20th Century (1900–1970)
Modernism, serialism, neoclassicism. Stravinsky, Bartók, Shostakovich, Britten.
2955 products
Suk: Chamber Music Vol 1 - String Quartets / Suk Quartet
Suk: 4 Pieces For Violin & Piano; Ballads
Stravinsky: Pulcinella, Danses Concertantes / Sanderling
Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Shostakovich / Schwarz, Rosenberger
Stravinsky: Music For Two Pianos / Frith, Hill
Shostakovich: The Bolt / Rozhdestvensky, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic
Recorded in: Stockholm Concert Hall 6-11 June 1994 Producer(s) Ralph Couzens Sound Engineer(s) Ben Connellan Richard Smoker (Assistant)
Shostakovich: Symphony No 10, Festive Overture / De Preist
Shostakovich: Piano Trios No 1 & 2, Etc /Stockholm Arts Trio
Scriabin: Piano Sonatas Vol 1 / Glemser
Romantic Piano Concertos - Medtner: Piano Concertos No 1 & 3
To have such romantic richness . . . offered on a bargain label is cause for celebration in itself; to have it performed and recorded with such tireless commitment is a double blessing. . . . [S]uccessful on all counts. Scherbakov, praised by Richter and recently hailed as a ‘modern Rachmaninov’, is now more attuned to Medtner’s widely fluctuating idiom, complementing his unquestioned virtuosity with inwardness and conviction. . . . Scherbakov’s agility at, say, the con moto (8'38'') is never at the expense of a composer whose bravura is always poetically motivated, and so all lovers of romantic piano concertos need look no further. . . . -- Bryce Morrison, Gramophone
Respighi: Church Windows, Poema Autunnale / Ricci, Clark, Pacific Symphony
Reger: Three Sonatas for Unaccompanied Violin / Mathé
Performance: 5 (out of 5; Sound: 5 (out of 5)
-- David Michaels, BBC Music Magazine
Rautavaara: A Requiem in Our Time / Lintu, FInnish Brass Symphony
REVIEW:
The Finnish Brass Symphony, directed by Hannu Lintu, has recorded a masterful survey of music by countryman Einojuhani Rautavaara. Spanning more than 45 years of the composer's work, the album functions as something of a compendium of themes that Rautavaara has returned to time and again in his music, from the dodecaphonic experiments of the Wind Octet to his ongoing fascination with angels. In this performance of 1981's Playgrounds for Angels, it becomes unclear if the playgrounds belong entirely to terrifying otherworldly beings or to these instrumentalists, whose superb ensemble skills definitely qualify them as supernaturally talented. 1953's A Requiem in our Time has been recorded at least four times, most memorably--until now--on a BIS disc with Brass Partout. The bold strokes and brash colors of this work are reflected in the more rare Soldier's Mass from 1968, whose "In Hora Mortis" movement presages the shimmering intensity of Rautavaara's later works.
A few shorter compositions round out the collection. Originally written as a compulsory piece for a trumpet competition, the Tarantará must have struck fear into the hearts of those brass players--in Rautavaara's hands, the instrument is nothing short of a wild animal that shrieks, growls, and leaps all over the register with dizzying speed. The extraordinary trumpeter Pasi Pirinen makes it all seem easy. The fanfare written for Finland's 75th independence anniversary is a mere 37 seconds long: blink twice, and you miss it entirely. The most recent composition, 1998's Hymnus for trumpet and organ, ably performed by Deborah Calland and Barry Millington, completes the survey. Kudos to Ondine for a marvelous recording.
--Anastasia Tsioulcas, ClassicsToday.com
Radiant Light - Songs for the Millennium / Trinity Choir
Recorded at the choir's home at Trinity Church in Boston, Massachusetts, the Trinity Choir's sound is augmented by the warmth of the performance space. The three dimensional sound is of particular note on John Tavener's "The Lamb," one of the most popular compositions on the album.
Directed by Brian Jones, the Trinity Choir lives up to its reputation as a world-class choir. Accompanied by organist Ross Wood, the choir provides a winning performance that will please recent converts to choral music as well as to long-time fans of the genre.
