Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Alfred Schnittke. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Alfred Schnittke. Mostrar todas las entradas
lunes, 1 de marzo de 2021
martes, 9 de febrero de 2021
martes, 7 de julio de 2020
sábado, 16 de mayo de 2020
domingo, 26 de abril de 2020
domingo, 12 de abril de 2020
Denis Matsuev / Kammerorchester Wien-Berlin SHOSTAKOVICH - SCHNITTKE - LUTOSLAWSKI
jueves, 13 de febrero de 2020
miércoles, 29 de enero de 2020
jueves, 12 de septiembre de 2019
Danish String Quartet PRISM II
The Danish String Quartet’s Grammy-nominated Prism project links Bach
fugues, late Beethoven quartets and works by modern masters. In volume
two of the series, Bach’s Fugue in Bb minor from the Well-Tempered
Clavier (in the arrangement by Viennese composer Emanuel Aloys Förster)
is brought together with Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 130 and Alfred
Schnittke’s String Quartet No.3 (composed in 1983). As the quartet
explains, “A beam of music is split through Beethoven’s prism. The
important thing to us is that these connections be experienced widely.
We hope the listener will join us in the wonder of thee beams of music
that travel all the way from Bach through Beethoven to our own times.”
Recorded in historic Reitstadel Neumarkt and produced by Manfred Eicher,
the album is issued as the Danish String Quartet embarks on a tour with
dates on both sides of the Atlantic, climaxing with a run of Prism
concerts on the West Coast of the U.S. The Quartet plays the full Prism
cycle at La Jolla Music Society over five concerts in late November.
jueves, 23 de mayo de 2019
Anna Gourari ELUSIVE AFFINITY
viernes, 21 de diciembre de 2018
Manrico Padovani, Natasha Korsakova, Nordböhmische Philharmonie Teplice, Charles Olivieri-Munroe TABULA RASA
The English language draws a clear distinction between the terms “concert” (a musical performance) and “concerto”
(referring to the musical form or genre). The German word “Konzert”, on the other hand, can carry both meanings which, due to an ever- increasing propensity towards simplification and sheer linguistic negligence on the one hand and a music scene long characterized by ignorance and amateurism on the other, often leads to hopeless confusion. The Italian word “concerto”, meanwhile, derives both from the Middle Latin and Italian concertare (to agree or concur) and from the Classical Latin concertare (to dispute or contend). While the first meaning was intended to denote a more or less harmonious interplay between singers and instrumentalists, the secondary definition of a rivalrous or contentious interaction between various instruments and instrumental groups, or between singers and instrumentalists, eventually prevailed for musical compositions in which “heterogeneous elements interact”.
domingo, 14 de octubre de 2018
Dresdner Philharmonie / Dennis Russell Davies ALFRED SCHNITTKE Symphony No. 9
miércoles, 16 de mayo de 2018
David Aaron Carpenter / Philharmonia Orchestra / Christoph Eschenbach ELGAR & SCHNITTKE Viola Concertos
23-year-old violist David Aaron Carpenter has recently emerged as one of
the world's most promising young talents. This recording, his debut
album, couples two concertos: a viola arrangement of Sir Edward Elgar's
famous Cello Concerto and the Viola Concerto (1985) by Alfred Schnittke.
Christoph Eschenbach leads the Philharmonia Orchestra. David Aaron
Carpenter adapted much of the Elgar Concerto himself, using the
well-known and Elgar-sanctioned arrangement completed by Lionel Tertis
in 1930 as a basis.
Since making his orchestral debut in 2005
with The Philadelphia Orchestra under Christoph Eschenbach, David Aaron Carpenter has been performing with leading musicians and orchestras in
the United States and Europe. In 2006, he won the the prestigious Walter
E. Naumburg Viola Competition. In 2007, he became the first American
and so far the youngest protégé for the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts
Initiative and the protégé of world-renowned violinist and violist
Pinchas Zukerman. He was chosen among an international selection that
included every violinist and violist of his generation.
David Aaron Carpenter has been acclaimed as producing, "a seductively rich sound and demonstrating both a forceful interpretive personality and remarkable control of his instrument," (The New York Times) and, "whose beautiful modulated tone makes a striking impression." (The Strad)
martes, 1 de mayo de 2018
Francisco Fullana THROUGH THE LENS OF TIME
The Spanish violinist Francisco Fullana will release his debut recording in March 2018 with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Entitled Through the Lens of Time, the recording brings together four modern perspectives reimagining the Baroque tradition: a dialogue that prompts both composers and performers to explore musical giants of the past and place them in their own lives.
