One more for tonight.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlTTgJau33Q
Classical Music for Aficionados
F. Liszt - "Ständchen" Piano Transcriptions After Schubert - Khatia Buniatishvili
One more for tonight. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlTTgJau33Q |
Alwyn: Complete Symphonies by LSO/Hickox. Have now been able to thoroughly preview this 3 CD set and it is a solid 5 stars (or, perhaps we should say 2 "LeftEars"). The bookend pieces of the set leave you breathless -- the first symphony (written in 1950) and the Sinfonietta for strings (in 1969). Perhaps because of his film score background, Alwyn is listenable while still being innovative. Check out his characteristic melodic style in the first movement of the Sinfonietta. The 4th movement of the 1st shows off his sophisticated contrapuntal abilities. The 3rd movement of the same has a beautiful melody reminiscent of Elgar who might be considered Alwyn's rightful mentor. Grab the LSO Hickox set while it's still available. Reviewers keep talking about how important this composer is but he seems always relegated to a minor status. If you get just one of the symphonies, go for the first. |
From the used bin... Wilhelm Stenhammer: Serenade, Op 31 by Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and Neeme Jarvi. Sweden's #1 classical opus written by its #2 ranked composer (Berwald gets the top spot) and played by the orchestra Stenhammer helped establish in 1905 and that still plays and records his work -- sort of an extended "thank you." The Canzonetta get the "Dives" award for repeated listening appeal. Stream it on Tidal, order it from Amazon, or get lucky as I did and find it in a used bin. |
At the risk of going slightly OT, seems like this is best directed at readers of this thread. Has it occurred to anyone else that Mahler must have heard the Adagietto from Bizet's L'Arlesienne Suite no. 1 before he composed his own, utterly sublime, Adagietto in Symphony 5? The more I listed to the Bizet, the more I hear echoes... |