10.30am
Building a Library
Gillian Moore chooses her favourite version of Stravinsky's Soldier's Tale
Soldier's Tale from 1918 is a theatrical work to be "read, played and danced by three actors, one or more dancers, and a septet of instruments." Stravinsky chose a libretto, in French, by Swiss writer Charles Ferdinand Ramuz; the two men worked on the piece together, basing it on the Russian tale The Runaway Soldier and the Devil.
Though this suggests that the version under consideration will be that with narration, I have also added a section of available recordings of the suite (though not of any of the other instrumental arrangements: usually clarinet, violin, and piano, but also some extracts just violin/piano) as I suspect that they may well also be covered.
Information on the Presto site (as with the recent The fairy’s kiss and The miraculous mandarin, to say nothing of Pulcinella!) is often incorrect, so where there is possible confusion I have used the length of the work as the deciding factor. Sometimes there is a single narrator; in other recordings the other roles have also been assigned. Also, in some listings there is no designated conductor, so those have been listed at the top in alphabetical ensemble order. In other cases, the violinist might (inadvertently?) have been thought of as the ‘conductor’.
DVD versions have not been included.
Full version (with narration)
Boston Symphony Chamber Players (D)
Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival Musicians (CD, D)
Edinburgh International Festival (D) [Thomas Allen as narrator]
LSO Chamber Ensemble (SACD, D)
SRO/Ansermet (D)
Soloists of the Berlin Philharmonic/Blacher [violin] (D)
Orchestre de Paris/Charlier (CD, D)
Ensemble Instrumental/Dutoit (CD)
Hallé Orchestra/Elder (CD, D)
Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Players/Falletta (CD, D)
Scottish CO/Friend (CD, D)
RSNO/N Järvi (CD, D)
Royal Academy of Music/Knussen (CD, D)
Various instrumentalists/Markevich (PCD, D) [Cocteau as narrator]
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center/Marsalis (D)
Various instrumentalists/Mintz [violin and conductor] [Depardieu as narrator] (D)
New Music Studium/Plotino (D)
London Festival O/Pople (D)
Eastman Virtuosi/Scatterday (CD, D)
Columbia Chamber Ensemble/Stravinsky (D) [This version, with Jeremy Irons as narrator, has Irons added in 2005 to Stravinsky’s own 1961 recording, with some additional material recorded in 1967, attributed to Craft as conductor in the documentation accompanying the release in the big Columbia Stravinsky Collection]
Recommended version:
Jeremy Irons (speaker)
Columbia Chamber Ensemble
Igor Stravinsky (conductor)
SONY G010003473050VNorthern Chamber O/Ward (CD, D)
Argo Chamber Ensemble/Zalkowitsch (CD, D)
Suite
Various instrumentalists (D) [Maazel on violin]
SRO/Ansermet (CD, D)
Members of the Boston SO/Bernstein (D)
Cleveland O/Boulez (D)
LSO Chamber Group/Carewe (D)
London Sinfonietta/Chailly (D)
Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble/Craft (CD, D)
Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Players/Falletta (CD, D)
RSNO/N Järvi (D)
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen/P Järvi
Budapest Chamber Ensemble/Mihaly (D)
Zurich CO/Norrington (D)
Chamber Harmonia O/Pešek (CD, D)
Harmonie Ensemble New York/Richman (D)
Finnish Radio SO Chamber Ensemble/Sakari (CD, D)
Los Angeles CO/Schwarz (CD, D)
Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia/Solzhenitsyn (D)
Cleveland Orchestra/Stravinsky (D)
Various instrumentalists (New York, 1954)/Stravinsky (D)
Various instrumentalists, subsequently called the Columbia Chamber Ensemble (Hollywood, 1961)/Stravinsky (D)
D: Download
CD: CD (possibly in set)
PCD: Presto CD
SACD: SACD
[I spotted the subject for this BaL when looking at the R3 schedule today, and I had some spare time to compile a list of available recordings; I messaged Alpie, and though I haven't heard back yet I'm sure he won't mind that I've started the thread and saved him some work.]
As always, happy to make corrections/additions.
