Showing posts with label classical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classical. Show all posts

13 March, 2013

Orlando Gibbons - Complete Keyboard Works (2007)

Orlando Gibbons - Complete Keyboard Works (2007)
Daniel-Ben Pineaar - piano
classical | 2cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Deux-Elles
Allmusic:
Pianist Daniel-Ben Pienaar, an English performer and educator of South African origin, is one of the few individuals to have played the Renaissance organ and virginal music of Orlando Gibbons on a modern piano. One of the others was Glenn Gould, from whom Pienaar takes pains to distinguish himself in his own booklet notes. He strives for a more pianistic approach in contrast to Gould's abstract (Pienaar's word is "arid") playing, with a good deal of pedal and a light, feathery treatment of the quick runs that emerge from Gibbons' basically chordal textures. In various other ways, Pienaar takes Gibbons' music merely as a creative starting point. He groups most of the music into heterogenous sets of from three to five pieces, creating suite-like configurations that Gibbons wouldn't have recognized. It may be that, on a piano, Gould (who named Gibbons, not Bach, as his favorite composer) better complements the complex, serious style of Gibbons' music; Pienaar comes off as frilly and a bit sentimental in comparison. But the real choice is between piano and the instruments for which Gibbons wrote the music. Hear the recording of a program similar to Pienaar's by John Toll, playing a small organ, on the Linn label; how the focus stays on the contrapuntal structure of the music, how the rapid runs complement that structure instead of seeming like an exotic effect, how the serious, intellectual quality of Gibbons' keyboard music, the perfect counterpart to his refined madrigals. There's no doubting the elegance and the technical facility of Pienaar's performances. The only doubt arises when one considers the question of their necessity.

Tracks
cd1
01 - Fantasia MB10
02 - Pavan MB17
03 - Galliard MB24
04 - Ground MB26
05 - Mask The Fairest nymph MB43
06 - Fantasia MB14
07 - Alman MB35
08 - Galliard MB25
09 - Ground The Italian ground MB27
10 - Mask Lincoln’s Inn Mask MB44
11 - Prelude MB2
12 - Alman MB37
13 - Alman MB36
14 - Fantasia MB6
15 - Fantasia MB5
16 - Galliard Lady Hutton MB20
17 - Galliard MB23
18 - Galliard MB21
19 - Fantasia MB9
20 - Pavan MB16
21 - Ground Whoop, do me no harm, good man MB31
22 - Ground Peascod time, or, The hunt’s up MB30
cd2
01 - Fantasia MB7
02 - Alman MB33
03 - Coranto French Coranto MB38
04 - Coranto MB39
05 - Mask Welcome home MB42
06 - Prelude MB1
07 - Versus MB4
08 - Fantasia MB11
09 - Alman MB34
10 - Coranto MB40
11 - Fantasia MB13
12 - Mask The temple mask MB45
13 - Ground The Queens’s command MB28
14 - Ground The woods so wild MB29
15 - French Air MB32
16 - Prelude MB3
17 - Fantasia MB8
18 - Pavan MB15
19 - Galliard MB22
20 - Mask Nann’s mask or French Alman MB41
21 - Pavan Lord Salisbury MB18
22 - Galliard Lord Salisbury MB19
23 - Fantasia MB12




31 January, 2013

Eberhard Weber - Stages Of A Long Journey (2005)

Eberhard Weber 2005 - Stages Of A Long Journey
jazz, classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 390MB
ECM
Allmusic:
Stages of a Long Journey was recorded in Stuttgart in March of 2005, as part of a celebration of both the 20th anniversary of the Theaterhaus Jazzstage festival and as a 65th birthday celebration for bassist Eberhard Weber. Weber was asked to pick a number of his own compositions, rearrange them by writing new charts for the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, and select his own band as well. Weber picked on former and current bandmates such as Gary Burton, Jan Garbarek, Rainer Bruninghaus, Marilyn Mazur, Wolfgang Dauner, Reto Weber, and human beatbox Nino G., and carefully chose material from his own catalog and pieces he had performed on in their initial recordings, such as Bruninghaus's "Piano Transition," Jerome Kern's "Yesterdays," Mazur's "Percussion Transition," and Carla Bley's "Syndrome." Those wondering if there is any actual "jazz" on this record need look no further than the gorgeous version of Bley's tune here, where Burton, Garbarek, and the bassist all shine. Another consideration for the listener is in Weber's beautiful, inventive, rhythmic charts for the orchestra (under the direction of Roland Kluttig). "Silent Feet," which opens the set, is one such exercise. What begins as a slow bowed bassline is colored and enlarged by the orchestra entering gradually, tensely, and dramatically, as grey dawn emerges from the night sky. A pulse begins just after Mazur's percussion entry, the band plays these intricate rhythmic phrases, and the orchestra adds genuine color, texture, and depth. They follow rhythmic signature perfectly, allowing the tune to evolve and bring its delightfully understated melodic frame (which is not inseparable from the pulse) to the fore. By the time Garbarek takes his solo and Weber plays double time behind him, the big brassy horns are ready to push and drop out only as Burton enters with a truly lovely and poetic solo.
There are a fine pair of duets played here as well, between Dauner on piano and Weber's bass on the lovely Kern number, and also "Seven Movements," shared by the bassist and Garbarek. They set the stage for what follows, the elongated "Birthday Suite" that encompasses five pieces -- bookended by gorgeous readings of two of Weber's best-known pieces, "The Colours of Cloë" and "Yellow Fields." On "Hang Around," a trio of Nino G., Weber's downright funky acoustic bass, and the self-designed percussion instrument played by Reto Weber (no relation) called the "hang," are in deep intuitive interplay. The work by G. is not a novelty, but something inventive, utterly fresh, and full of the energy -- especially in G.'s solo. The final two pieces of the evening are in many ways the most satisfying. The full band returns on "The Last Stage of a Long Journey," where the orchestra introduces the brooding and melancholy composition. Strings and the deep brass of tuba and euphonium gradually bring up the tempo and introduce the lithe melody, as Weber brings his bass up from the ether. When Bruninghaus restates the theme on the piano and Weber is allowed free play inside the rhythm, Burton begins to color it. When Garbarek's icy soprano saxophone cries out, it is arresting and rings true. The concert ends with a brief bass solo by Weber on "Air." In just over three minutes, the great bassist is not remotely interested in showing his chops but in playing this bittersweet little song as a folk tune. This is a watershed moment in Weber's recorded output, because it reveals his collective gifts as a musician, which, even when understated, are shining examples of the European jazz, folk, classical, and new music he has forged these last 40 years as a leader and as a valued sideman and composer.

