James Mulcro Drew
James Mulcro Drew
"please do not understand me too quickly"-andre gide
Don't miss the chamber arrangement of 15. The whole 2 disc Chamber Symphonies set this is part of is fantastic.
https://youtu.be/fwMItGr5_xY
Yeah that would be nice. There are fragments recorded on a BIS recording but nothing substantial. There is a very good chance he burned the thing - Aino seemed to think that happened. He was not unbuzzed.
David Hurwitz always makes the claim that Sibelius has 9 symphonies....the other two being Lemminkainen and Kullervo. He may be on to something, especially with Lemminkainen. Those two pieces were written way before his 1st two proper symphonies and they are definitely more progressive and ambitious, and less Tchaikovsky influenced.
Karl Jenkins (Soft Machine) that is
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Jenkins
If it isn't Krautrock, it's krap.
"And it's only the giving
That makes you what you are" - Ian Anderson
I only have the Ashkenazy recordings of the Sibelius symphonies. I have an old vinyl version of the second which is on the Columbia label but I don’t remember who the orchestra or conductor is off hand. I just played the Ashkenazy versions not long ago and still love them so I’m not sure if I’d care for another interpretation of them.
In the meantime I just got the set of Rued Langgaard symphonies. I’ve played the first three discs and I love them. I’ve been looking at buying them for years and finally took the plunge. Wow am I glad I did.
Rick
Listened to some Stravinsky last night. L'Histoire du Soldat, Octet, Renard, violin concerto.
Just got a CD of Josef Suk's Ripening and Praga with Libor Pesek conducting Royal Liverpool.
This is a composer that should be more highly regarded/well known. His Asrael Symphony is a freakin' masterpiece. Ripening, too. I've mentioned this before somewhere on PE, but I would be surprised if folks who dig the "big and heavy" orchestral works of Mahler, Shostakovich, Bax and stuff like Sibelius 4 wouldn't connect with this music.
OK. Bye.
Today I discovered that an album with the Dreigroschenoper was done under direction of James Last, someone I wouldn't associate with this.
He is more associated with this:
I listened to Mahler's Symphony No. 5 today (Leonard Bernstein/NY Phil recording, from 196-whatever) and I had forgotten about the joyous interplay between the brass and woodwinds at the opening of the fifth movement:
Mahler's 5th is a fave. I've collected several recordings. I usually put on the Boulez or Shipway.
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