Building a Library
Gillian Moore chooses her favourite version of Stravinsky's Soldier's Tale
Soldier's Tale from 1918 is a theatrical work to be "read, played and danced by three actors, one or more dancers, and a septet of instruments." Stravinsky chose a libretto, in French, by Swiss writer Charles Ferdinand Ramuz; the two men worked on the piece together, basing it on the Russian tale The Runaway Soldier and the Devil.
Though this suggests that the version under consideration will be that with narration, I have also added a section of available recordings of the suite (though not of any of the other instrumental arrangements: usually clarinet, violin, and piano, but also some extracts just violin/piano) as I suspect that they may well also be covered.
Information on the Presto site (as with the recent The fairy’s kiss and The miraculous mandarin, to say nothing of Pulcinella!) is often incorrect, so where there is possible confusion I have used the length of the work as the deciding factor. Sometimes there is a single narrator; in other recordings the other roles have also been assigned. Also, in some listings there is no designated conductor, so those have been listed at the top in alphabetical ensemble order. In other cases, the violinist might (inadvertently?) have been thought of as the ‘conductor’.
DVD versions have not been included.
Full version (with narration)
Boston Symphony Chamber Players (D)
Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival Musicians (CD, D)
Edinburgh International Festival (D) [Thomas Allen as narrator]
LSO Chamber Ensemble (SACD, D)
SRO/Ansermet (D)
Soloists of the Berlin Philharmonic/Blacher [violin] (D)
Orchestre de Paris/Charlier (CD, D)
Ensemble Instrumental/Dutoit (CD)
Hallé Orchestra/Elder (CD, D)
Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Players/Falletta (CD, D)
Scottish CO/Friend (CD, D)
RSNO/N Järvi (CD, D)
Royal Academy of Music/Knussen (CD, D)
Various instrumentalists/Markevich (PCD, D) [Cocteau as narrator]
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center/Marsalis (D)
Various instrumentalists/Mintz [violin and conductor] [Depardieu as narrator] (D)
New Music Studium/Plotino (D)
London Festival O/Pople (D)
Eastman Virtuosi/Scatterday (CD, D)
Columbia Chamber Ensemble/Stravinsky (D) [This version, with Jeremy Irons as narrator, has Irons added in 2005 to Stravinsky’s own 1961 recording, with some additional material recorded in 1967, attributed to Craft as conductor in the documentation accompanying the release in the big Columbia Stravinsky Collection]
Recommended version:
Jeremy Irons (speaker)
Columbia Chamber Ensemble
Igor Stravinsky (conductor)
SONY G010003473050VNorthern Chamber O/Ward (CD, D)
Argo Chamber Ensemble/Zalkowitsch (CD, D)
Suite
Various instrumentalists (D) [Maazel on violin]
SRO/Ansermet (CD, D)
Members of the Boston SO/Bernstein (D)
Cleveland O/Boulez (D)
LSO Chamber Group/Carewe (D)
London Sinfonietta/Chailly (D)
Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble/Craft (CD, D)
Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Players/Falletta (CD, D)
RSNO/N Järvi (D)
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen/P Järvi
Budapest Chamber Ensemble/Mihaly (D)
Zurich CO/Norrington (D)
Chamber Harmonia O/Pešek (CD, D)
Harmonie Ensemble New York/Richman (D)
Finnish Radio SO Chamber Ensemble/Sakari (CD, D)
Los Angeles CO/Schwarz (CD, D)
Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia/Solzhenitsyn (D)
Cleveland Orchestra/Stravinsky (D)
Various instrumentalists (New York, 1954)/Stravinsky (D)
Various instrumentalists, subsequently called the Columbia Chamber Ensemble (Hollywood, 1961)/Stravinsky (D)
D: Download
CD: CD (possibly in set)
PCD: Presto CD
SACD: SACD
[I spotted the subject for this BaL when looking at the R3 schedule today, and I had some spare time to compile a list of available recordings; I messaged Alpie, and though I haven't heard back yet I'm sure he won't mind that I've started the thread and saved him some work.]
As always, happy to make corrections/additions.
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