Ginette Neveu is one of our (my wife and my) favorite violinist. She recorded for EMI, where the Brahms concerto from 1946 is from. All of her EMI recordings were rereleased in an EMI four record box set in the '70's which includes the 1946 Brahms Concerto and her Sibelius Concerto.
However the album is misnamed, because there are late non EMI recordings of IMHO her greatest performances, live performances of the Brahms Violin Concerto done in 1948 and the Beethoven Violin Concerto done only a month before her untimely death in 1949. I have recordings of both on vinyl. I am partial to the Brahms, which has superb sonics for its era - release on STIL is the best sonically that I have found.
The 1949 Beethoven Concerto was actually chosen by the great Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer who was given a large number of recordings of the Beethoven to choose his favorite (he has recorded the Beethoven several times) and he chose the 1949 Neveu - even though it was not among the many great recordings given him.
This is my copy, from a company called ERA. It has both the 1948 Brahms and 1949 Beethoven. I very much prefer the sound quality of the STIL release of the Brahms to this one. I don't have any other release of the Beethoven. Of course all these are mono recordings. Neveu is said to have told her mother (IIRC) in 1948 that she was reaching a new level in her playing, far exceeding anything that she had previously achieved.
I think these 1948 and 1949 recording must be available digitally, but I have no experience with those.
The great story of Ginette Neveu was when she was 15 she entered the first Wieniawski Violin Competition in Warsaw in 1935 (which was to become the most prestigious violin competition in the world). She was given no chance to win because the favorite was the 27 year old David Oistrakh! Nevertheless Neveu won, with Oistrakh placing second. For many years Oistrakh recordings listed him as winning the Wieniawski competition (I actually have a couple of Oistrakh records that say that). Finally, they admitted the truth that Neveu won.
Larry