The recording begins with Max Richter’s daring reworking of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, which Fullana first performed in 2016 under Venezuelan conductor Carlos Izcaray, who also conducts this debut recording. Fullana comments: “Richter’s Four Seasons Recomposed awoke a renewed commitment to my musical approach focused on instinct and emotion. It brought me back to my own beginnings, as The Four Seasons was one of the few cassettes that my family would play in the car when I was a young boy. During the performance, Carlos Izcaray and I found that we both shared the same energetic approach to music making. It became clear that we both loved performing this piece too much not to do so again.
”
The recording continues with three other works that provide unique takes on the Baroque tradition. The Korean-German Isang Yun’s Königliches Thema pays homage to Bach's Musical Offering, conflating Baroque and modern styles in one densely rich composition that magically surveys Western musical tradition through the lens of Eastern philosophies. Meanwhile, Schnittke’s Suite in the Old Style presents a combination of different aspects of the Western tradition from Baroque onward, and is heavily influenced by the musical aesthetic of the composers’ own time. As such, the writing represents a sort of time capsule, portraying what “Baroque style” meant to performers
in the 1970s, with exaggerated gestures, verticality, and highlighting the sense
of drama to the point of becoming ceremonial.
Finally, Salvador Brotons’ Variations on a Baroque Theme hearken to the roots of Fullana's career, and to his first performance before the public as a nine-year-old prodigy soloing in Mozart's Turkish A Major Concerto, under Broton's baton. The one-time mentor composed his set of variations specifically for this project, completing a circle by basing the work on a popular aria from the zarzuela, Acis Y Galatea, by a third Spaniard, the 18th Century Mallorcan composer Antoni Lliteres. (Orchid Classics)
sábado, 3 de marzo de 2018
Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir / Kaspars Putniņš SCHNITTKE Psalms of Repentance PÄRT Magnificat & Nunc Dimittis
Alfred Schnittke and Arvo Pärt lived through times of remarkable change
in the last decades of the Soviet Union. From the 1970s, state
restrictions on religion were gradually relaxed and this was reflected
in the arts and especially in music. Schnittke’s adoption of
Christianity was triggered by the death of his mother in 1972, and
culminated in his later
conversion to Catholicism. Pärt was from a nominally Lutheran background
in Estonia, but embraced the Orthodox faith in the 1970s, following
intensive study of liturgical music. Both composers began to incorporate
religious themes into their work, moving away from the modernist
abstraction that had characterized their early careers.
Schnittke’s large-scale Psalms of Repentance were composed in 1988 for
the celebrations for the millennium of Christianity in Russia. The texts
come from an anonymous collection of poems for Lent, written in the
16th century, and in his settings Schnittke engages with the traditions
of chant-based Orthodox liturgical music. The Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir and Kaspars Putniņš have chosen to combine Schnittke’s
Psalms with two shorter works by Arvo Pärt, whose music they are
well-known exponents of. Like the Psalms, Pärt’s pieces are composed in a
quasi-liturgical style, and with its serene atmosphere, his Nunc
dimittis forms a natural counterpart to the Magnificat even though the
two were written more than a decade apart.
lunes, 26 de febrero de 2018
Olga Andryushchenko 20th CENTURY PIANO WORKS
She has won a number of important prizes and awards, including the
4th International Piano Competition “Franz Schubert and the Music of
Modernity” in Austria (2000), the Premium Piano Seiler 2nd International
Piano Competition in Germany (2001), the Premio Vanna Spadafor
International Piano Competition in Italy (2004), the Bach Competition in
Leipzig (2006), the Musica Antiqua International Fortepiano Competition
in Belgium (2007), the A. Scriabine International Piano Competition in
Paris (2008), the N. Rubinstein International Piano Competition in Paris
(2008), and the Fortepiano Competition in Schloss Kremsegg (2011).
She was a soloist of the Moscow State Philharmonic Society
(2002–2004), and performs both as a soloist and in ensembles, playing
piano, organ, fortepiano or harpsichord. She has also given a number of
piano recitals and played with orchestras in many cities of Russia,
Austria, Germany, Sweden, Italy, the United States, Belgium, Finland,
Great Britain, Canada, France, Japan and elsewhere.
martes, 25 de abril de 2017
Roman Mints / Evgenia Chudinovich TRANSFORMATIONS 20th Century Works for Violin & Piano
The title work, "Transformations" by Elena Langer is very romantic, fresh and
impressive piece which changes from a dream world of first movement
through an agressive and ecstatic mood of the second to the "new light"
in the end. The work is probably the most appealing on the disc.
Lutoslawski's Subito is a demanding virtuoso piece which gives Mints a
chance to show his seductive tone and his command of the instrument.