Tracks
-01. "Silent Feet" - 7:37
-02. "Syndrome" - 7:44
-03. "Yesterdays" - 5:03
-04. "Seven Movements / Birthday Suite" - 5:54
-05. "Colours of Chloe" - 7:19
-06. "Piano Transitino" - 4:11
-07. "Maurizius" - 7:04
-08. "Percussion transition" - 3:03
-09. "Yellow Fields" - 7:01
-10. "Hang Around" - 4:17
-11. "Last Stage of a Long Journey" - 11:06
-12. "Air" - 3:10

Personnel
* Gary Burton - vibraphone
* Jan Garbarek - soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone
* Eberhard Weber - bass instrument
* Rainer Bruninghaus - piano, keyboards
* Marilyn Mazur - drums, percussion
* Wolfgang Dauner - piano
* Nino G
* Roland Kluttig
* SWR Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra


26 October, 2012

Scharwenka - Complete Chamber Works (1995)

Scharwenka - Complete Chamber Works (1995)
classical | 2cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 690MB
Hyperion
Hyperion:
Franz Xaver Scharwenka was born on 6 January 1850 at Samter, near the Polish city of Poznan, which was then in East Prussia. Both Xaver and his older brother Philipp (1847–1917) showed early signs of musical talent and were much encouraged by their father in their first music lessons.
In 1865 the Scharwenka family moved to Berlin where the two brothers were enrolled at Theodor Kullak’s Neue Akademie der Tonkunst. Xaver made rapid progress, studying the piano with Kullak himself, a pupil of Carl Czerny, and composition with Richard Wuerst who in turn had studied with Mendelssohn in Leipzig. This formal musical education, together with his own natural ability and dedication, ensured Scharwenka’s success as both pianist and composer, and in 1869, a year after his pianistic debut at the Berlin Singakademie, his first compositions were published. Before 1874, when he took up a career as a travelling virtuoso, he had already been on Kullak’s teaching staff for some five years as professor of piano, and the experience thus gained was to prove invaluable in later years when he turned his attentions more to teaching, opening his own conservatory in Berlin in 1881, and subsequently a branch in New York in 1891 following his successful American debut. By the middle of the 1890s that institution had become one of the world’s largest, universally acknowledged as offering the highest quality of musical education.
It was the outbreak of war in 1914 which forced Scharwenka’s retirement from the international concert platform after some forty years, during which time he had achieved the highest reputation worldwide, not only as a pianist of exceptional quality but also as a fine all-round musician, receiving numerous decorations and orders from most of the crowned heads of Europe, as well as many honours from various educational institutions. The last few years of his life were spent in semi-retirement in Berlin, where he died, a much respected man, in December 1924.
Scharwenka’s reputation as a composer must surely rest with his four piano concertos and his large and varied output for piano solo, although he also wrote a symphony and had considerable success with his opera Mataswintha. By contrast, his chamber music was, in his own opinion, of lesser importance, although it is perhaps worth mentioning that, with the exception of the Serenade for violin and piano, Op 70, the other works in this genre (piano quartet, two piano trios, violin sonata and cello sonata) are substantial and, perhaps predictably, all include the piano.
Both the Piano Trio in F sharp minor, Op 1, and the Violin Sonata in D minor, Op 2, were probably conceived whilst Scharwenka was still studying at Kullak’s Academy, although the young composer was quick to attract sufficient attention for Breitkopf und Härtel, the famous German music-publishing house, to accept these early compositions, which duly appeared in print in 1869. Dedicated to his brother Philipp, the trio is respectably conservative both in structure and content, as may be expected from a student work, and follows the usual four-movement pattern, with a short ‘Adagio sostenuto’ introduction preceding the main first movement ‘Allegro con brio’. The second movement, ‘Andantino quasi Allegretto’, has an almost Schubertian quality, whilst the scherzo, with its contrasting trio section, together with a decisive finale, indicates how strong an influence the music of Schumann was to Scharwenka during his early years.
Although published simultaneously with the Opus 1 trio, the Violin Sonata in D minor, Op 2, shows a distinct advance in Scharwenka’s musical development and also bears evidence of his ever-increasing confidence and assuredness as a composer. Once again Schumann’s presence is still quite strongly felt, but Scharwenka is here less restricted by the requirements of classical conformity, resulting in a work which is naturally more fluent, and in which the thematic content is more fully and effectively developed. As with the trio, a short ‘Adagio sostenuto’ introduces the first movement ‘Allegro appassionato’, which is characterized predominantly by a restless and impulsive energy, with only occasional respite being offered by way of the more lyrical second subject. The second movement, ‘Romanze’, is a perfect centrepiece for the sonata with its intimate lyricism and quiet simplicity contrasting well with the excitement of the outer two movements. The finale, ‘Presto agitato’, hurries on impetuously, culminating in a triumphant conclusion in the tonic major.
Both the Piano Quartet, Op 37, and the Piano Trio No 2, Op 45, are mature products of Scharwenka’s most prolific period of creativity, dating from between 1876 and 1878. The Monthly Musical Record for April 1878 reports: ‘At the Chamber Concert at the Royal Academy of Music on the 5th March, Herr Scharwenka played his own quartett in F, his co-executants being Herren Peiniger (violin), Holländer (viola), and Van Biene (cello). The quartet was first introduced to an English audience, we believe, by Mr. Dannreuther, at a recent concert at his own house [3 January 1878], and the good impression then and there created by it was strengthened and deepened by a second hearing. It is unquestionably an artistic and effective work, especially as interpreted by the composer himself, who is a brilliant executant, phrasing with neatness and finish, and presenting the ideas of the composition with more than ordinary intelligence and power’.
In both of these works, the piano is given much prominence, and requires a virtuoso performer. The strings, however, are not merely given the job of accompanying, and in many places have to provide the main thematic material against the energetic piano writing. Both works are cast in the traditional four movements and in each instance Scharwenka places a rather extensive slow movement in second place, following with the scherzo movements in third. Whilst the fourth movement of the quartet has some textural similarity to that of the second piano sonata, Op 36, which was composed at about the same time, and in general reflects the influence of German romanticism in Scharwenka’s musical upbringing, the finale of the trio, by contrast, bears distinct evidence of the composer’s Polish character.
During the nine or so years between the publication of his first compositions and the appearance of the Cello Sonata in E minor, Op 46a, Scharwenka had established his reputation and reached full maturity as a creative artist. The sonata is jointly dedicated to his friends and former fellow-students at Kullak’s Academy, the brothers Heinrich and Alfred Grünfeld. Like Scharwenka, Heinrich Grünfeld had remained at the Academy where he taught the cello, and the two of them had joined together with the violinist Gustav Holländer to produce chamber music subscription concerts in Berlin during the years 1871 to 1881. Expansive melodic writing, infused with a new, more deeply-felt sense of romanticism, together with a more natural and effective integration of the two instrumental parts, are the main features of this work, setting it apart from the earlier examples. A rather dark opening theme, ideally suited to the cello, sets the mood and dominates much of the first movement. The Andante provides a somewhat surprising change of direction, beginning with a chorale-like passage which gives way to a rather Brahmsian centre section before returning and ending the movement on a note of tranquil calm. The finale, in E major, provides a contrasting affirmative conclusion. Such was the success of the work that Scharwenka arranged it for violin and piano, and also made an arrangement of the slow movement for string orchestra with harp and organ. Some twenty-five years later, along with a number of his other works, he made a thorough revision, making some small cuts and rewriting several passages, and it is this version that is recorded here.
The Serenade for violin and piano, Op 70, dates from 1895 when Scharwenka was based in the USA and, perhaps surprisingly, is the only example he left of the short ‘salon’ instrumental piece. It was dedicated to his brother’s wife, Marianne (née Stressov), a violinist who also taught at the Scharwenka Conservatory. In a simple A-B-A form, the mood is essentially lyrical and expressive and is typical of a genre very popular at the turn of the century.
These works possess energy, rich melody, harmonic interest and strong rhythm—qualities for which Scharwenka was renowned as a composer, and their revival after so many years of unjust oblivion is long overdue.

