Originally posted by Petrushka
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Kondrashin's Shostakovich
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostYes, I've come across that set, but at that price. I'm having a holiday from CD buying anyway, although silly bargains on the Amazon market place won't be out of bounds. keeping my eyes open for single Kondrashin releases.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI just ordered the Praga SACD that IGI recommended for $13 on Amazon US. I was also on holiday from buying CD. I think this one lasted 72 hours.
I'm still on holiday, but that Praga CD is £9.99 incl delivery, in the UK. V. tempting
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostA long weekend break, rather than a vacation!
I'm still on holiday, but that Praga CD is £9.99 incl delivery, in the UK. V. tempting
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI stand corrected! (again! )Last edited by richardfinegold; 24-10-14, 01:14.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI wonder why there are so many complete cycles. Does anyone actually listen to 2 and 3? I also have a low tolerance for 12. It must be ad rag for a Conuctor and the Orchestra to have to program and record these pieces for the sake of "completeness".
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI wonder why there are so many complete cycles. Does anyone actually listen to 2 and 3? I also have a low tolerance for 12. It must be ad rag for a Conuctor and the Orchestra to have to program and record these pieces for the sake of "completeness".
The 2nd and 3rd symphonies are from a young composer finding his way after leaving music college. There is an most interesting article in the November edition of the BBC Music Magazine by Vasily Petrenko who writes a short description on each of the 15 symphonies. Petrenko calls 2 & 3 both "experimental and abstract in the way the visual art of the 1920s was." I would suggest they can be appreciated more in a live performance.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostHiya RFG,
The 2nd and 3rd symphonies are from a young composer finding his way after leaving music college. There is an most interesting article in the November edition of the BBC Music Magazine by Vasily Petrenko who writes a short description on each of the 15 symphonies. Petrenko calls 2 & 3 both "experimental and abstract in the way the visual art of the 1920s was." I would suggest they can be appreciated more in a live performance.
Maybe in deference to you and Bryn I'll give them another listen.
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Roehre
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI wonder why there are so many complete cycles. Does anyone actually listen to 2 and 3? I also have a low tolerance for 12. It must be a drag for a Conuctor and the Orchestra to have to program and record these pieces for the sake of "completeness".
I hardly listen to 2,3 or 12 myself, but excluding 1: that escapes me
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I thought I would resurrect this old thread, and indeed, my own contributions to this forum (at least temporarily), to report that I have recently taken possession of a recording of the world premiere performance of the 13th, 18 December 1962.
This performance is available on a twofer (I shall discuss the coupling anon...) from the Moscow Conservatory's own label and was originally released - without fanfare - in 2015 and reissued last year. I am amazed that this release is not better known. I myself was stunned to discover its availability, though it does not seem to be available from any of the "usual" sources.
It is, of course, Gromadsky, Kondrashin and the same forces as the 20 December 2nd performance.
When it arrived, I was disheartened to discover that i-Tunes and Windows Media Player both "recognised" the disc as being the Russian Disc release of the 20 December 2nd performance. HOWEVER, close A/B comparisons reveal that - although the performances of 18 and 20 December are remarkably similar - they are NOT the same rendition (e.g. a smudged note in the trumpet in bar 2 of the premiere is "clean" in the Russian Disc 2nd performance, and the whirling piccolo figurations at the 1st movement's climax are slightly early in their entry in the premiere as opposed to the Russian Disc 2nd performance).
It goes without saying that this is a wildly exciting performance of the work. My one regret is that the spontaneous applause reported after the 1st movement of the premiere has been edited out.
Now to the coupling on this twofer...
...only the WORLD PREMIERE of the 4th!
Available here
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Originally posted by Tapiola View PostI thought I would resurrect this old thread, and indeed, my own contributions to this forum (at least temporarily), to report that I have recently taken possession of a recording of the world premiere performance of the 13th, 18 December 1962.
This performance is available on a twofer (I shall discuss the coupling anon...) from the Moscow Conservatory's own label and was originally released - without fanfare - in 2015 and reissued last year. I am amazed that this release is not better known. I myself was stunned to discover its availability, though it does not seem to be available from any of the "usual" sources.
It is, of course, Gromadsky, Kondrashin and the same forces as the 20 December 2nd performance.
When it arrived, I was disheartened to discover that i-Tunes and Windows Media Player both "recognised" the disc as being the Russian Disc release of the 20 December 2nd performance. HOWEVER, close A/B comparisons reveal that - although the performances of 18 and 20 December are remarkably similar - they are NOT the same rendition (e.g. a smudged note in the trumpet in bar 2 of the premiere is "clean" in the Russian Disc 2nd performance, and the whirling piccolo figurations at the 1st movement's climax are slightly early in their entry in the premiere as opposed to the Russian Disc 2nd performance).
It goes without saying that this is a wildly exciting performance of the work. My one regret is that the spontaneous applause reported after the 1st movement of the premiere has been edited out.
Now to the coupling on this twofer...
...only the WORLD PREMIERE of the 4th!
Available here
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