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Pianist Simon Trpceski makes his Avie label debut with his first concerto recording, Rachmaninov’s Second and Third, potently partnered by Vasily Petrenko and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.30-year-old Macedonian pianist Simon Trpceski is one of the most remarkable musicians of his generation. Here he performs technically flawless and superbly rendered versions of Rachmaninov’s notoriously challenging Piano Concertos Nos. 2 and 3. He partners with frequent collaborator Vasily Petrenko who, with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, extend their fruitful Avie association with this, the first of two recordings with Trpceski surveying Rachmaninov’s complete concertante works for piano and orchestra.


  • Wykonawca Trpceski Simon
  • Data premiery 2010-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Rachmaninov’s Études-tableaux explore a plethora of colours, textures and sonorites and demonstrate the emotional range of the composer’s expression. Howard Shelley gives authoritative performances of these studies and tackles the technical challenges with an easy brilliance. ‘In Shelley’s Rachmaninov series, I think this the finest achievement among them’ (Gramophone) ‘The performance, to say nothing of the sound, is transcendental’ (Acoustic Sounds Catalog, USA) ‘Peerless command and inimitable insights’ (Hi-Fi News) ‘The refinement of the playing reminds one of Rachmaninov’s own classic interpretations: few contemporary pianists can equal Shelley’s elegant phrasing in pianissimo passages or his imaginative and resourceful use of the pedal. Strongly recommended’ (The Monthly Guide to Recorded Music)output reveals him to have been a far more complex artist than such a superficial description suggests. The emotional range of his expression was, in fact, surprisingly wide, and his objectivity—the very antithesis of subjective Romanticism—marks him out as an exceptional composer, doubly so for one of his generation and nationality. As a late nineteenth-century Russian, Rachmaninov exhibits some curious features: he had nothing to do with the nationalist movement and he was a world-famous composer whose influence was negligible. A further paradox is that although he was one of the most popular composers of all time the majority of his works remained virtually unknown for decades after his death. Consequently, his work was—and still is, in some quarters—frequently misunderstood. A clue to his true artistic character can be found in one of the rare interviews he gave, for The Étude in 1941, when he said:In my own compositions, no conscious effort has been made to be original, a Romantic, or Nationalistic, or anything else. I write down on paper the music I hear within me, as naturally as possible. I am a Russian composer, and the land of my birth has influenced my temperament and outlook. My music is the product of my temperament, and so it is Russian music; I have never consciously attempted to write Russian music, or any other kind of music …Romanticism in music centres upon extra-musical thought, and reached its zenith in the nineteenth century with a kind of obsessive self-regarding individualism, a state of mind utterly alien to Rachmaninov’s restrained and profoundly civilized art. Rachmaninov knew that he was not, at heart, a Romantic composer, as were his great pianist-composer predecessors Schumann and Liszt, yet he did not remain entirely aloof from the movement.Although it is tempting to consider the Études-tableaux as the epitome of Rachmaninov’s Romanticism in piano music, he was reluctant to reveal any extra-musical programme to them. Such reticence is foreign to the true Romantic, and in Rachmaninov’s case amounts almost to an anti-Romantic stance.The use of the word ‘tableaux’ is misleading in the present context. Although we know Rachmaninov was inspired by extra-musical subjects in some of them, he said: ‘I do not believe in the artist disclosing too much of his images. Let them paint for themselves what it most suggests.’ The programmes he supplied in 1930 to the Italian composer Ottorino Respighi, who orchestrated five of the Études-tableaux for Serge Koussevitsky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, seem contrived and full of post hoc justification, without being entirely inappropriate. The ‘tableaux’ are not first and foremost ‘pictures’ in the Musorgskian sense, rather are they successors to Chopin’s Ballades in that they permit poetic interpretation whilst at the same time being composed entirely from musical (and also technical) ideas. The ‘character’ of each piece is dictated by the material, and it is the ‘character’ which is the ‘tableau’.The first set, Op 33, followed immediately upon the thirteen Préludes of Op 32, being written before the Préludes were premiered. Thus they follow a succession of large-scale masterpieces: two operas, the first piano sonata, second symphony, the symphonic poem The Isle of the Dead, the third concerto, the Liturgy of St John; and after this exclusive concentration upon big works during almost the whole of the previous ten years, Rachmaninov doubtless felt the need to express his compositional mastery and newly developed artistic strength in works of the smallest scale. He found the task exceptionally difficult, as it ‘presented many more problems than a symphony or a concerto … after all, to say what you have to say, and say it briefly, lucidly, and without circumlocution is still the most difficult problem facing the creative artist.’ Rachmaninov composed nine Études-tableaux in 1911, but they were not published until 1914, when three were removed—the original No 3 in C minor, No 4 in A minor and No 5 in D minor. Of these, No 4 was revised in 1916 and incorporated (as No 6) into the second set (Op 39), which was written between September 1916 and February 1917. Nos 3 and 5 from the first set remained in manuscript and were found after Rachmaninov’s death, being ultimately published in 1948 when they were reinstated as parts of his Opus 33. As a result, the form in which we hear the first set of Études-tableaux today is one which was unknown to the composer, and goes against his express wishes. Whilst it is generally conceded that Rachmaninov’s first thoughts are almost invariably preferable in regard to those works which he subsequently allowed to be cut (second symphony, The Isle of the Dead, third piano concerto—consecutive works), his Opus 33 presents an insoluble problem: do we restore the C minor and D minor pieces to their original place, or do we play the set in the first published form? As the question did not arise during Rachmaninov’s lifetime, we have no direct evidence, but there is a curious connexion between the two previously unpublished Études: they both use material from other works.In April 1914 Rachmaninov revealed he was working on a new concerto (his fourth). It was uncharacteristic of him to announce work in progress. The war interrupted the concerto, and the work did not appear until 1926. The opening of the concerto, and a subsidiary theme in the slow movement of the same work, were both—as Geoffrey Norris has pointed out—taken from the discarded C minor Étude. The D minor Étude is based on material from the first movement of the first piano sonata (1907). At the suggestion of Konstantin Ignumnov, Rachmaninov excised fifty bars from the movement before publication: it must have been that Rachmaninov constructed this Étude from the music he discarded from the sonata. And so it is likely that the two unpublished Études-tableaux, using material already in hand for other works, were withdrawn by the composer for this very reason. A further point is that the six as originally published give the impression of a Schumannesque organic unity, akin to the procedures of Schumann’s Études symphoniques: there are melodic-cellular connexions between the six which the C minor and D minor do not share.It is possible to discern a more elliptical, laconic