Tracks & Performers: 
cd1
   Piano Trio No 1 in F sharp minor Op 1    
Movement 1: Adagio sostenuto – Allegro con brio  [9'35]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Colin Carr (cello)
Movement 2: Andantino quasi Allegretto  [5'58]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Colin Carr (cello)
Movement 3: Scherzo: Vivace  [4'00]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Colin Carr (cello)
Movement 4: Finale: Allegro molto quasi presto  [5'43]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Colin Carr (cello)
    Violin Sonata in D minor Op 2    
Movement 1: Adagio sostenuto – Allegro appassionato  [9'10]
Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Seta Tanyel (piano)
Movement 2: Romanze: Andante con moto  [6'20]
Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Seta Tanyel (piano)
Movement 3: Finale: Presto agitato  [5'42]
Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Seta Tanyel (piano)
    Cello Sonata in E minor Op 46a
Movement 1: Allegro ma non troppo  [8'14]
Colin Carr (cello), Seta Tanyel (piano)
Movement 2: Andante  [6'50]
Colin Carr (cello), Seta Tanyel (piano)
Movement 3: Vivace ma non troppo  [6'05]
Colin Carr (cello), Seta Tanyel (piano)
Serenade for violin and piano Op 70  [8'16] English Français Deutsch
Lydia Mordkovitch (violin), Seta Tanyel (piano)

cd2   
   Piano Quartet in F major Op 37
Movement 1: Allegro moderato  [11'15]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Ivo-Jan Van Der Werff (viola), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
Movement 2: Adagio  [12'31]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Ivo-Jan Van Der Werff (viola), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
Movement 3: Allegro vivace  [6'37]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Ivo-Jan Van Der Werff (viola), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
Movement 4: Allegro con fuoco  [8'16]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Ivo-Jan Van Der Werff (viola), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
    Piano Trio No 2 in A minor Op 45   
Movement 1: Allegro non troppo  [12'22]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
Movement 2: Adagio  [11'28]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
Movement 3: Molto allegro  [4'50]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)
Movement 4: Allegro con fuoco  [8'12]
Seta Tanyel (piano), Levon Chilingirian (violin), Garbis Atmacayan (cello)


 

10 January, 2012

Classical Jazz Quartet - Play Bach (2002)

Classical Jazz Quartet - Play Bach (2002)
jazz, classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 325MB
Kind Of Blue
Allmusic:
The Classical Jazz Quartet -- with pianist Kenny Barron, Stefon Harris (vibes and marimba), bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Lewis Nash -- interpret the music of Johann Sebastian Bach as arranged by Bob Belden. One of the strengths of this date is the wealth of solo opportunities for each musician, instead of focusing the spotlight excessively on any one or two musicians. Beginning with the brisk treatment of the normally legato choral prelude "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring," it's clear that the quartet is ready to swing. Less familiar to the casual fan of Baroque music is Bach's "Oboe Concerto in A major, 2nd Movement," a piece recast by Belden with a samba-like flavor. The group turns on the afterburners in a boppish romp through the normally laid-back "Brandenburg Concerto #2 in F Major, 2nd Movement," as Harris literally wails along with his vibes. It's not surprising that these four superb musicians finished their work on this CD during just one session; it's obvious that they enjoyed themselves immensely.

Tracks
-1. "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring" - Bach - 8:37
-2. "2nd Movement" - Bach - 5:43
-3. "Allegro" - Bach - 8:10
-4. "Two-Part Invention, for keyboard No. 4 in D minor, BWV 775 (BC L45)" - Bach - 8:01
-5. "Allegro assai" - Bach - 5:55
-6. "2. Air" - Bach - 7:55

Personnel
* Kenny Barron - piano
* Ron Carter - bass
* Stefon Harris - vibes & marimba
* Lewis Nash - drums

 

01 December, 2011

RCA Living Stereo: Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff - Piano Concertos (1958)

RCA Living Stereo: Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff - Piano Concertos (1958)
Van Cliburn & Chicago S O
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 355MB
RCA | SACD | rel.: 2004
Classicstoday:
Recorded hot on the heels of his landmark Gold Medal victory in the first Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition, the 23-year-old Van Cliburn's million-selling 1958 Tchaikovsky First remains one of this war-horse's most poetic, intelligently paced versions on disc. If an operatic aesthetic governs Cliburn's golden tone and big technique, the heart of the ballet lies within Kondrashin's enlivening support, especially in the Finale's syncopations. Surround-sound technology allows us to appreciate the spatial perspective of the original three-track stereo master. The results prove less dry and more three-dimensional than the standard two-track mixdowns passed down to consumers over the years.
Similar sonic improvement marks Cliburn's 1962 Rachmaninov Second under Fritz Reiner. However, that doesn't change my long-held mixed response to the performance. Cliburn's easygoing line and tendency toward expansive phrasing come alive in the outer movement's slower episodes and throughout the central movement. Yet friskier, scintillating passages lack fire and vitality, especially when compared to, say, Rubinstein's dashing interpretation with the same conductor and orchestra six years earlier. I'll bet that if you played Cliburn and Rubinstein back to back, you'd swear that Cliburn was the older pianist. But Reiner's dovetailed accompaniments carry Cliburn like a baby, and the Chicago Symphony's principal winds particularly stand out. In sum--a qualified recommendation for the Rachmaninov, while the Tchaikovsky's legendary patina has yet to fade.

