Originally posted by gurnemanz
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BaL 12.1.19 - Prokofiev: Violin concerto 1 in D
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostWhat I've noticed about the more modern recordings is that the orchestral detail is so much more apparent revealing that's it's beautifully scored.
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Originally posted by mikealdren View PostThe David Oistrakh recordings I have are:
Kondrashin USSR Radio (?State) Symphony 6/1953
Von Matacic LSO 21/11/1954
Moscow Philharmonic 7/9/1963 (Brilliant live)
Sanderling Berlin Symphony 19/4/1971
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostSometimes a silvery violin transcending a muddy grey orchestra has a phosphorescent beauty of its own, pastoralguy. First among equals may not always be best!
It's certainly not what I gave my adolescence/early adulthood for!
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Originally posted by BBMmk2 View PostDo any of the newe recordings that have been released recently,say in the past ten years, come of interest?
I heard the recently released Petrova/Odense SO/Poska before Christmas, and it is truly lovely - AND c/w an excellent account of the Nielsen Concerto...so if you're looking for a fresh take, try that one...
Listen to unlimited or download Prokofiev & Nielsen: Violin Concertos by Liya Petrova in Hi-Res quality on Qobuz. Subscription from £10.83/month.
....glowingly reviewed in the Gramophone, I should add. (AF-C, 11/18 "a marvellous disc"...)
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post....as aforementioned (#15 above)...:
I heard the recently released Petrova/Odense SO/Poska before Christmas, and it is truly lovely - AND c/w an excellent account of the Nielsen Concerto...so if you're looking for a fresh take, try that one...
Listen to unlimited or download Prokofiev & Nielsen: Violin Concertos by Liya Petrova in Hi-Res quality on Qobuz. Subscription from £10.83/month.
....glowingly reviewed in the Gramophone, I should add. (AF-C, 11/18 "a marvellous disc"...)
Thanks! I will!Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by BBMmk2 View PostDo any of the newe recordings that have been released recently,say in the past ten years, come of interest?
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostI've just bought Isabelle van Keulen with Andrew Manze conducting his NDR Orchestra. And then there is Lisa Batiashvili with Y N-S and the CoE. Both of them are just as "interesting" as fairly ancient performances where the fiddling may be stellar but the orchestral recording murky. The idea that such recordings have some kind of nacreous attraction seems to my no doubt dullard sensibilities as verging on the perverse. The work is, as PG says above, beautifully scored (check out the Batiashvili) so what's not to like about hearing it as one would in the concert hall?
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostHighlandDougie: were you watching Isadora Duncan live, would you notice whether her corps de ballet were Pam's People or the Bournemouth Bloomers?
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostHighlandDougie: were you watching Isadora Duncan live, would you notice whether her corps de ballet were Pam's People or the Bournemouth Bloomers?
Prokofiev's Concertos aren't Wienewski's - they are superbly-crafted works for soloist and orchestra; a "muddy grey orchestral sound" would be as bad for the work as would a third-rate soloist, in that in both cases, the composer's craft and imagination is lost.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThat is rather an inadequate analogy, as Isadora Duncan's self-choreography was the main attraction of her performances. It might have been more apposite if you'd suggested Anna Pavlova - to which the response would have been "That depends on whether one's priorities were going to see Pavlova or the ballet Swan Lake - if the former, then the corps doesn't really matter; if the latter, what the corps does is essential, and needs to be a top-rank team and needs to be seen clearly."
Prokofiev's Concertos aren't Wienewski's - they are superbly-crafted works for soloist and orchestra; a "muddy grey orchestral sound" would be as bad for the work as would a third-rate soloist, in that in both cases, the composer's craft and imagination is lost.
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