What are you listening 2 now?

Started by Gurn Blanston, September 23, 2019, 05:45:22 AM

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Linz

Anton Bruckner Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, 1877 Linz version with revisions - Ed. Leopold Nowak
Frankfurt Radio Sympphony, Paavo Järvi

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Continuing on with the Villa-Lobos symphonies --- now playing Symphonies Nos. 6 & 7


Linz

Ludwig van Beethoven CD 5
3 Duets for Clarinet and Bassoon, WoO 27, No. 1
Johannes Brahms Clarinet Quintet in B Minor, Op.11
Robert Schumann Fantasiestück, Op.73, Märchenerzählungen, Op. 132
Max Reger Clarinet Quintet in A Major, Op. 146
Gervase De Peyer; Melos Ensemble

foxandpeng

Ruth Gipps
Symphony 2
Rumon Gamba
BBC NOoW
Chandos


More Gipps #2. Starting to feel a little familiarity with this symphony, now. Good stuff. Lots of melody and variation to hold on to.
"A quiet secluded life in the country, with the possibility of being useful to people ... then work which one hopes may be of some use; then rest, nature, books, music, love for one's neighbour — such is my idea of happiness"

Tolstoy

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Quote from: ritter on May 05, 2025, 12:12:04 PMYes, a superb work! I haven't listened to it for quite some time now, but remember that when I first encountered it (when the Zagrosek recording was released almost 30 years ago), a connection to Bruckner sprang to mind...

I should listen to it again soon... :)

There's a kind of Brucknerian imposingness in this work, certainly.
The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied. The terror IS REAL!

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Henze: Musen Siziliens and Moralitäten
Davies: Naxos Quartets 5 and 6

The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied. The terror IS REAL!

Karl Henning

Karl Henning, Ph.D.
Composer & Clarinetist
Boston MA
http://www.karlhenning.com/
[Matisse] was interested neither in fending off opposition,
nor in competing for the favor of wayward friends.
His only competition was with himself. — Françoise Gilot

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Quote from: Karl Henning on May 05, 2025, 04:15:26 PM


Interesting. The first live recording I see of a Weinberg symphony, and no less than the 12th, one of his best.
The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied. The terror IS REAL!

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Delius: Hiawatha

This is a beauty. I've always found early Delius worth my time and this lovely tone poem is not an exception. 

The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied. The terror IS REAL!

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#128769
Quote from: Symphonic Addict on May 05, 2025, 05:04:42 PMDelius: Hiawatha

This is a beauty. I've always found early Delius worth my time and this lovely tone poem is not an exception.



I have mixed feelings about Hiawatha and I think this boils down to the fact that Delius himself had removed some pages of his manuscript, which rendered the work as incomplete. The performing edition was prepared by Robert Threlfall who is a Delius scholar and he worked on this edition in conjunction with the Delius Trust. Supposedly, Threlfall worked in material taken from Delius' handwritten score. It is lovely, but it will never be a work that I completely fall for due to my suspicions about it and what material was exactly used to fill in for the missing pages of the manuscript. The fact remains that those pages of Delius' original thoughts were removed (thanks to the composer himself), which makes Hiawatha an interesting piece of history, but hardly representative of a complete work.

Even as someone who fancies himself a Delius fanatic of sorts, his earlier period works don't quite satisfy me like his middle and late period works. I do, however, have much affection for works like Koanga, the Piano Concerto and Paris: The Song of a Great City, which all date from this early period. Gorgeous works.

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Now playing Delius Three Small Tone Poems



This work dates from the earlier part of Delius' career (c. 1890). It's beautiful and you can hear snippets of where Delius is heading a decade later in turn-of-the-century works like Appalachia and the opera, A Village Romeo and Juliet. This Lloyd-Jones is the first recording to feature all three works together and performed as they were originally intended.

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Quote from: Symphonic Addict on May 05, 2025, 12:02:05 PMKrenek: Symphony No. 2

Wow, I had thought that his first symphony was a solid musical edifice, but this one is even more mighty, monolithic, heavy, granitic and very contrapuntal. I'm seeing myself enjoying these symphonies more than expected.



I need to take another stab at Krenek. I own that CPO set of symphonies and couldn't really connect with any of the music.

I've been reading yours and @ritter's comments about Krenek with great interest.

JBS


Hollywood Beach Broadwalk

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Now playing Delius American Rhapsody



American Rhapsody is an early, kind of test run of sorts for the more substantial Appalachia (c.1898 - 1903) . This work was composed in 1896. It shares some features with the more well-known Appalachia, but there's a section towards the beginning that brought Dvořák's Carnaval Overture to mind, but also the atmospheric sections in Sibelius' first version of En Saga.

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Now playing Ginastera Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 28


Symphonic Addict

Quote from: Der lächelnde Schatten on May 05, 2025, 05:24:49 PMI have mixed feelings about Hiawatha and I think this boils down to the fact that Delius himself had removed some pages of his manuscript, which rendered the work as incomplete. The performing edition was prepared by Robert Threlfall who is a Delius scholar and he worked on this edition in conjunction with the Delius Trust. Supposedly, Threlfall worked in material taken from Delius' handwritten score. It is lovely, but it will never be a work that I completely fall for due to my suspicions about it and what material was exactly used to fill in for the missing pages of the manuscript. The fact remains that those pages of Delius' original thoughts were removed (thanks to the composer himself), which makes Hiawatha an interesting piece of history, but hardly representative of a complete work.

Even as someone who fancies himself a Delius fanatic of sorts, his earlier period works don't quite satisfy me like his middle and late period works. I do, however, have much affection for works like Koanga, the Piano Concerto and Paris: The Song of a Great City, which all date from this early period. Gorgeous works.

You're right, it's not 100% Delius, but even so, I couldn't help but being delighted by its charms.

As for those pieces you mentioned, I'd happily add Florida Suite and On the Mountains (the actual title escapes me) in a personal list of mine.
The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied. The terror IS REAL!

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Now playing Hindemith The Four Temperaments for Piano and Strings


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Quote from: Der lächelnde Schatten on May 05, 2025, 05:41:31 PMI need to take another stab at Krenek. I own that CPO set of symphonies and couldn't really connect with any of the music.

I've been reading yours and @ritter's comments about Krenek with great interest.

Since you gave up on Reger, I don't think there would be hope with Krenek either, but one never knows.  ;D
The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied. The terror IS REAL!

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Quote from: Symphonic Addict on May 05, 2025, 06:40:06 PMYou're right, it's not 100% Delius, but even so, I couldn't help but being delighted by its charms.

As for those pieces you mentioned, I'd happily add Florida Suite and On the Mountains (the actual title escapes me) in a personal list of mine.

Ah yes, Paa Viderne (On the Mountains) is a lovely work, indeed. I used to be rather enamored with the Florida Suite when I was first getting in Delius 15 years ago, but I've since cooled in my enthusiasm for it.

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Quote from: Symphonic Addict on May 05, 2025, 06:42:36 PMSince you gave up on Reger, I don't think there would be hope with Krenek either, but one never knows.  ;D

There's really that much similarity between Reger and Krenek? Hmmm...