Originally posted by Dave2002
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Tchaikovsky Symphony Cycles
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI have this set by Ormandy - which has yet another symphony - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Eugene-Orma...%2Ftchaikovsky
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWell worth it - I bought it a while back, largely for recordings I never knew existed!
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostIn all honesty, I have to agree with you about the 3rd (and, like you, I've really tried to love it). But yes, 1 & 2 are terrific in their different ways.
Btw, IMV Bruckner 3 is one of Bruckner's best, and RVW’s 3rd is possibly his finest. (pace Petrushka’s post #26).
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Note, one reviewer wrote this
He is just as convincing in the major Romantic symphonies he was also assigned: 7-9 by Dvorak and 4-6 and the "Manfred" by Tchaikovsky, though here I have a caveat. I find the way Silvestri phrases the motto theme of the Tchaikovsky Fourth Symphony willfully peculiar. This is a shame really, because the rest of the performance is thrilling. I have no such reservations about the Fifth, Sixth, or the "Manfred." Silvestri's Tchaikovsky is dark, roiling, and fiercely dramatic.
Many of us might not agree. Otherwise I think the performances are good.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostInteresting how we, fairly like-minded people, can respond very differently to the same thing. I very much like Tchaikovsky's symphony #3. His ideas always seem too beautiful and elegant for the strictures of symphonic form. Give him the theatrical go-ahead (e.g.ballet) and he’s untouchable (in the romantic genre). Symphony #3 is a gorgeous piece of theatre. The tunes come and go with the harmonics providing their own non-literal facsimile of the melodic line (oxymoron noted). This symphony, in many respects, is maybe Tchaikovsky at his best; what he does best. Perhaps low on cerebral technical form, but high on visceral appeal - actually no, not just visceral, but heart-felt. If anyone’s interested in a recommended recording, I’d say the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, Antoni Wit on Naxos. Available for as little as 1p for a s/h copy in very good condition from Amazon! - https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/offer-li...condition=used
Btw, IMV Bruckner 3 is one of Bruckner's best, and RVW’s 3rd is possibly his finest. (pace Petrushka’s post #26).
I haven't heard this Polish Polish but when I got that stunning Canyon Classics HDCD live Svetlanov cycle which Makropoulos mentioned, the 3rd remained elusive; I finally caught up with it years later 2nd hand from a French seller. Price the right side of... obscene (just). It didn't disappoint!
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Originally posted by Alison View PostThe recent RLPO/Petrenko set of First, Second and Fifth symphonies is a fine addition to the catalogue.
Bbm, you should be aware that the Petrenko Manfred is not part of this cycle. That was on Naxos (and it a terrific performance). The new Tchaik recordings are for Onyx.Our chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... Our two weapons are fear and surprise...and ruthless efficiency....
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Originally posted by Il Grande Inquisitor View PostIndeed, Alison, it was my pick of the year for Gramophone's Critics Choice.
Bbm, you should be aware that the Petrenko Manfred is not part of this cycle. That was on Naxos (and it a terrific performance). The new Tchaik recordings are for Onyx.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Been listening today to a cheap second hand copy of the Android Nelsons/CBSO Tchaikovsky 5 on Orfeo . I really liked their Fourth and I think this is very fine. Edward Seckerson did not like it when reviewing it for Gramophone . I could not disagree with him more . It may lack histrionics but not emotion. Highly recommended - thoughtful, affectionate and superbly played .
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