I took delivery today of the new Icon box of Constantin Silvestri's complete EMI recordings and, after a busy day scribbling, have just rewarded myself by spinning the first disc - all Russian fare via three orchestras: the Philharmonia in Ruslan & Ludmila and Prince Igor Overtures, the Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire in the Polovtsian Dances and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra in Borodin's In the Steppes of Central Asia, plus a Tchaikovsky trio: 1812, Capriccio italien and the Polonaise from Eugene Onegin.
The Polonaise goes with tremendous élan and I was quite struck by the blazing brass of the BSO and the almost Russian oboe tone!
One quibble so far - why, over a fifteen CD box, six of which are devoted to Russian music, could EMI have not found a way to present Tchaikovsky's Fifth without it being split over two discs?
The Polonaise goes with tremendous élan and I was quite struck by the blazing brass of the BSO and the almost Russian oboe tone!
One quibble so far - why, over a fifteen CD box, six of which are devoted to Russian music, could EMI have not found a way to present Tchaikovsky's Fifth without it being split over two discs?
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