Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra, Dance Suite & Rhapsodies / Ehnes, Gardner, Bergen Philharmonic

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Label
Chandos
Release Date
November 3, 2017
Format
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    Featuring
    • COMPOSER
      BARTOK, BELA
    • ORCHESTRA / ENSEMBLE
      Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra
    • PERFORMER
      Ehnes, Gardner
    Product Details
    • RELEASE DATE
      November 03, 2017
    • UPC
      095115518922
    • CATALOG NUMBER
      CHSA 5189
    • LABEL
      Chandos
    • NUMBER OF DISCS
      1
    • GENRE
    Works
    1. Concerto for Orchestra, Sz 116

      Composer: Béla Bartók

      Ensemble: Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

      Conductor: Edward Gardner

    2. Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra no 1, Sz 87

      Composer: Béla Bartók

      Ensemble: Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

      Performer: James Ehnes (Violin), Hans-Kristian Kjos Sorensen (Cimbalom)

      Conductor: Edward Gardner

    3. Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra no 2, Sz 90

      Composer: Béla Bartók

      Ensemble: Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

      Performer: James Ehnes (Violin)

      Conductor: Edward Gardner

    4. Dance Suite for Orchestra, Sz 77

      Composer: Béla Bartók

      Ensemble: Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

      Conductor: Edward Gardner

    5. Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra no 2, Sz 90

      Composer: Béla Bartók

      Ensemble: Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

      Performer: James Ehnes (Violin)

      Conductor: Edward Gardner

    6. Dance Suite for Orchestra, Sz 77

      Composer: Béla Bartók

      Ensemble: Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

      Conductor: Edward Gardner


Four years after a highly successful Bartok recording with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Edward Gardner here returns to the composer on SACD, with James Ehnes as solo violinist, and his Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra. The central piece in this recording is the Concerto for Orchestra, the largest work that Bartok completed during the last five years of his life and described by the composer, in the program notes for its 1944 premiere, as ‘a gradual transition from the sternness of the first movement and the lugubrious death-song of the third, to the life-assertion of the last one.’ It is joined by the Dance Suite, the immediate predecessor, among Bartok’s few works for full orchestra without a soloist, of the Concerto for Orchestra, though by more than two decades; and by the violin Rhapsodies, the colorful folk influences of which are revealed by James Ehnes, a specialist in the repertoire, who already has recorded the complete sonatas as well as the concertos for violin and for viola to critical acclaim.