Tracks
-1. "Piano Concerto No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 23" - 34:41
(Tchaikovsky)
* RCA Symphony Orchestra
* Van Cliburn piano
* Kiril Kondrashin - conductor

-2. "Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18" - 34:08
(Rachmaninov)
* Chicago Symphony Orchestra
* Van Cliburn - piano
* Fritz Reiner - conductor

23 November, 2011

Arvo Part - Te Deum (1993)

Arvo Part - Te Deum (1993)
Tallinn Chamber Orchestra and the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir
contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover |255MB
ECM
Allmusic:
A richly realized collection of prayers that brings deep, resounding enlightenment to the ears. Everything about this compact disc feels like Arvo Pärt's master work, right down to the gorgeous photos in the accompanying booklet. "Te Deum" opens patiently and ominously, then proceeds to run the spectrum between overflowing swells and hushed contemplation. The Tallinn Chamber Orchestra and the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir breathe as one under the magnificent direction of Tönu Kaljuste for this and "Berliner Messe," the closing mass that parts the clouds with its stark beauty and pious rejoicing (the third passage within the mass, "Erster Alleluiavers," is a brief teardrop of reverence that even atheists would ponder). Elsewhere, the a cappella chorus of "Magnificat" shines with vocals that embrace the church walls with chills and crispness, like a beam of moonlight through winter. One of the composer's strengths has always been to find the depth in simplicity. To this end, ever-present ECM producer Manfred Eicher's sparse and beautiful sensibilities fit Arvo Pärt like a glove, especially with "Silouans Song," which blossoms in stoic waves of strings. Such bittersweet longing resides here ("My soul yearns after the Lord") that a little sadness seems to slip out through all the reverence. This is uniformly his finest album, but by no means does it encompass all he has to offer. The compositions in Te Deum may not reveal Pärt's more eclectic and thunderous side, but few other albums carry such a consistent theme.

Tracks
-01. "Te Deum, for 2 choruses, strings, prepared piano & tape" - Part - 28:54
-02. "Silouans Song, for string orchestra" - Part - 5:41
-03. "Magnificat, for chorus" - Part - 6:48
-04. "Kyrie" - Part - 3:09
-05. "Gloria" - Part - 3:42
-06. "First Alleluia Verse" - Part - 0:52
-07. "Second Alleluia Verse" - Part - 1:10
-08. "Veni Sancte Spiritus" - Part - 4:57
-09. "Credo" - Part - 3:56
-10. "Sanctus" - Part - 4:04
-11. "Agnus Dei" - Part - 2:41

24 October, 2011

Astor Piazzolla - Tangazo (2001)

Astor Piazzolla - Tangazo (2001)
Charles Dutoit,  D Binelli, O S Montreal
latin, classical, contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Decca
Musicweb:
The Argentine tango began as the music of the dispossessed marginalised class of the poorer port areas of Buenos Aires yet it found acceptance first in England, France and the United States before it received universal recognition in Argentina - and not just by the underclasses but universally as symbol of national pride, national aspiration, and national sorrow.
The bandoneon is a square-built button accordion invented in Germany in the 1840s but eventually taken up in Buenos Aires as the chief instrument of the tango bands. Piazzolla studied traditional classical music with Alberto Ginastera and with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. His distinctive brand of tango - "tango nuevo" – is characterised by chromaticism, dissonance, and elements of jazz so Piazzolla’s compositions for large ensemble, as in this collection, is a fusion of traditional tango, jazz and classical music. Dutoit’s Montreal players and his soloists capture the vivid colour and sensuality of these works perfectly.
The tango melody of Adós Noninio is probably Piazzolla’s best known work and certainly the most frequently performed. It was written, in 1959, in fond memory of his father who died after complications following a street accident. This orchestral arrangement, dating from 1981, begins unsettlingly and somewhat abrasively with rasping percussion before the mood mellows and becomes affectionate and nostalgic. The Milonga del ángel is a soft sensual slow moving tango, very atmospheric suggesting a sultry moonlight night, with gossamer boudoir curtains billowing gently. Oblivion has the oboe murmuring a plaintive song of yearning against luscious mid-range string harmonies with the bandoneon commenting and picking its way through the texture. Danza criolla breaks the spell: it is wild and abandoned, bouncing along joyfully in resplendent colours. Tangazo, without bandoneon, is intense and densely constructed with a slow and ruminative, almost tragic, opening that gives way to high spirited and humorous material dancing away, the rhythms infectious and the orchestration inventive. This joy alternates with slower passionately romantic tango figures.
There are two three-movement works. The Double Concerto for Bandoneon and Guitar adroitly contrasts and blends the two instruments. The Introduction is introspective and slightly melancholy, the Milonga voluptuous and the Tango lively. More impressive and imaginative is the purely orchestral Tres movimentos tanguisticos porteños. It opens on a furtive, almost sinister note then a piano figure announces a seductive challenge with the tango figures passing through a variety of moods: pensive, torrid - even an exotic jungle excursion might be imagined. The Moderato central movement is tenderly nostalgic but moodily seductive too with tempo and rhythm gradually heating. The jungle evocation is recalled, giving way to material that might suggest a sophisticated dinner party with the guests suffering a certain ennui. The Vivace concluding movement is a proud tango employing fugal figures, colourful glissandi, and bouncing rhythms pegged by bold timpani rolls. A work that invites your imagination run riot.
Hedonistic, exotically coloured tango music in vivid orchestral dress played with conviction and enthusiasm. Just the thing to banish dull winter blues.

Tracks
-1. "Adiós Nonino - 8:53
-2. "Milonga del ángel - 7:46
-3. "Double Concerto for bandoneón, guitar - 16:59
-4. "Oblivion - 4:45
-5. "Tres movimientos tanguísticos portenos - 20:43
-6. "Danza criolla - 2:26
-7. "Tangazo - 14:10

Performers
* Daniel Binelli (bandoneon)
* Eduardo Isaac (guitar)
* Louise Pellerin
* Orchestre Symphonique de Montrea,l Conducted by Charles Dutoit
(Recorded Église St-Eustache, Montreal – 18th May 2000)

14 October, 2011

RCA Living Stereo: Tchaikovsky - Symphony no.6 "Pathetique" (1955)

RCA Living Stereo: Tchaikovsky - Symphony no.6 "Pathetique" (1955)
Pierre Monteux, Boston Symphony Orchestra
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 260MB
RCA | SACD | rel.: 2004
Classicstoday:
Pierre Monteux was one of those conductors who could make the most anguished music sound effortless. You might think that this isn't an advantage in the Pathétique Symphony, but it is. His innate musicality keeps the allegro sections of the first movement pressing smartly forward, while the lyrical second subject never turns sticky. Other performances may be noisier, but Monteux's cogency offers its own exciting and perfectly valid argument. Certainly no one would take issue with the idiomatic lilt he brings to the second-movement waltz, or with the rhythmic lift he provides in the ensuing march (this really is Janikovszky as his most French, isn't it?). There have been more intense accounts of the finale, but the beautiful playing of the Boston Symphony and Monteux's refusal to get hysterical remain all of a piece: it's a very satisfying reading by any standard. The 1955 Living Stereo recording still sounds excellent both in stereo and on (two-channel) SACD, without a large enough difference between them to make a significant difference. This is a very welcome reissue.