Part's Fratres is a religious meditation executed with great
feeling. Works by Gubaidulina and Penderecki involve pianist playing
inside piano and thus, explore new sound dimensions. In general, this
album is outstanding and is a joy to listen to. (Amazon)
martes, 18 de abril de 2017
Dennis Russell Davies / Stuttgarter Kammerorchester SHOSTAKOVICH - VASKS - SCHNITTKE
Russell Davies, who really feels his Eastern Europeans, contrasts
Shostakovich's lament for Dresden and humanity with Yuri Bashmet's
sensitive arrangement of Schnittke's elegiac String Trio and introduces
us to a powerfully moving piece by Latvian Vasks Musica dolorosa. It's
a pre-glasnost work whose tonal dramas linger long in the mind.
Benefiting from charismatically brilliant playing, poetic phrasing and
spiritiually involving bass resonances, this is an anthology not to be
missed.' (Alex Orga, BBC Music Magazine)
'The lamenting climaxes of the Vasks make an unforgettable impression
here, and the link with Shostakovich is even more pertinent in the
Schnittke where memories of music of the distant past (Russian chant,
Schubert, Mahler) are paraded before the listener like shadows in the
night. Throughout the three works, the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra
deliver highly charged performances, and the recording balances warmth
of tone with admirable clarity of detail.' (Erik Levi, Classic CD)
'Among recent releases from ECM, the stunning label that records the
works of Pärt and others, is Dolorosa, a collection of three works by
20th century dissident composers from the former Soviet Union. These works are profoundly moving testaments to the power of the human spirit
to resist oppression. Vasks' title cut, and the recording's centrepiece,
was written to both express and 'console' the suffering of the Latvian
people. Admittedly bleak, at times very dramatic, it is also gorgeous a
near-perfect expression from a 'saddened optimist' searching for a way
out of the crisis of his time, towards affirmation, towards faith. Music
grounded in the mire of real life that can lift the soul toward the
transcendent.' (Dwight Ozard, Prism)
sábado, 15 de octubre de 2016
Miranda Cuckson / Blair McMillen BÉLA BARTÓK - ALFRED SCHNITTKE - WITOLD LUTOSLAWSKI
The New York Times has praised violinist Miranda Cuckson’s “undeniable
musicality,” while Gramophone has declared her “an artist to be reckoned
with.” Born in Australia and educated in America, she makes her ECM New
Series debut – alongside pianist Blair McMillen – with three
20th-century milestones: the Hungarian Béla Bartók’s Violin Sonata No. 2
(1922), the Russian Alfred Schnittke’s Violin Sonata No. 2 “Quasi una
Sonata” (1968) and the Pole Witold Lutoslawski’s Partita for Violin and
Piano (1984). “Bringing these great Slavic composers together enables us
to hear each dealing with the dichotomies of form and spontaneity,
playfulness and seriousness, folk expression and abstraction,” Cuckson
explains. “The colors and traits of Slavic ethnic music are vibrantly in
the foreground in Bartók’s music, more subsumed into abstraction and
flavor in the Schnittke and Lutoslawski. Humor is a tool of provocation
and survival in Schnittke and to some extent Lutoslawski, a cheeky
attitude anchored by deep purpose. In Bartók, the boisterousness and
teasing charm of folk dances gives way to moods of profound melancholy.” (ECM Records)
domingo, 11 de septiembre de 2016
Kim Kashkashian / Dennis Russell Davies GIYA KANCHELI Vom Winde beweint ALFRED SCHNITTKE Konzert für Viola und Orchester
Giya Kancheli: Vom Winde beweint (Mourned by the Wind)
Kancheli’s self-styled “liturgy” is an exercise in patience and surrender. Its opening slam of piano chords is a big bang in and of itself, and sets the stage for the soloist’s epic journey. Wilfred Mellers, in his liner notes, posits the viola’s emergence from such chaos as the “birth of consciousness.” And indeed, one can extrapolate from its startling abruptness the inklings of a life yet lived, fresh and devoid of self-awareness in the greater void of silence. The orchestra skirts the periphery, gradually uniting with the soloist. This contrast mimics the arbitrary stability of human values—at once sacred and mutable—so that moments of resolution always tread a downward slope. Luminous winds, a cosmic harpsichord, and trails of harmonics characterize the first movement. Brief horn blasts introduce the second, throughout which the viola wanders without fortitude into a minefield of piano and timpani, singing without carrying a tune. The harpsichord again works its galactic magic, feeding stardust into the viola’s arterial core. A passage of intense and sustained volume leads into an epic swan song. The third movement is brought forth on the strings of the harpsichord, the viola a mere flit of wings in the surrounding air. An oboe threads the hesitation like the beginning of an incomplete statement. The fourth movement is a violent implosion and balances out the first with its selfish gaze. As with seemingly every Kancheli composition, it ends as quietly as an evening breeze. One hears the rustling of leaves in the distance, only to find that it was a trick of the ears all along. Vom Winde beweint is rich with sharp dynamic peaks that are short-lived and sporadic, the hallmarks of an ode to process over progress.