manner in Rachmaninov’s post-Revolutionary works, and this change of emphasis is already apparent in the Études-tableaux. As we have seen, Rachmaninov admitted that such brevity presented him with considerable compositional problems, but, apart from their brevity, these pieces are virtuosic in the extreme. They make cruel demands of unconventional hand positions, immense physical strength and energy from the player and, combined with the impacted character of each piece and the often wide leaps for the fingers, such problems place these works outside the scope of any but the most formidable virtuoso technique. Rachmaninov’s Études-tableaux mark the virtual end of the nineteenth-century tradition of virtuoso writings of the great composer-pianists.In addition to their unique qualities must be mentioned their unusual harmonic language, already foreshadowed in parts of the third concerto: modal harmonies and melodic characteristics can be frequently found in the Études, together with the absence of the third in the traditional major and minor modes; the flattened seventh, and Rachmaninov’s use of thick chordal clusters in contrary and parallel motion. These features account for the less obviously ‘Russian’ nature of the music, placing the composer more firmly in the Central and East-European tradition. The Études-tableaux of Opus 39 were the last works Rachmaninov composed in Russia.Detailed comment on each piece is unnecessary, but note particularly the modal aspect of the melody in Op 33 No 1, and how the quiet ending of this piece is echoed in the opening of No 2, being a variation upon it, and how this is carried through the remainder of the set. The final C sharp minor is almost a parodia of the most famous of Rachmaninov’s Préludes. Op 39 can also be perceived as a hidden set of variations on this composer’s idée-fixe, the Dies irae, parts of the plainchant being quoted directly in all of the nine studies, particularly obviously in the first five. The Dies irae is quoted in Rachmaninov’s Isle of the Dead, which was inspired by Böcklin’s painting, and Rachmaninov claimed two other Böcklin paintings, ‘The Waves’ and ‘Morning’, were the inspiration behind the first and eighth respectively.One final point on the entire collection is the vivid rhythmic life of the music: at times virile and commanding, at others subtle and understated, it is an aspect of Rachmaninov’s compositional skill which helps to ensure the immortality of his music.Robert Matthew-Walker © 1983


  • Wykonawca Shelley Howard
  • Data premiery 2011-06-01
  • Nośnik CD
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7-płytowy box zawierający komplet nagrań Horowitza dokonanych dla Deutsche Grammophon w latach 1970 – 1987 (archiwalne nagrania studyjne, koncertowe, a także nagrane w warunkach domowych)    * HOROWITZ – The Last Romantic    * Bach arr. Busoni,. Mozart, Chopin, Schubert, Liszt, Schumann, Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Moszkowski    * HOROWITZ – The Studio Recordings    * Schumann: Kreisleriana op. 16, Scarlatti, Liszt, Scriabin, Schubert    * HOROWITZ in Moscow    * Scarlatti, Mozart, Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Liszt, Chopin, Schumann, Moszkowski, Rachmaninov    * Live recording    * HOROWITZ PLAYS MOZART    * Piano Concerto no. 23 in A major K.488, Piano Sonata in B flat major K.333    * With Carlo Maria Giulini conducting    * HOROWITZ AT HOME    * Mozart: Sonata in B flat major K. 281 (189f), Adagio in B minor K. 540, Rondo in D major K. 485, Schubert: Moment musical in F minor D780/3, Liszt after Schubert: Ständchen, Soirées de Vienne: Valse Caprice No. 7, Valse Caprice no. 6    * HOROWITZ THE POET    * Schubert,: Piano Sonata in B flat major D960, Schumann: Kinderszenen op. 15 (Live Recording)    * BONUS TRACKS: Studio chatter, Mozart: Rondo in A minor K. 511, Liszt: • Horowitz: Ehemals (No. 10 from Weihnachtsbaum)      oraz:    * Mozart: 1 Rondo in D major K. 485, Piano Sonata in B flat major K .333, Liszt after Schubert: Valse-Caprice no.6, Schumann: Kinderszenen op. 15, Chopin: Mazurka in B minor op. 33 no.4, Polonaise in A flat major op. 53, Schubert: Moment musical in F minor D 780/3; Moszkowski: Etincelles op. 36 no. 6Tracklista:VLADIMIR HOROWITZ - Complete Recordings on DGCD 1 HOROWITZ – The Last Romantic 64:091 Bach Arr. Busoni: Chorale Prelude "Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland"2 - 4 Mozart: Piano Sonata in C major K. 3305 Chopin: Mazurka op. 17 / 46 Chopin: Scherzo no. 17 Schubert: Impromptu in A flat major D899/48 Liszt: Consolation no. 39 Schumann: Novellette in F major op. 21/110 Rachmaninov Predlue in G sharp minor op. 32/1211 Scriabin: Etude in C sharp minor op. 2/112 Chopin: Polonaise no, 6 in A flat major op. 5313 Moszkowski: Etude in F major op. 72 / 6CD 2 HOROWITZ- The Studio Recordings 64:261 - 8 Schumann: Kreisleriana op. 169 Scarlatti: Sonata in B minor K.8710 Scarlatti: Sonata in E major K.13511 Liszt Impromptu in F sharp major S19112 Liszt: Valse oublieé no. 113 Scriabin: Etude in D sharp minor op. 8/1214 Schubert: Impromptu in B flat major D935/315 Schubert arr Tausig: Military March in D flat major D733/1CD 3 HOROWITZ in Moscow 60'481 Scarlatti: Sonata in E major K.3802 - 4 Mozart: Sonata in C major K.3305 Rachmaninov: Prelude in G major op. 32/56 Rachmaninov: Prelude in G sharp minor op. 32/127 Scriabin: Etude in C sharp minor op. 2/18 Scriabin: Etude in D sharp minor op. 8/129 Liszt Soirées de Vienne - Valse Caprice no .610 Liszt: Sonetto 104 del Petrarca11 Chopin: Mazurka in C sharp minor op. 30/412 Chopin: Mazurka in F minor op. 7/413 Schumann: Träumerei14 Moszkowski: Etincerlles15 Rachmaninov: Polka de W. R.Live recordingCD 4HOROWITZ PLAYS MOZART1 - 3 Piano Concerto no. 23 in A major K.4884 - 6 Piano Sonata in B flat major K.333 (315c)CD 5 HOROWITZ AT HOME 53:34MOZART1 - 3 Sonata in B flat major K. 281 (189f)4 Adagio in B minor K. 5405 Rondo in D major K. 4856 SCHUBERT: Moment musical in F minor D780/3LISZT after SCHUBERT7 StändchenSoirées de Vienne:8 Valse Caprice No. 79 Valse Caprice no. 6CD 6 HOROWITZ THE POET 69:38SCHUBERT: Piano Sonata in B flat majorSCHUMANN: Kinderszenen op. 15 (Live Recording)Studio chatter 1:30MOZARTt: Rondo in A minor K. 511 8:06LISZT / HOROWITZ: Ehemals (No. 10 from Weihnachtsbaum) 3:55CD 7: HOROWITZ in HAMBURG - The Last Concert 73:37WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART1 Rondo in D major K. 485 6:352 - 4 Piano Sonata in B flat major K .333 24:32FRANZ LISZT after FRANZ SCHUBERT5 Soirées de Vienne: Valse-Caprice no.6 7:36ROBERT SCHUMANN6 - 18 Kinderszenen op. 15 17:26FRÉDÉRIC CHOPIN19 Mazurka in B minor op. 33 no. 4 4:4520 Polonaise in A flat major op. 53 7:30Encores:FRANZ SCHUBERT21 Moment musical in F minor D 780/3 2:15MORITZ MOSZKOWSKI22 Etincelles op. 36 no. 6 2'32VLADIMIR HOROWITZ, piano


  • Wykonawca Horowitz Vladimir
  • Data premiery 2010-10-29
  • Nośnik CD
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Nagranie II Koncertu fortepianowego Rachmaninowa w wykonaniu Lang Langa teraz w wersji winylowej! Tracklista: LP 1 Side A  Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No.2 In C Minor, Op.18 1. Moderato Side B  Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No.2 In C Minor, Op.18 1. Adagio sostentuto 2. Allegro scherzando LP 2 Side C  Rachmaninov: Rhapsody On A Theme By Paganini, Op.43 1. C26


  • Wykonawca Lang Lang
  • Data premiery 2017-10-20
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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Tracklista: CD 1 1. Nocturne cis-moll op. posth/Frederic Chopin 2. La campanella/ Franz Liszt 3. 1. Adagio sostenuto/ Ludwig VanBeethoven 4. Etüde op. 20 Nr. 3/ Frederic Chopin 5. 