Inspired by this terrific performance by Teo Gheorghiu on Through the Night just now (03:09 AM) to lay down this new thread quickly in case the forum goes down unexpectedly for the planned maintenance shutdown.
Pictures at an Exhibition - Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881)
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Wikipedia lists the following orchestrations:-
Mikhail Tushmalov
Sir Henry Wood
Leo Funtek
Maurice Ravel
Giuseppe Becce
Leonidas Caillet
Leopold Stokowski
Walter Goehr
Sergei Gorchakov
Nikolai Golovanov
Lawrence Leonard
Vladimir Ashkenazy
Francisco Mignone
Thomas Wilbrandt
Emile Naoumoff
Mekong Delta
Julian Yu
Jason Wight Wingate
Hidemaro Konoye
Leonard Slatkin
Vaclav Smetacek
Peter Breiner
Thomasz Golka
David DeBor Canfield
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostInspired by this terrific performance by Teo Gheorghiu on Through the Night just now (03:09 AM) to lay down this new thread quickly in case the forum goes down unexpectedly for the planned maintenance shutdown.
I will try later, after the matitudinal cuppa, to retrieve what has been lost.
I couldn't find a prior thread either, but someone has posted a longer and more detailed list, IIRC, than Alpie's, of orchestrations.
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Surprisingly, it seems that most of Hartmann's exhibition pictures are presumed lost. Apparently Musorgsky had been given two of them. A good account of Musorgsky's career is on one of the Tchaikovsky websites.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostSurprisingly, it seems that most of Hartmann's exhibition pictures are presumed lost. Apparently Musorgsky had been given two of them. A good account of Musorgsky's career is on one of the Tchaikovsky websites.
I listened to the Byron Janis RCA recording recently. It’s pretty impressive.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI wrote & posted more than this - it seems to have got lost in the night, perhaps run over by a runaway server at the Level Crossing.....
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI will try later, after the matitudinal cuppa, to retrieve what has been lost.
Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI couldn't find a prior thread either, but someone has posted a longer and more detailed list, IIRC, than Alpie's, of orchestrations.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post…but nothing from Rimsky-Korsakov
Tomita also tinkered with ‘Pictures’ and his electronic keyboard interpretation brought it clearly into the late C20th withe tweeting unhatched chicks shifting between left and right speakers!Last edited by cloughie; 16-11-23, 07:29.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostTomita also tinkered with ‘Pictures’ and his electronic keyboard interpretation brought it clearly into the late C20th withe tweeting unhatched chicks shifting between left and right speakers!
EDIT: Yes it is.Last edited by kernelbogey; 16-11-23, 19:16.
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Originally posted by cloughie View Post
…and Modest lived up to his name by not having a go beefing up his own work!
Tomita also tinkered with ‘Pictures’ and his electronic keyboard interpretation brought it clearly into the late C20th withe tweeting unhatched chicks shifting between left and right speakers!
For the piano version I would recommend Claire Chevalier's recording on a Becker piano of the composer's period. As German-born Becker was the best-known piuano maker in St Petersburg, it is very likely that Musorgsky himself played such an instrument. Anyone interested in Russian pianos should read Sophy Roberts' book The Lost Pianos of Siberia, which has a lot of information even if in parts it makes sad reading (many of the pianos are unplayable).
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Originally posted by CallMePaul View Post
Emerson, Lake & Palmer also made an arrangement for their prog-rock group, which included some extra pieces (as I remember - my brother was/is a big ELP fan and I don't know if he still has the album) by group members.
For the piano version I would recommend Claire Chevalier's recording on a Becker piano of the composer's period. As German-born Becker was the best-known piuano maker in St Petersburg, it is very likely that Musorgsky himself played such an instrument. Anyone interested in Russian pianos should read Sophy Roberts' book The Lost Pianos of Siberia, which has a lot of information even if in parts it makes sad reading (many of the piqanos are unplayable).
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Originally posted by cloughie View Post
My only regret with ELP’s formation was that it robbed King Crimson of its best ever vocalist - though it undoubtedly gave Keith Emerson an improvement on Lee Jackson in the Nice!
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