Kancheli’s self-styled “liturgy” is an exercise in patience and surrender. Its opening slam of piano chords is a big bang in and of itself, and sets the stage for the soloist’s epic journey. Wilfred Mellers, in his liner notes, posits the viola’s emergence from such chaos as the “birth of consciousness.” And indeed, one can extrapolate from its startling abruptness the inklings of a life yet lived, fresh and devoid of self-awareness in the greater void of silence. The orchestra skirts the periphery, gradually uniting with the soloist. This contrast mimics the arbitrary stability of human values—at once sacred and mutable—so that moments of resolution always tread a downward slope. Luminous winds, a cosmic harpsichord, and trails of harmonics characterize the first movement. Brief horn blasts introduce the second, throughout which the viola wanders without fortitude into a minefield of piano and timpani, singing without carrying a tune. The harpsichord again works its galactic magic, feeding stardust into the viola’s arterial core. A passage of intense and sustained volume leads into an epic swan song. The third movement is brought forth on the strings of the harpsichord, the viola a mere flit of wings in the surrounding air. An oboe threads the hesitation like the beginning of an incomplete statement. The fourth movement is a violent implosion and balances out the first with its selfish gaze. As with seemingly every Kancheli composition, it ends as quietly as an evening breeze. One hears the rustling of leaves in the distance, only to find that it was a trick of the ears all along. Vom Winde beweint is rich with sharp dynamic peaks that are short-lived and sporadic, the hallmarks of an ode to process over progress.
Alfred Schnittke: Konzert für Viola und Orchester
For this monumental work, Schnittke has chosen to invert the standard concerto form, sandwiching an Allegro Molto between two Largos. The piece opens with a viola solo held aloft by shimmering orchestral waves. Every melodic line is like the root of an ever-growing tree of voices. In the second movement, the viola skips across a landscape of consonances and dissonances at the behest of a passively insistent harpsichord. Schnittke maintains the fascinating sense of rhythm and energy that distinguishes his faster turns, scratching at the surface of a larger unfathomable world. Harpsichord, flute, and viola congregate in a Mozartean danse macabre at the movement’s center. The strangely wooden pizzicato toward the end haunts as the piano jumps impatiently on its lower notes. The last movement gives the viola a demanding solo, which is eventually overtaken by horns and winds. A deep pause marks a change in intent. The harpsichord once again comes to the fore, the final cameo of a strong orchestral cast, before bowing to a beautifully dissonant double stop from the viola.
For this monumental work, Schnittke has chosen to invert the standard concerto form, sandwiching an Allegro Molto between two Largos. The piece opens with a viola solo held aloft by shimmering orchestral waves. Every melodic line is like the root of an ever-growing tree of voices. In the second movement, the viola skips across a landscape of consonances and dissonances at the behest of a passively insistent harpsichord. Schnittke maintains the fascinating sense of rhythm and energy that distinguishes his faster turns, scratching at the surface of a larger unfathomable world. Harpsichord, flute, and viola congregate in a Mozartean danse macabre at the movement’s center. The strangely wooden pizzicato toward the end haunts as the piano jumps impatiently on its lower notes. The last movement gives the viola a demanding solo, which is eventually overtaken by horns and winds. A deep pause marks a change in intent. The harpsichord once again comes to the fore, the final cameo of a strong orchestral cast, before bowing to a beautifully dissonant double stop from the viola.
Schnittke would suffer a stroke just ten days after completing the
score for his concerto.* Said the composer: “Like a premonition of what
was to come, the music took on the character of a restless chase through
life (in the second movement) and that of a slow and sad overview of
life on the threshold of death (in the third movement).” Such narrative
approaches to one’s own work speak of a pragmatic mind that seeks order
in the flow of a creative life. Yet rather than a premonition, I
experience the concerto as an affirmation of what one already knows. If
Kancheli’s is an unanswered question, Schnittke’s is an unquestioned
answer.
This is a profoundly emotional album, by turns confrontational and
mournfully resplendent. Kashkashian brings her usual heartrending
strength to even the subtlest gestures and is never afraid to betray the
fragility of her pitch. The orchestras, under the direction of Dennis
Russell Davies, are forces to be reckoned with that scintillate in a
slightly distanced mix. A benchmark recording in all respects. (Tyran Grillo)
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