3. Rondon alla turca: Allegretto/ Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 6. La fille aux cheveux de lin/ Claude Debussy 7. Moment musical D 780 Nr. 3/ Franz Schubert 8. Valse op. 64 Nr. 1 'Petit chien'/ Frederic Chopin 9. The heart asks pleasure first/ Michael Nyman 10. Jesu, joy of man's desiring/ Johann Sebastian Bach 11. Polonaise op. 53 'Heroique'/ Frederic Chopin 12. Albumblatt für Elise (Bagatelle für Klavier a-moll WoO 59)/ Ludwig Van Beethoven 13. Frühlingslied/ Felix Mendelssonhn 14. Fantaisie-impromptu/ Frederic Chopin 15. Rondo für Klavier Nr. 1 D-Dur KV 485/ Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 16. Arabesque Nr. 1/ Claude Debussy 17. Pavane pour une infante defunte/ Maurice Ravel CD 2 1. Piano Concerto No.26 I: Allegro (extract)/ MOZART 2. Grande Valse brillante/ CHOPIN 3. Rhapsody in Blue (extract)/ GERSHWIN 4. La Belle excentrique I: Grande Ritournelle/ SATIE 5. Etude Op.10 No.5/ CHOPIN 6. Fantasiestucke Aufschwung/ SCHUMANN 7. Rondo capriccioso Op.14/ MENDELSSOHN 8. Piano Sonata No.21 ?Waldstein? I: Allegro con brio (extract)/ BEETHOVEN 9. Les Jeux d?eau a la villa d'Este/ LISZT 10. Gaspard de la nuit Ondine/ RAVEL 11. Impromptu No.2 Op.31/ FAURE 12. Le Piccadilly/ SATIE 13. Invitation to the Dance/ WEBER 14. Piano Sonata K545 I: Allegro/ MOZART 15. Piano Concerto No.3 I: Allegro ma non tanto (extract)/ RACHMANINOV 16. I got rhythm/ GERSHWIN CD 3 1. Gymnopedie Nr. 1/ Satie 2. Gnossienne Nr. 1/ Satie 3. Ręverie/ Debbusy 4. Un sospiro/ Liszt 5. 2. Andante/ Mozart 6. 2. Adagio cantabile/ Beethoven 7. Tango op. 165 Nr. 2 (transkr. von Leopold Godowsky)/ Albeniz 8. Consolation Nr. 3 Des-Dur/ Bach 9. Lied ohne Worte Nr. 1 E-Dur op. 19b Nr. 1/ Mendelssohn 10. Prelude A-Dur op. 28 Nr. 7/ Chopin 11. Aria/ Bach 12. Vogel als Prophet/ Schumann 13. 2. Pagodes/ Debbusy 14. Nocturne Des-Dur op. 9 Nr. 2/ Scriabin 15. Nocturne Des-Dur op. 27 Nr. 2/ Chopin 16. 2. Adagio/ Shostakovich 17. Berceuse Des-Dur op. 57/ Chopin CD 4 1. Etüde c-moll op. 10 Nr. 12 'Revolutionary'/ Chopin 2. Piano concerto n.5 3. Rondo: Allegro (Auszug)/ Beethoven 3. Piano concerto 1. Allegro molto moderato/ Grieg 4. Polonaise Nr. 3 A-Dur op. 40 Nr. 1 'Militär-Polonaise' (Auszug)/ Chopin 5. Piano sonata n.23 Appassionata- 3. Allegro ma non troppo - Presto/ Beethoven 6. Salvonic damce Allegro scherzando/ Dvorak 7. Etüde op. 8 Nr. 12/ Scriabin 8. Well-Teempered Clavier, book 1 Praeludium C-Dur/ Bach 9. Piano concerto n.3 1. Allegretto/ Bartok 10. Piano sonata n.2 3. Marcia funebre/ Chopin 11. Prelude cis-moll op. 3 Nr. 2/ Rachmaninov 12. Piano sonta n.17 Tempest 1. Largo - Allegro/ Beethoven 13. Scherzo Nr. 3 fis-moll op. 39/ Chopin 14. Islamey/ Balakirev 15. Pictures at an exhibition - Das groBe Tor von Kiew/ Mussorgsky 16. Piano concerto n.1 1. Allegro non troppo e molto moderato (Auszug)/ Tchaikovsky CD 5 1. Liebestraum/ Liszt 2. Clair de lune/ Debussy 3. Piano concerto n.2 1. Moderato (Auszug)/ Rachmaninov 4. Prelude Des-Dur op. 28 Nr. 15 'Regentropfen'/ Chopin 5. Valse romantique/ Debussy 6. Jeux d'eau/ Ravel 7. Valse-impromptu/ Liszt 8. Walzer op. 39 Nr. 15/ Brahms 9. Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini Variation 18: Andante cantabile/ Rachmaninov 10. Nocturne Fis-Dur op. 15 Nr. 2/ Chopin 11. Alborada del gracioso/ Ravel 12. Sonate für Klavier d-moll L 413 'Pastorale'/ Scarlatti 13. Klavierstück F-Dur KV 33b/ Mozart 14. 1. Valse oubliee/ Liszt 15. Walzer cis-moll op. 64 Nr. 2/ Chopin 16. 2. En bateau/ Debussy 17. Piano concerto n.1 1. Allegro maestoso/ Chopin


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2005-12-12
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista:1. Prelude 00:03:36 2. Gavotte 00:03:36 3. Gigue 00:01:47 4. Wohin 00:02:52 5. A Midsummer Night's Dream: Scherzo 00:04:39 6. Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 00:13:51 7. Sorochinskaya yarmarka (Sorochintsi Fair): Gopak (Hopak) (arr. S. Rachmaninov for piano) 00:02:09 8. L' Arlesienne: Minuetto 00:02:52 9. Flight of the Bumble - Bee 00:01:13 10. Lullaby 00:04:50 11. Daisies 00:02:22 12. Lilacs 00:02:42 13. Dance of the Young Gypsy Maidens from Aleko 00:04:22 14. Liebesleid 00:05:09 15. Liebesfreud 00:07:00 16. Polka W. R. 00:04:00 17. The Star Spangled Banner (arr. Rachmaninov for piano solo) 00:02:08


  • Wykonawca Biret Idil
