Not many of my purchases are new recordings, but one that would feature in my list is already in jlw's: the Zimerman/BPO/Rattle Bernstein Symphony 2 (Age of Anxiety).
2018. Your top classical albums from this year.
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Originally posted by ostuni View PostChiming in with my own 'really?': I have to say that Aimard's Catalogue was one of my disappointments of the year!
Jayne has reminded me of the completed Schubert B minor symphony. I shall have to add that, for sure. I'd also forgotten Daniele Pollini's Chopin/Scriabin/Stockhausen disc, volume 7 of the Michael Gielen Edition, the DG complete Debussy, and no doubt a few early/baroque discs as well. Back to the drawing board.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostNot many of my purchases are new recordings, but one that would feature in my list is already in jlw's: the Zimerman/BPO/Rattle Bernstein Symphony 2 (Age of Anxiety).
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI heard Zimmerman and Sir Simon do this with the LSO at this years EIF and terrific it was too. However, I'd probably go for Beatrice Rana and Pappano since I absolutely love her playing.
I'm not so keen on the rest of the Pappano set, though, especially the Jeremiah.
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OK, this is my list (I think):
Bartók - Violin Concertos (Tetzlaff & Lintu)
Debussy - Complete Works (DG)
Geminiani - Concerti grossi (Café Zimmermann)
Michael Gielen Edition vol.7
Graupner - Duo Cantatas (Capricornus Consort Basel)
Haydn Symphonies vol.6 (Antonini)
Messiaen - Catalogue d'oiseaux (Aimard)
Daniele Pollini plays Chopin, Scriabin, Stockhausen
Schubert - B minor symphony & orchestral songs (Concentus musicus Wien)
Zimmermann - Symphonies (L'arte del mondo)
There are a few others that might make it onto the list if I get around to hearing them before the end of the year: JS Bach solo violin music with Giuliano Carmignola, Junst der Fuge with Bob van Asperen, Il ritorno de Ulisse with JEG.Last edited by Richard Barrett; 27-11-18, 19:58.
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostTchaikovsky: The Seasons - Pavel Kolesnikov
Chopin: (24) Mazurkas - Pavel Kolesnikov
Rzewski: The People United Will Never Be Defeated - Igor Levit
Bach: Goldberg Variations - Beatrice Rana
Was Beatrice's Goldberg cd this year? Whether it is or not, it's one of my 'Desert Island Discs'!
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostWhat a surprising choice.
I'm looking forward to seeing the choices of Finzi4ever, Bax-of-Delights, and ... oh!
The Ferneyhough CD is a magnificent achievement - the Music itself is terrific (of course!) and the care and passion that the performers (particularly Brabbins & the BBCSO) and the recording crew give to it makes this very clear. It's been a long wait ... but totally worth it.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
The Ferneyhough CD is a magnificent achievement - the Music itself is terrific (of course!) and the care and passion that the performers (particularly Brabbins & the BBCSO) and the recording crew give to it makes this very clear. It's been a long wait ... but totally worth it.
I think it was the only new classical CD I've bought this year, therefore it wins by default. But yes, amazing.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostReally? You sort of have to imagine that there are brass and percussion instruments playing somewhere in the distance though...
What Currentzis does is reproduce these differences - not simply as a mark of awe for the Composer (this is Currentzis, after all), but to reveal what the Music is giving at these points - and the detail that is heard is compelling: I don't remember hearing the many semiquaver driving rhythms (usually drowned out by prominent brass playing) so clearly as in this recording. It's propulsive, and demonstrates Mahler's debt to Bach; one that had never struck me at all before (and the string players of MusicAeterna are phenomenal in these passages - there's none of that muddy approximation that many recordings and performances make do with; in fact, the orchestral playing throughout is staggeringly good).
It's not all perfect - I think the prominent Celesta has more to do, I think, with the mixing desk than with what was heard in the hall; and there's a Timp part in the finale that gets lost. But picky-picky! The sound is what Mahler has written, and with benefits that become clearer with every hearing. And, not least; as so very, very often, the total experience - the joy, longing, humour and despair - of the work becomes greater as a result of such trust and meticulous reading. A fantastic release.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
I'm looking forward to seeing the choices of Finzi4ever, Bax-of-Delights, and ... oh!
The Ferneyhough CD is a magnificent achievement - the Music itself is terrific (of course!) and the care and passion that the performers (particularly Brabbins & the BBCSO) and the recording crew give to it makes this very clear. It's been a long wait ... but totally worth it.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
I'm looking forward to seeing the choices of Finzi4ever, Bax-of-Delights, and ... oh!
The Ferneyhough CD is a magnificent achievement - the Music itself is terrific (of course!) and the care and passion that the performers (particularly Brabbins & the BBCSO) and the recording crew give to it makes this very clear. It's been a long wait ... but totally worth it.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWhat Currentzis does is reproduce these differences
I thought about including the Ferneyhough on my list, but I can't say I've listened to it enough as yet to make my mind up, apart from Plötzlichkeit of which I've had a broadcast recording for some time, and with which I have a bit of a problem in terms of its overall form (ie. does it really have one, beyond its mosaic-like surface?), in comparison to pieces where this contributes decisively to the impact of the music, as in Time and Motion Study II or (especially) Transit. I'll need to be in the right state of mind to give this disc the right sort of attention and then maybe it will open itself up.
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