Orchestral and Symphonic
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FRENCH BALLET MUSIC OF THE 1920S
BRITTEN NOCTURNE
Walton: Christopher Columbus, Hamlet and Ophelia / Hickox, BBC National Orchestra
Trumpet Concert: Basch, Wolfgang / Kremer, Pierre – NERUDA,
Schubert, F.: Symphony No. 8 / Bruckner, A.: Symphony No. 9
Ives: Symphony No. 2 - Carter, & Gershwin / Morlot, Seattle Symphony
This disc is dominated by two masterpieces of early 20th century American music, which reflect eclectic influences of jazz club, church hall and military band. Elliott Carter’s last orchestral work and his penultimate composition of any kind, Instances, received its world premiere in February 2013 in Seattle Symphony’s Benaroya Hall. The work was a co-commission by the Seattle Symphony and Tanglewood Music Center and the first live performance of this single-movement piece is featured on this recording. Carter dedicated Instances to Ludovic Morlot, who, in his words, “has performed many of my works so beautifully.” All works on this disc were recorded live. - Seattle Symphony Media
Ravel: Orchestral Works - Saint-Saens: Organ Symphony / Morlot, Seattle Symphony
Weill: 7 Deadly Sins (The) / Quodlibet, Op. 9
My Heart Will Go On
Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 "New World"; Varese: Ameriques / Morlot, Seattle Symphony
Castrum Doloris: Old Polish Burial Ceremonies
ENGELBERT HUMPERDINCK: HAENSEL UND GRETEL
Mendelssohn & Schumann: Violin Concertos & Phantasy / Graffin, Rousi, Orchestra di Padova e del Veneto
Dutilleux: Metaboles; L'arbre Des Songes; Symphony No. 2, Le Double
SYMPHONY NO.3
CHORAL RECORDINGS ON PHILIPS
BEETHOVEN: VIOLIN CONCERTO
Bruckner: Symphonies Nos. 3-4, 6-9 / Jansons, BRSO
Anton Bruckner's symphonies were a constant part of the repertoire for Mariss Jansons and the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks. The existing recordings - almost all the great Bruckner symphonies – are important documents of Jansons’ deep understanding of the works, and the high musical quality of the recordings also testifies to the long Bruckner tradition at the BRSO. Jansons followed Bruckner’s notes and markings with painstaking precision, and listening to a recording with the score reveals again and again how closely the conductor studied these works with the musicians of his orchestra. Bruckner's symphonies form the backbone of Late Romantic symphonic music. To a certain extent, Bruckner reinvented the symphony – something that not even Liszt or Wagner had dared to do in the wake of the groundbreaking masterpieces of Beethoven, which until then had been considered the culmination and conclusion of the genre. It was Bruckner and, somewhat later, Brahms who sought and found new methods of reviving the symphonic genre and developing it further. In this regard, Bruckner's approach was entirely new. From the outset, he relied on the sound of the large orchestra and, rather than mixing the individual groups of instruments, he tended to either separate them from each other or couple them together like organ registers (with which, as an organist, he was very familiar). Terraced dynamics, that is, the immediate juxtaposition of piano and forte without transition, was also something Bruckner derived from organ music. As a church musician, he had close contact with these and other elements of Baroque music, and they flowed into his symphonies. As far as dramaturgical development was concerned, he tended to favor Schubert; indeed, it was the organic continuation and alternating interconnection of themes Bruckner had learned from Schubert that also explains the unprecedented performance length of his symphonies.
Membra Jesu Nostri By Dietrich Buxtehude
Elgar: Symphonies No 1 & 2 / Adrian Boult, London Po
Symphony No. 1 clearly was Boult's less favored of the two, and his EMI recording suffered from a degree of stiffness (especially compared to Barbirolli). But the Lyrita version has a raw, edgy quality--with swifter tempos and snappier rhythms--that's most welcome. The London Philharmonic sounds slightly less polished in 1968 than in 1976, but the playing is still excellent. Some collectors may find Lyrita's close and clear recorded sound preferable to EMI's plushy resonance (though the latter has greater dynamic range). As it stands, this Lyrita set, priced at 2-for-1, is an essential acquisition for Elgarians (and Boulters).
--Victor Carr Jr, ClassicsToday.com
Schubert: Late Symphonies
MUJERES
Szymanowski: Symphonies No 1 & 3 / Gardner, BBC SO
Reviews:
The performances are particularly cosmopolitan. And why not? The works here reflect influences from many nationalities. Johnson, whose relatively lean voice (in contrast with the Eastern European sopranos sometimes heard in this piece) is very much responsive to the text's meaning.
– Gramophone
“The BBC Symphony Chorus sings with languid exaltation, yet it is the orchestral detail that impresses most here, right from the still, mystery-laden opening. Gardner conducts with such conviction that it is impossible not to find beauty in [Love Songs'] potentially dense Reger-meets-Scriabin soundworld.
– BBC Music Magazine
Another Night Before Christmas / Simon Callow, Gavin Sutherland
The Christmas net is cast wide in this captivating collection of seasonal music. John Fox has crafted a delightful Carol Fantasia. Bryan Kelly’s Scrooge is an action-packed Dickens compression, brought to visceral life by esteemed actor Simon Callow, who also narrates Philip Lane’s Another Night Before Christmas, an update by Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy of the classic poem. Lane’s Old Christmas Music is expressively rich, and spans the centuries. Smaller pieces from Liszt, orchestrated by Gordon Jacob, Rebikov and more recent works, complete a delightful selection.
