomas Edison. The following dialogue can be heard in the recording itself, before the music starts: • Theo Wangemann: "Dezember 1889." • Johannes Brahms: "Im Haus von Herrn Doktor Fellinger bei Herrn Doktor Brahms, Johannes Brahms." (English: "In the house of Dr. Fellinger with Dr. Brahms, Johannes Brahms.")
Joseph Joachim, a close friend of Brahms, in collaboration with an unnamed accompanying pianist, recorded their own renditions of Hungarian Dances Nos. 1 and 2.
Leopold Stokowski's very first recordings with the
Philadelphia Orchestra were devoted to Hungarian Dances Nos. 5 and 6. They were recorded by the
Victor Talking Machine Company in
Camden, New Jersey in 1917. The
Boston Pops Orchestra with conductor
Arthur Fiedler recorded Hungarian Dances Nos. 5 and 6 in
Symphony Hall, Boston. Hungarian Dance No. 5 was recorded on June 25, 1950. It was released by
RCA Victor as catalog number 10-3254B (in the US) and by
EMI on the
His Master's Voice label as catalog number B 10631. Hungarian Dance No. 6 was recorded on June 16, 1950. It was released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number (in the US) and by EMI on the
His Master's Voice label as catalog number B 10631. These were 78 rpm discs. The pieces were arranged by Albert Parlow.
Julius Katchen and
Jean-Pierre Marty recorded the complete set in the 1960s, as part of Katchen's recording of the complete piano works of Brahms.
Aloys and Alfons Kontarsky recorded them in 1976 for
Deutsche Grammophon, released originally on LP catalog number 2530 710. The French sister duo-pianists
Katia and Marielle Labèque recorded the complete set of dances for
Philips in 1981, as catalog number 4164592. Dances Nos. 17, 19 and 21 were recorded in 1966 by the
Hollywood Symphony Orchestra for their album
Orchestral Fireworks, released in the UK on the
Music For Pleasure label. The first complete orchestral versions were recorded by
Mario Rossi conducting the Vienna State Opera Orchestra in 1956 and released on Vanguard Records. Robert Schollum's orchestrations of nos. 4, 8 and 9 were commissioned by Vanguard for this recording. They were again recorded by Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt conducting the NDR Radio Symphony Hamburg in 1967 and released in the US on Vanguard. The first digital by
Claudio Abbado and the
Vienna Philharmonic for
Deutsche Grammophon was recorded in 1982, released on LP as and on CD as . They were again recorded digitally by and the
Budapest Symphony Orchestra for
Naxos in 1988, released on CD as 8.550110. This recording was awarded a
Rosette by
The Penguin Guide. Their review called this recording "sheer delight from beginning to end... an outright winner among the available versions." Another set of complete orchestral versions was recorded in 1998 by
Iván Fischer conducting the
Budapest Festival Orchestra on the
Philips Records label, released as . ==References==