  • Data premiery 1998-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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The programme on this disc include Rachmaninov's last work, the Symphonic Dances (1941) as well as The Rock, his first published orchestral work, but opens with The Isle of the Dead from 1909. Inspired by the painting of the same name by Arnold Böcklin, Rachmaninov based almost the entire thematic material on the four-note figure which stalks through so much of his music: the first notes of the plainchant setting of the Dies iræ, describing the terrors of the Last Judgement.  The motif was Rachmaninov’s musical symbol for death – an ever-present spectre, sometimes feared, sometimes welcomed – and it impregnates the whole fabric of The Isle of the Dead. If The Rock, inspired by an image from a short story by Chekhov, is a youthful work by a composer just turned twenty, the Symphonic Dances, written almost 50 years later, sum up a lifetime’s musical and emotional experience. The title of the work doesn't reveal a programme of any kind, but when Rachmaninov suggested it to the choreographer Mikhail Fokine as the score for a possible ballet, he explained that its three movements followed the sequence Midday – Twilight – Midnight, possibly a description of life's journey from youth through middle age to old age. Andrew Litton and his Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra have already proven their skills in the Russian repertoire, with recordings of music by Stravinsky (‘If you're looking for a freshly painted Petrushka or a Rite to shake you up a bit, this is shockingly good’, International Record Review) and Prokofiev (‘An exceptional Romeo and Juliet, to be placed right next to the great ones’, Crescendo)


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2012-11-01
  • Nośnik CD

When Sergei Rachmaninov composed his Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini in 1934, it was after an almost complete seven-year silence – so complete that he was thought to have renounced composing. Nevertheless, the Rhapsody was finished in only seven weeks, with a speed that was possibly stimulated by Paganini’s theme itself; taken from the 24th Caprice for solo violin it had already been used by Schumann, Liszt, Brahms and Szymanowski and is ideal for variation. Rachmaninov’s Rhapsody consists of twenty-four continuous variations, of which the 18th has become so popular that it is often included separately in compilations of ‘classical favourites’. The variations fall into larger sections, forming a structure which has caused the work to be called ‘Rachmaninov’s Fifth Piano Concerto’. The soloist on the present recording is Yevgeny Sudbin, whose highly acclaimed discography includes a Rachmaninov solo recital, as well as a recording of the Fourth Piano Concerto described in BBC Music Magazine as an ‘ exhilarating, barnstorming, spine-tingling performance’. The warm reception that the Rhapsody received no doubt spurred Rachmaninov on to the composition of his Third Symphony. The work of a reluctant exile from his native Russia, its themes often have a marked Russian character, but are treated with great ambiguity. One example is the ‘motto theme’ which is heard at the very opening of the symphony, but which cannot be heard for what it really is until the finale (and then only fleetingly): a variant of the Dies iræ theme, which the composer used so often – for instance in the Rhapsody – as a symbol of mortality. With this disc, Lan Shui and his Singapore Symphony Orchestra follow up on their 2008 recording of the composer’s Symphony No.2, which impressed critics around the world, for instance on the website Klassik Heute: ‘Lan Shui allows himself to be guided by the music itself, by its arcs, meanderings, sudden impulses, melancholies and triumphs … and at the same time propels his marvellous orchestra to musical heights from which the entire panorama of this work can be perceived.’


  • Wykonawca Sudbin Yevgeny
  • Data premiery 2012-02-01
  • Nośnik SACD