Symphony no 6 in B minor, Op. 74 "Pathétique" by P I Tchaikovsky

Conductor: Pierre Monteux
Orchestra: Boston Symphony Orchestra

17 August, 2011

John Foulds (Endellion Quartet) - Chamber Music (1981)

John Foulds (Endellion Quartet) - Chamber Music (1981)
 classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 235MB
Pearl 1995
Amazon customer:
I count both Janacek's and Britten's String Quartets among the most searingly lyrical compositions in the genre written in the 20th Century. Until I heard this Foulds disc, I also thought they were uniquely original. John Foulds long remained an all-but-forgotten figure of British music. Born in 1880, the son of a bassoonist in the Hallé Orchestra, he had a measure of success in the 1920s, and his huge World Requiem was given a yearly performance in London between 1923 and 1926, but his success as a composer of light music overshadowed his more serious endeavors, to his great irritation. When the World Requiem fell out of favor Foulds career suffered a setback, and eventually he established in India, working on a synthesis of Eastern and Western music, writing for ensembles of traditional Indian instruments, using quarter-tones and Indian scales (although he had grown an interest in them much earlier). But his geographical remoteness and sudden death of cholera in 1939 durably put him out of the music scene. The staunch advocacy of musicologist Malcolm MacDonald and this recording by Pearl and the Endellion String Quartet, made in 1981 (which is the medium through which I discovered the composer, some years ago), signalled the beginning of a revival, which had a (small) recent culmination with the release by Warner Classics of two discs of orchestral music conducted by Sakari Oramo (John Foulds: Three Mantras and John Foulds: Dynamic Triptych; Music-Pictures III), and by Chandos of the first modern performance of the World Recording under Leon Botstein, Foulds: A World Requiem [Hybrid SACD] (all this info comes from the excellent article published on the invaluable, free and user-operated Internet encyclopedia). More a trickle than a flood, but a trickle is better than a drought.
According to MacDonald Foulds composed ten String Quartets, without numbering them, of which apparently only four survive complete, eight of these being early works composed before he was thirty. Quartetto intimo op 89 is Fould's 9th and was composed in 1931, after a long period during which the composer didn't tackle the genre. So, it has the intense and searing lyricism and the strange twists of phrase of Janacek's Quartet or Britten's first two. I also hear traces of Ravel's. These references are mentioned only to give the reader an idea of what is in store, not to imply that the composition is derivative. It remained unplayed until the premiere given in 1980 by the same Endellion Quartet who recorded it here. Coming back to it some twenty years (oh can it be that long) after first hearing it, I am as breath-taken as the first time. How could such a masterpiece have remained so long forgotten, and how is it possible that it hasn't had any subsequent recordings?
Unfortunately most of the 10th Quartet, Quartetto geniale, composed in India in 1935, has been lost. Only fragments of the first movement remain and a complete draft of the slow third movement, "Lento Quieto". It is very tender, lullaby-like, then broodingly passionate and dramatic, quite beautiful but not as original as Quartetto intimo. This recording is believed to be the first performance.
"Aquarelles" is an earlier composition and isn't as original. In fact, according to the liner notes they are apparently a compilation, made around 1914, of movements written earlier and independently. Foulds regrouped them under the general title of Music-Pictures Group 2, the second of nine such suites written for various forces ranging from full orchestra to solo piano. The first Aquarelle, apparently originally written in 1911 for piano trio (part of the Music-Pictures Group 1), and the third, adapted from a piano piece, "English tune with Burden" (meaning "refrain"), possibly written also in 1914, are reminiscent and derivative of Dvorak. The original piano piece by the way can be found on Peter Jacobs' Foulds piano collection on Altarus, John Foulds: Seven Essays in the Modes, etc.. The second is the earliest (1905) and also the best, imbued with a mood of a despondent and passionate despair (and some depressivequarter-tone slides, too, at 3:54). Debussy's Quartet comes to mind.
TT is 54 minutes. The uncredited author of the very informative liner notes is presumably Malcolm MacDonald himself, the scholar who single-handedly set the Foulds revival in motion.

Tracks
-1. Quartetto Intimo, Op.89: Poco Trattenuto - Impetuoso
-2. Quartetto Intimo, Op.89: Lento Introspettivo
-3. Quartetto Intimo, Op.89: Pasquinade: Con Amore
-4. Quartetto Intimo, Op.89: Colloquy: Serioso
-5. Quartetto Intimo, Op.89: Finale: Energico Passionata
-6. Quartetto Geniale, Op.97: Lento Quieto
-7. Aquarelles (Music-Pictures Group 2) Op.32: I. In Provence. Refrain Rococo
-8. Aquarelles (Music-Pictures Group 2) Op.32: II. The Waters Of Babylon
-9. Aquarelles (Music-Pictures Group 2) Op.32: III. Arden Glade. English Tune With Burden - ESQ

08 July, 2011

Erik Satie (P Roge) - 3 Gymnopedies & Other Piano Works (1984)

Erik Satie - 3 Gymnopedies & Other Piano Works (1984)
performer: Pascal Roge
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 180MB
Decca 410 220-2
Amazon:
The lingering despair of Satie's gnossienes and gymnopedies are among the most affected compositions from the last century, and Roge transmits this fragility such that one becomes cautious of other Satie interpreters after experiencing his delicate phrasing. In addition to the artistic quality of Roge's pianism, this disc is a very comprehensive survey of Satie's piano works, although it neglects the gorgeous nocturnes that can be found on a recording by Roge unfortunately titled "after the rain..the soft sounds of Erik Satie." For anyone looking for the most comprehensive survey I suggest this disc if you are not embarrassed by its title.

