John Corigliano

Started by Shrunk, January 20, 2008, 10:46:12 AM

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BitPerfectRichard

It's nearly 7 years since this thread last saw the light of day, but - HEY! - I happen to like Corigliano's Symphony No 1 very much indeed.  I have both the Barenboim and Slatkin recordings, plus a "private" recording by Judd and the Florida Philharmonic that was professionally recorded but never issued.  I find this is a symphony that has grown on me over the years and stands comparison with the wider established repertoire.  Happily, I am told it is still played quite regularly, if not recorded.

Interestingly, the Tarantella (2nd movement) is a depiction of a friend of Corigliano whose mental state was affected by his AIDS affliction such that he developed a Tourette's-like condition.  There is a related piece called Tarantella from Gazebo Dances, which depicts the same person prior to his affliction.  There are great videos of Peter Stanley Martin conducting both of these pieces on YouTube that are instructive to watch (albeit with low video quality).  I'd pay good money to hear that guy take a professional orchestra through Symphony No 1.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLR3QZ4esAY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GHqHleU0l90
"I did play all the right notes ... just not in the right order!"  -  Eric Morecambe

SimonNZ

#41
I find Corigliano's work to be very uneven, peaks and valleys, but I've now heard enough that I've liked very much to listen whenever something new comes along.

Looking over this brief thread I see that nobody has yet mentioned his 2007 percussion concerto "Conjurer", which I'd say was not only one of his best works, but among the best works by anyone from recent years:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYy-mFPgy10


amw

Quote from: Dundonnell on December 01, 2008, 08:36:41 AMI don't sense much genuine depth in his music; it seems to be going more for effect/impact on the listener rather than appealing either to the intellect or to the soul, if you understand my meaning.

I pretty much agree with this—my impressions have been the opposite of Simon's, with works that initially seem impressive not repaying further listening. eg the Symphony No 1 was a powerful work on first listen, but on subsequent listens it started to become apparent how thin the musical material was and how little it was actually developed, and the overall impression ended up being an insubstantial work in spite of its 'message' and attempts at creating an emotional charge.

I have the same problem with some works by Shostakovich and Schnittke among others (though partly due to prolifixity (sp?) I guess, they could transcend this when they put the time in—I haven't heard anything like that from Corigliano, who remains an "effects" composer for me), with material chosen for semiotic shorthand rather than actual musical substance.

Maestro267

At the moment, I only have A Dylan Thomas Trilogy in my collection, but I certainly want to get a recording of Symphony No. 1 at some point. Circus Maximus is a work on my radar as well, with its offstage ensembles.

BitPerfectRichard

I just picked up an obscure Japanese recording of Symphony No 1 By Tatsuya Shimono conducting the Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra on the Avex Classics label SACD.  It is a refreshingly different interpretation, rather well thought out and very nicely recorded.  Its delivers some valid new ideas about the Symphony.  While Shimono seems to have a clear enough vision of the piece, one gets the impression that the orchestra itself is politely holding back, almost as thought they have either been under-rehearsed (unlikely) or collectively aren't 'getting' the piece yet.  I formed the impression that Shimono has extracted all there is to be had from this orchestra.  Symphony No 1 has to be played with total commitment to be convincing, and while the orchestra's physical commitment is in evidence, the emotional commitment is lacking.  Does that make sense?   Nonetheless, this performance exceeds Slatkin in vision and interpretation as well as in recording quality, and is overall the best of the four recordings I own.  It also enhances Shimono's reputation.
"I did play all the right notes ... just not in the right order!"  -  Eric Morecambe

Maestro267

2 days ago I bought the new Naxos recording of Symphony No. 1. Giving it a second listen now, and I'm really enjoying this work. The fortissimo climaxes are overwhelming and wild, especially at the end of the Tarantella and the Chaconne.

Scion7

Marked for investigation at some later date ....
When, a few months before his death, Rachmaninov lamented that he no longer had the "strength and fire" to compose, friends reminded him of the Symphonic Dances, so charged with fire and strength. "Yes," he admitted. "I don't know how that happened. That was probably my last flicker."

BitPerfectRichard

Quote from: Maestro267 on July 16, 2016, 05:49:56 AM
2 days ago I bought the new Naxos recording of Symphony No. 1. Giving it a second listen now, and I'm really enjoying this work. The fortissimo climaxes are overwhelming and wild, especially at the end of the Tarantella and the Chaconne.

Thanks for this.  I'm listening to it now on a free Hi-Res download stream at http://shop.classicsonline.com/albums/575f5c6551e88c8b4ccfd1e5?type=download and I have to say I rather like it.  I expect I will buy this, but before I do I'm pinging Naxos to see if I can't score a DSD version ... if one exists.
"I did play all the right notes ... just not in the right order!"  -  Eric Morecambe

Christabel

I have been investigating this American composer's works of late and find most of them compelling.  Here's his wonderful Clarinet Concerto, and played here with extraordinary virtuosity:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUE5dL4ipZk


relm1

Quote from: Christabel on February 23, 2020, 07:12:58 AM
I have been investigating this American composer's works of late and find most of them compelling.  Here's his wonderful Clarinet Concerto, and played here with extraordinary virtuosity:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUE5dL4ipZk

That's a fantastic work but I find the LSO/Richard Stoltzman a more memorable performance but the movements are on separate links.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MSeCn-5dUSw