Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis In the Forest (1901); The Sea (1907).
Lithuanian State SO/Gintaras Rinkevičius. KING RECORD JAPAN CD, rec 1991.
Lithuanian National SO/Juozas Domarkas. NORTHERN FLOWERS CD 2011.
Slovak PO/Domarkas. Marco Polo lossless download (eclassical), rec. 1993 (?).
Serendipity.... Only aware of this composer from the Svetlanov The Sea anthology (Debussy, Glazunov, Ciurlionis), I had ordered the Fedoseyev CD of these remarkable works but when I opened the packet I found the Rinkevičius had been sent, an issue I'd ignored due to the high price and my ignorance of its quality. Then I noticed the timing for The Sea: 37' rather than the more typical 27' - 29'. Also, "Original version"appeared next to it.... I had no idea there were two versions of this late-romantic masterpiece - but perhaps it was simply very slow? Three unexpected cymbal clashes in the first climax soon cleared that up - not to mention the organ of the Church of St John, Vilnius founding the hugely extended central climax on its groundswell. A 37-minute continuous stretch of visionary, dreamlike evocations, somewhere between the Scriabin of the first 3 symphonies and the Schoenberg of Pelleas or Gurrelieder.
Forest is shorter and more delicate, its Wagnerian-murmurs precedent obvious, but gorgeously wrought in Čiurlionis' own voice.
All of these recordings are recommendable, but the later Lithuanian Domarkas has the better sound: very distinctively rich and velvety where the widely-available Marco Polo release offers a less sensuous, less evocative clarity of line. But both of these are the (still very enjoyable) heavily Balsys-edited sub-30' version, (organ far less prominent - not even sure it's there on all the recordings I've heard - with less of the reflective, quieter episodes between shorter, though still thunderous climaxes) as is the Fedoseyev (preferred in 1991 in Gramophone to the Marco Polo). The KING release is unique in offering the extraordinary original, prepared in 1990 for these very performances, and I feel it has the more natural idiomatic feel for the shaping of each phrase, the natural building up of the elaborate paragraphs.
(Stunning sound too, With prices to match, I'm afraid...)
But what an experience it offers... do have a look at Čiurlionis' wonderful paintings too, often with Musical Titles e.g. "Funeral Symphony"..
Lithuanian State SO/Gintaras Rinkevičius. KING RECORD JAPAN CD, rec 1991.
Lithuanian National SO/Juozas Domarkas. NORTHERN FLOWERS CD 2011.
Slovak PO/Domarkas. Marco Polo lossless download (eclassical), rec. 1993 (?).
Serendipity.... Only aware of this composer from the Svetlanov The Sea anthology (Debussy, Glazunov, Ciurlionis), I had ordered the Fedoseyev CD of these remarkable works but when I opened the packet I found the Rinkevičius had been sent, an issue I'd ignored due to the high price and my ignorance of its quality. Then I noticed the timing for The Sea: 37' rather than the more typical 27' - 29'. Also, "Original version"appeared next to it.... I had no idea there were two versions of this late-romantic masterpiece - but perhaps it was simply very slow? Three unexpected cymbal clashes in the first climax soon cleared that up - not to mention the organ of the Church of St John, Vilnius founding the hugely extended central climax on its groundswell. A 37-minute continuous stretch of visionary, dreamlike evocations, somewhere between the Scriabin of the first 3 symphonies and the Schoenberg of Pelleas or Gurrelieder.
Forest is shorter and more delicate, its Wagnerian-murmurs precedent obvious, but gorgeously wrought in Čiurlionis' own voice.
All of these recordings are recommendable, but the later Lithuanian Domarkas has the better sound: very distinctively rich and velvety where the widely-available Marco Polo release offers a less sensuous, less evocative clarity of line. But both of these are the (still very enjoyable) heavily Balsys-edited sub-30' version, (organ far less prominent - not even sure it's there on all the recordings I've heard - with less of the reflective, quieter episodes between shorter, though still thunderous climaxes) as is the Fedoseyev (preferred in 1991 in Gramophone to the Marco Polo). The KING release is unique in offering the extraordinary original, prepared in 1990 for these very performances, and I feel it has the more natural idiomatic feel for the shaping of each phrase, the natural building up of the elaborate paragraphs.
(Stunning sound too, With prices to match, I'm afraid...)
But what an experience it offers... do have a look at Čiurlionis' wonderful paintings too, often with Musical Titles e.g. "Funeral Symphony"..
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