Tracks
-01. "Gymnopédie No. 1" - 3:08
-02. "Gymnopédie No. 2" - 2:30
-03. "Gymnopédie No. 3" - 2:31
-04. "Je Te Veux" - 5:10
-05. "4 Préludes Flasques" - 5:16
-06. "Prélude En Tapisserie" - 2:54
-07. "4eme Nocturne" - 2:55
-08. "Vieux Sequins Et Vieilles Cuirasses" - 4:23
-09. "Embryons Desséchés" - 6:11
-10. "Gnossienne No. 1" - 3:41
-11. "Gnossienne No. 2" - 2:30
-12. "Gnossienne No. 3" - 3:08
-13. "Gnossienne No. 4" - 3:29
-14. "Gnossienne No. 5" - 4:02
-15. "Gnossienne No. 6" - 1:52
-16. "Sonatine Bureaucratique" - 4:16
-17. "Le Picadilly" - 1:36

performer
Pascal Roge - piano

10 June, 2011

Classical Jazz Quartet - Play Tchaikovsky (2001)

Classical Jazz Quartet - Play Tchaikovsky (2001)
jazz, classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 380MB
Kind Of Blue | rem: 2006
Allmusic:
A jazz quartet plays eight selections from Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker on this CD. Some of the melodies are familiar but usually reinvented in the arrangements of Bob Belden. Vibraphonist Stefon Harris (who doubles on marimba) is joined by pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Lewis Nash for this enjoyable outing. Harris and Barron make for a particularly stimulating team as they perform such numbers as "The Swingin' Nut," "Groove of the Sugar Plum Fairy," and "Vaunce of the Flowers."

Tracks
1. The Swingin' Nut
2. Marche Touche
3. Groove Of The Sugar Plum Fairy
4. Blues A La Russe
5. Bedouin Dreams
6. Oriental Rhythm
7. Mirlitonova
8. Vaunce Of The Flowers

Personnel
*Kenny Barron - piano
*Ron Carter - bass
*Stefon Harris - vibes & marimba
*Lewis Nash - drums

25 May, 2011

Piazzolla - Tangos Arranged for Saxophone and Orchestra (1999)

Piazzolla - Tangos Arranged for Saxophone and Orchestra (1999)
F. Mondelci: sax; Moscow Camber Orchesta, C Orbelian cond
classical, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Delos Records
NY Times:
The sax is a particularly good instrument for Piazzolla's music: like the tango, it is sexy, steamy and evocative, perfect listening for hot summer nights. Mondelci, playing baritone, tenor and soprano saxophones, brings a rich, jazzy appeal to Piazzolla's hauntingly beautiful melodies; he seems to have a real feel for the music's power and gutsiness, as well as its gentle tenderness.
Amazon:
Federico Mondelci and the strings of the Moscow Chamber Orchestra have collectively caught the tango bug and dedicated an entire program to Piazzolla here. Suddenly strings and saxophone alike have become inflamed with a new and beautiful fever that manifests itself in shivers, secrets, palpitations, flowing silences, triumphs and tears that crackle beneath the music's dark surface, merging in an elegant and intense unity like the balance of reason and passion.
Mondelci has reworked Piazzolla's music with originality and fantasy, clothing it in the same instinctive elegance with which the muted yet penetrating tone of his saxophone recalls the bandoneon's haughty languors. With deft affection, Mondelci's devotion, professionalism, and sheer love of his instrument share the same intuition that tormented and motivated the young Piazzolla: the need to completely rethink -- but always with respect and admiration -- a music that already existed, and to reweave its thematic material according to his own sensibilities and creative imperatives.
Mondelci has succeeded magnificently in blending intimacy and distance, plenitude and emptiness, bombast and lyricism, and he has done so with arranging so intelligent as to be imperceptible.
From the overflowing vessel of melodies written and recorded by Piazzolla for various ensembles and purposes, Mondelci, in this anthology-like sequence, has accomplished a new and sophisticated interweaving of orchestra and soloist, where profane angels, loosed from their urban shackles, are free to sing of their ardent dreams of a most human resurrection.

Tracks
-01. "Libertango (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 4:45
-02. "Adios Nonino (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:39
-03. "Cierra tus ojos escucha (Close your eyes and listen) (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 6:39
-04. "Revirado (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:47
-05. "Milonga del angel (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:50
-06. "La Muerte del angel (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 2:24
-07. "Resurrecction del Angel (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 6:58
-08. "Violentango (arr. saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 3:21
-09. "Melody in A minor" - Mondelci" - 4:58
-10. "Anos de Soledad (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 4:26
-11. "Meditango (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 6:23
-12. "Oblivion (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:53

23 May, 2011

RCA Living Stereo: Gershwin - Rhapsody in Blue / An American in Paris (1959&61)

RCA Living Stereo: Gershwin - Rhapsody in Blue / An American in Paris (1959&61)
Arthur Fiedler, Earl Wild, Boston Pops Orchestra
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 430MB
RCA | SACD | rel.: 2005
Classicstoday:
This is the finest Gershwin disc available, period. The items featuring Earl Wild have never been bettered, particularly the Concerto in F, which is dazzling in its excitement and irresistible panache. Fiedler alone does a splendid job with An American in Paris, and this collection for the first time includes the Cuban Overture, a rip-roaring performance with the Latin percussion front and center. This latest remastering is noticeably brighter than the previous Living Stereo reissue, whether in stereo or SACD, and the added brashness suits both the music and the interpretations. The three-track SACD channel separates the various instrumental choirs quite effectively, but some listeners may find the result artificial. It doesn't matter: You have the choice of how you listen, but if you haven't yet, you simply must listen one way or the other. Priceless.

Tracks
Rhapsody in Blue, for piano & orchestra (orchestrated by F. Grofé)
Composed by George Gershwin
Performed by Boston Pops Orchestra
with Pasquale Cardillo, Earl Wild
Conducted by Arthur Fiedler

Concerto in F, for piano & orchestra
Composed by George Gershwin
Performed by Boston Pops Orchestra
with Earl Wild
Conducted by Arthur Fiedler

An American in Paris, tone poem for orchestra
Composed by George Gershwin
Performed by Boston Pops Orchestra
Conducted by Arthur Fiedler

Variations on "I Got Rhythm" for piano and orchestra (or 2 Pianos)
Composed by George Gershwin
Performed by Boston Pops Orchestra
with Earl Wild
Conducted by Arthur Fiedler

Cuban Overture
Composed by George Gershwin
Performed by Boston Pops Orchestra
Conducted by Arthur Fiedler

15 April, 2011

Classical Jazz Quartet - Play Rachmaninov (2002) (eac-log-cover)

Classical Jazz Quartet - Play Rachmaninov (2002)
jazz, classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 400MB
Kind Of Blue | rel: 2006
Allmusic:
One of a series of sessions featuring Bob Belden's arrangements for the Classical Jazz Quartet, this volume focuses exclusively on one piece, Sergei Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor. As a result, this is by far the most ambitious project tackled by the quartet, though Kenny Barron, Stefon Harris, Ron Carter and Lewis Nash are more than up to the task. Belden subdivides each movement into several parts. For example, the first movement is initially played in a fairly straight-ahead manner, followed by a brisk post-bop segment, a slow blues, a quiet ballad, and finally, a mid-tempo bop setting. The musicians never allow themselves to get stuck in a rut, thanks to their ability to flesh out Belden's conception. In any case, the crossover effect of this recording is more likely to get jazz fans not already familiar with Rachmaninov's original work to investigate it versus classical fans seeking out this extensive revision of his landmark piece.

