I am quite disappointed in the Naxos symphony series. The piano music with Geoffrey Burleson is a must, though. Also, I love his violin concerto and would like to hear what a star violinist could do with it. It surely is a most erratic and strange concerto. I didn´t know that Kubelik did the seventh, but I´m not surprised as he was a great and curious musician. I have the Stokowski and like it a lot.
Neglected masterworks
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Thomas Roth
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Yes I been looking at that site fairly recently the performance of Harris 10 & 13 are the same as the ones I have though I may download them to see if they 'come out better'. The real value is the complete performance (its only ever performance) of the 12th, I've had some recent difficulties downloading the 2nd part but it finally seems to have worked last night. The recording level is very low and rather bass heavy but it does give a unique opportunity to hear Harris's largest symphonic work. Also of value on this site which I didn't have are Diamond's 10th symphony (pity the complete 11th isn't also available) and Creston's 6th symphony. Some of the other 'off air' performances are the same ones that were donated to me several years ago.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostShostakovich: The Execution of Stepan Razin.
I heard this for the first time on acquiring the Kondrashin recording. Perhaps it is the subject matter, the Russian text or the difficulty in slotting it into a programme but this is every bit as much the real voice of Shostakovich as any of the symphonies.Originally posted by teamsaint View PostStepan Razin is Magnificent. A deal better than some of the symphonies IMO.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostYes I been looking at that site fairly recently the performance of Harris 10 & 13 are the same as the ones I have though I may download them to see if they 'come out better'.Last edited by PJPJ; 20-03-12, 07:52.
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Stanford Symphonies - I recently picked up the 4CD Chandos set of Syms 1 - 7 with the Ulster Orch / Vernon Handley and have loved what was basically new music to me and which I don't recall hearing much about before . Surely they deserve a wider hearing ( as do Parry's Syms ) ? Does anyone else like these works ? Are there any other recordings of them ?
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Originally posted by AmpH View PostStanford Symphonies...Surely they deserve a wider hearing ( as do Parry's Syms ) ? Does anyone else like these works ? Are there any other recordings of them ?
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Roehre
Originally posted by AmpH View PostStanford Symphonies - I recently picked up the 4CD Chandos set of Syms 1 - 7 with the Ulster Orch / Vernon Handley and have loved what was basically new music to me and which I don't recall hearing much about before . Surely they deserve a wider hearing ( as do Parry's Syms ) ? Does anyone else like these works ? Are there any other recordings of them ?
I have never understood why the first two of these haven't received an opus number.
Personally I rate them in a higher league than Parry's (apart from the slow mvt in Parry 2 and Parry 5).
By accident I listened to both Parry 5 and Stanford 2 within a couple of hours - there are quite nice coincidences, despite the works separated by more than 30 years.
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostPersonally I rate them in a higher league than Parry's (apart from the slow mvt in Parry 2 and Parry 5).
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI have the del Mar Stanford Irish Symphony but it strikes me as a work full of reminders of other composer's tunes especially Brahms.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThe third ('Irish') is said to have been the most often played British symphony of the 25 years before Elgar's 1st came along. It then disappeared completely. All the symphonies are enjoyable, with Brahms and Dvorak never far away. There's also a set from David Lloyd-Jones and the Bournemouth SO on Naxos, as well as a very good 'Irish' from Norman del Mar, also from Bournemouth, on EMI.
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Roehre
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostWell yes, precisely. There's even an apparent lift from Brahms 4.
Obviously the "Beethoven X" string theme from Brahms' I finale returns in disguise in Stanford's "Irish" finale.
Interesting in Stanford III also is the coda of mvt 1: Beethoven IX's mvt 1 coda springs immediately to mind.
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