Prokofiev: Symphonies Nos 1 & 5, Lieutenant Kije / Gunzenhauser
Prokofiev & Shostakovich / Mata, Dallas Symphony
Good recorded sound also informs the coupled Shostakovich Symphony No. 9. Again the Dallas Symphony’s playing is technically beyond reproach, and Mata’s keen conducting illuminates Shostakovich’s unique orchestral timbres and biting rhythms. The opening Allegro is brisk and bright, while the Moderato charms with its graceful melancholy. However, the rather gingerly played trumpet solo in the Presto scherzo points up the lack of edginess in this performance, something you’ll find in abundance in Rudolf Barshai’s gripping rendition on Brilliant Classics. So, while not the last word in either work, this disc serves as an excellent memento of the Dallas Symphony’s Mata period.
-- Victor Carr Jr., ClassicsToday.com
Poulenc: Stabat Mater, Gloria, Litanies / Borst, Piquemal
Poulenc: Organ Concerto, Concert Champêtre, Etc / Lefebvre

Naxos has done it again! Francis Poulenc's delicious Concert Champêtre for harpsichord and orchestra, surely the finest work of its genre, also is one of the most difficult to bring off. The problem is one of balance: it was composed for a huge Pleyel harpsichord, which had the dynamic range of a modern grand piano. Usually it's played on a tiny little Baroque instrument, with the balance problems left to the recording engineers, who either blow it completely or adjust matters electronically, which is equally unconvincing. Here, finally, is a performance that works: the right-sounding instrument, dazzling execution, and excellent sonics. The same holds true for the Organ Concerto, appropriately captured in live performance before a very quiet audience in Notre-Dame Cathedral, Paris. In fact, not since the recordings supervised by the composer himself have we had this music rendered with such idiomatic flair.--David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
Piazzolla: Tangos Arranged For Saxophone And Orchestra
Organ Encyclopedia - Dupré: Works For Organ Vol 3 / Mckinley
Orchestral Favourites Vol Ii / Boughton, Et Al
Nono: Polifonica-monodia-ritmica, Canti Per 13 / Hirsch
Peter Hirsch and his Ensemble United Berlin have mastered this music and found Nono's broken and echoed melodies along with his polyphony, monody, and the rest. Whether a group of seven or of thirteen or of only two, they play with excellent ensemble. Soprano Angelika Luz gives the haunting, stratospheric 'Canciones a Guiomar' appropriate voice, giving beauty and life to "un-pretty" vocal writing.
Mussorgsky: Pictures At An Exhibition - Scriabin: Poem of Ecstasy / Järvi, Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Recorded in: Orchestra Hall, Chicago 27, 28 November 1989 Producer(s) Brian Couzens Sound Engineer(s) Ralph Couzens Mitchell Heller (assistant)
Music On Hebrew Themes / Turovsky, I Musici De Montreal
Recorded in: Paroisse La Nativite, La Prairie, Quebec 31 May & 1 June 1989 Producer(s) Ralph Couzens Sound Engineer(s) Ralph Couzens Ben Connellan (assistant) Richard Lee (assistant)
Mompou: Piano Music Vol 1 / Jordi Masó
Merry Christmas / Chicago Brass Quintet
Menotti: The Consul / Hickox, Bullock, Spoleto Festival
Menotti writes both words and music for most of his operas, resulting in an extraordinarily well-suited marriage of words and music. His sense for setting the English language--particularly for a non-native speaker--is finely tuned, and his vocal lines are always sensitive to both the notes and the words, rather than the music dragging the text along.
This recording of 'The Consul' comes from a production produced and directed by Menotti at the Spoleto Festival in 1998. The presence of the composer and the keen musical and dramatic aspects of the conductor and performers make this an excellent set.
Medtner: Piano Works Vol 5 / Hamish Milne
Meditations For A Quiet Dawn - Vaughan Williams, Ives, Et Al
Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works Vol 5 / Wit, Polish Rso
From the composer's full maturity comes his only work for chorus and orchestra, the 'Three Poems of Henri Michaux.' The score specifies that the two ensembles are only loosely coordinated, and each has its own conductor. The middle movement is a brilliant evocation of a crowd on the verge of riot. Finally there is 'Mi-Parti,' from 1976, a two-part single-movement work written for the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam. As always in this series, the performances are completely competitive and offer much repertoire not available elsewhere--and all at a budget price.