Tracks
Piano Concerto #2 in C minor
-1. "Movement 1. Part 1." - Rachmaninov - 0:54
-2. "Movement 1. Part 2." - Rachmaninov - 8:44
-3. "Movement 1. Part 3." - Rachmaninov - 6:41
-4. "Movement 1. Part 4." - Rachmaninov - 4:09
-5. "Movement 1. Part 5." - Rachmaninov - 4:47
-6. "Movement 2. Part 1." - Rachmaninov - 5:55
-7. "Movement 2. Part 2. Cadenza ver" - Rachmaninov - 5:38
-8. "Movement 3. Part 1." - Rachmaninov - 6:12
-9. "Movement 3. Part 2." - Rachmaninov - 6:09

Personnel
*Kenny Barron - piano
*Ron Carter - bass
*Stefon Harris - vibes & marimba
*Lewis Nash - drums

08 April, 2011

Allison Brewster Franzetti - The Unknown Piazzolla (1999) (eac-log-cover)

Allison Brewster Franzetti - The Unknown Piazzolla (1999)
classical, contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 290MB
Chesky

The name Astor Piazzolla may be forever linked with the tango, but the master composer/artist had another passion that is finally revealed on this release: chamber music. Written primarily in the 1940's, before Piazzolla developed New Tango, these pieces demonstrate his flair for serious classical composition. The influences of Alberto Ginastera (his Argentine teacher), Bartok and Hindemith clearly steered the impressionable Piazzolla in a different direction. In addition, several tango-flavored chamber pieces composed in the 1960s and 1970s complement this unique collection. Most of the works on here have never before been recorded. The album features noted pianist Allison Brewster Franzetti, violinist Hector Falcon, violist Nardo Poy and cellist Eugene Moye.

Tracks
-01. Vayamos Al Diablo (piano solo) - 1:35
-02. Dos Piezas Breves - Tanguango (for viola and piano) - 3:33
-03. Dos Piezas Breves - Noche (for viola and piano) - 4:55
-04. Preludio 1953 (piano solo) - 3:04
-05. Milonga En Re (for violin and piano) - 4:24
-06. Suite Op. 2 - Preludio (piano solo) - 2:03
-07. Suite Op. 2 - Siciliana (piano solo) - 3:24
-08. Suite Op. 2 - Toccata (piano solo) - 2:26
-09. Milongo Sin Palabras (for treble instrument/voice and piano) - 5:52
-10. Preludio No. 1 (for violin and piano) - 5:47
-11. Suite No. 2 - Nocturno (piano solo) - 2:16
-12. Suite No. 2 - Miniatura (piano solo) - 0:37
-13. Suite No. 2 - Vals (piano solo) - 1:55
-14. Suite No. 2 - Danza Criolla (piano solo) - 1:29
-15. Tres Piezas Breves - Pastoral (for cello and piano) - 2:53
-16. Tres Piezas Breves - Serenade (for cello and piano) - 2:42
-17. Tres Piezas Breves - Siciliana (for cello and piano) - 2:31
-18. Sonata No. 1 Op. 7 - Presto (piano solo) - 3:02
-19. Sonata No. 1 Op. 7 - Coral con Variaciones (piano solo) - 6:02
-20. Sonata No. 1 Op. 7 - Rondo (piano solo) - 4:41

Personnel
*Allison Brewster Franzetti - piano
*Hector Falcon - violin
*Nardo Poy - viola
*Eugene Moye - cello

15 March, 2011

RCA Living Stereo: Beethoven, Mendelssohn - Violin Concertos (1955&59) (eac-log-cover)

RCA Living Stereo: Beethoven, Mendelssohn - Violin Concertos (1955&59)
Jascha Heifetz, violin; BSO, C Munch
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 340MB
RCA | SACD | rel.: 2004
Musicweb:
There is certainly no chance of Beethoven’s extended first movement to his Violin Concerto sprawling under Heifetz’s fingers. His famed technique fully intact, and with Munch his willing Leporello, Heifetz unleashes a remarkably fiery view of this concerto. Perhaps that is reflected in his choice of cadenza (Auer/Heifetz), a cadenza that marries display, conceit, drama and virtuosic nonchalance in equal measure. True, perhaps he does not always let the music breathe where expected, but this may be because he’s saving the more interior emotions for the Larghetto. Again, here, the speed may be faster than expected (but it is after all Larghetto, not Largo) but this really is a meeting of minds. Heifetz soliloquises marvellously towards the end before embarking on a suave finale. There is an unfortunate drop in tension towards the end, and Heifetz is markedly too forward around the bassoon tune (around 3’30) but those caveats apart this is a magnificent reading. The cadenza in the finale is Joachim/Heifetz.
Mendelssohn takes less well to driven performances, yet it has to be admitted there is real excitement here that one rarely finds elsewhere. The ‘molto appassionato’ part of the first movement directive is taken at face value, to great effect. Heifetz reminds us of his knack of making the cadenza a highpoint musically as well as technically (not many musicians can claim this). The slow movement is a real andante, marked by a refusal to dawdle. Heifetz plays as if improvising (and trace of abrasive tone) and the entire seven minutes flows as if in one breath. The bridge passage between the last two movements (an ‘Allegretto non troppo’) is most effective, acting as a foil for the high-jinks of the Allegro molto vivace. And very lively it is, too, with all parties concerned exhibiting quicksilver responses. A vital rhythmic awareness permeates every bar.
One of the highlights of this series.

Tracks
Beethoven:
-1. Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61: Allegro, ma non troppo
-2. Piano Concerto in D major (after the Violin Concerto, Op. 61), Op. 61a: Larghetto
-3. Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61: Rondo: Allegro
(37:49)
Mendelssohn:
-4. Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64: Allegro molto appassionato
-5. Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64: Andante
-6. Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64: Allegretto non troppo; Allegro molto vivace
(24:01)
recorded Symphony Hall, Boston 1955 & 1959

Jascha Heifetz: violin
Boston Symphony Orchestra, Charles Munch

24 February, 2011

Sofia Gubaidulina - Orchestral Works & Chamber Music (1989)

Sofia Gubaidulina - Orchestral Works & Chamber Music (1989)
classical, contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 270MB
Col Legno
Sofia Gubaidulina info
----
Amazon customers:
Maestro Nikolaevsky was appreciated by Gubaidulina and Schnittke for his great sense of timing and steel rythm. His Baroque conducting was praised too and it is no surprise those Russian modern composers would enjoy working with him. Sadly, He passed away in November 2003. I had the chance to play Schnittke's concerto for Piano and Strings in April 2003 in Omsk, his last concert. Although he was a frail man, his determination was unaltered as soon as he stepped on the podium.
I would also recommend his recording of Schnittke's third violin concerto with Oleg Kagan.
-
I think this may be the only semi-available recording of G.'s "Night in Memphis" which is a barbaric whirlygig of a composition, and one of her most potent. Unfortunately, the sound quality is very poor, especially during the cantata, when the male singers enter. Plus, throughout the entire CD, there is lots of background sound, including what must be the inmates from the local tuberculosis sanatorium sitting in the front row.
All of this detracts somewhat from the music, but not bad enough to justify not buying this album. "Hour of the Soul" is another piece which is difficult to locate. It is a winding beast, with mezzo-soprano. The text is from a poem by Tsaetaeva.

On disc:
-1. Trio, for violin, viola & cello
*Composed by Sofia Gubaidulina (1988)
*Yevgenya Alikhanova, Olga Ogranovitch, Tatyana Kokhanovskaya (Members of the Moscow String Quartet)
-2. Hour of the Soul, for mezzo-soprano & wind orchestra
*Composed by Sofia Gubaidulina (1974)
*Performed by Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra with Mark Pekarsky, Lina Mkrtchyan
-3. Night in Memphis, cantata for mezzo-soprano, male chorus & chamber orchestra (3 versions)
*Composed by Sofia Gubaidulina (1968)
*Moscow State Film Orchestra (Conducted by Yuri Nikolayevsky); Elena Dolgova (Mezzosoprano Voice)

27 October, 2010

RCA Living Stereo: Chopin (Rubinstein) - Ballades & Scherzos (1959) (eac-log-cover)

RCA Living Stereo: Chopin - Ballades & Scherzos (1959)
Arthur Rubinstein, piano
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 330MB
RCA | SACD | rel.: 2004
ClassicsToday:
Little new can be added to what's been said of these tried, true, and extremely satisfying catalog staples. Their most recent transfer in RCA's 1999 complete Rubinstein collection boasts a fullness and impact unmatched in earlier CD transfers. However, the advantage of SACD's multi-channel format allows home listeners to perceive the left, center, and right three-track stereo perspective as originally captured in the master tape, as opposed to a two-channel mixdown. The results yield a more realistic sense of how Rubinstein's fabled tone projects and congeals in the venue (New York's Manhattan Center), along with more air between the notes plus sundry bench and music-rack noises (Rubinstein's future producer Max Wilcox turning pages, I gather). While the aforementioned Rubinstein Edition CD appears to be mastered at a higher level, with slightly more emphasis in the bass, the SACD's overall ambience wins the day, even when reproduced on a conventional two-channel CD player.
In an era full of hotshot keyboard youngsters determined to put their individual stamp on Chopin's Ballades and Scherzos by way of willful rubatos and contrived inner voices, Rubinstein's respect for the score, controlled freedom, and unerring sense of proportion prove how sanity and inspiration are not mutually exclusive interpretive properties. A few examples will suffice. For instance, when the pianist lingers over the First Ballade's E-flat major subject, he still provides a strong rhythmic backbone in the left-hand accompaniment to anchor it. Many pianists blur the Second Scherzo's famous opening triplets; instead Rubinstein articulates them without compromising their spookiness. While his earlier Third and Fourth Scherzo recordings from 1932 and 1950 may dare and scintillate more, the slower stereo remakes better cohere and flow. Will further Rubinstein SACD releases capture the pianist's generous artistic presence so vividly?

Tracks:
-1. Ballade for Piano no 1 in G minor, B 66/Op. 23
-2. Ballade for Piano no 2 in F major/a minor, B 102/Op. 38
-3. Ballade for Piano no 3 in A flat major, B 136/Op. 47
-4. Ballade for Piano no 4 in F minor, B 146/Op. 52
-5. Scherzo for Piano no 1 in B minor, B 65/Op. 20
-6. Scherzo for Piano no 2 in B flat minor/D flat major, B 111/Op. 31
-7. Scherzo for Piano no 3 in C sharp minor, B 125/Op. 39
-8. Scherzo for Piano no 4 in E major, B 148/Op. 54
Written: 1831-42
Rec: 1959
Manhattan Center, NYC

Performer:
Artur Rubinstein (Piano)

15 September, 2010

Kurt Weill (Edo De Waart) - Symphonies nos. 1&2 (1973) (Limited edition) (eac-log-cover)

Kurt Weill - Symphonies  nos. 1&2 (1973)
Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, Edo De Waart
contemporary, classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 240MB
Philips | Limited Edition

Symphony No. 1 (1921)
1. 'in one movement - in einem Satz' (25:41)

Symphony No. 2 (1933-34)
2. I. Sostenuto - Allegro molto (9:22)
3. II. Largo (12:03)
4. III. Allegro vivace (6:29)


These symphonies were performed by the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig and conducted by Edo de Waart. They were recorded in December 1973 at the Paul Gerhard Kirche, Leipzig, Germany, and originally released on LP in 1974.

08 September, 2010

RCA Living Stereo: Ravel (Munch) - Daphnis Et Chloe (1955) (eac-log-cover)

RCA Living Stereo: Ravel - Daphnis Et Chloe (1955)
Charles Munch, BSO
classical | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 290MB
RCA | SACD | rel.: 2004 | rar +5% recovery
ClassicsToday:
I may be alone in preferring Charles Munch's later recording of Daphnis, from the 1960s, to this classic 1955 version. The remake (last available on Japanese RCA) has even better playing, as well as more modern sound--not that this disc is all that much inferior. In fact, it's still a terrific feat of audio engineering, and Munch's interpretation is just as powerful and committed (and perhaps a bit swifter in the Bacchanal) as it would be later. Given the unavailability of his second effort, you certainly can purchase this with total confidence, and the two-channel SACD brings a touch more vividness to what already was a very fine remastering job. Let's face it: Munch was well nigh unbeatable in this music, and there's no point in quibbling over tiny details. If you don't have this, then by all means don't hesitate. If you do own it, I don't think this latest remastering offers enough obvious differences to warrant trading in the previous release.

Composer: Maurice Ravel
Conductor: Charles Munch
Orchestra/Ensemble: Boston Symphony Orchestra, New England Conservatory Chorus, New England Conservatory Alumni Chorus
Rec: 1955
Venue: Symphony Hall, Boston, Massachusetts
54 Minutes 29 Secs.
rc

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