MARBECKS COLLECTABLE: Shostakovich: Symphony No 15 / From Jewish Folk Poetry

MARBECKS COLLECTABLE: Shostakovich: Symphony No 15 / From Jewish Folk Poetry cover $20.00 Low Stock add to cart

DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH
MARBECKS COLLECTABLE: Shostakovich: Symphony No 15 / From Jewish Folk Poetry
Elisabeth Soderstrom (soprano) Ortun Wenkel (contralto) / London Philharmonic, Haitink

[ Decca Ovation / CD ]

Release Date: Saturday 5 May 2001

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Rosette (highest rating) Penguin Stereo Guide

'Haitink makes the first movement sound genuinely symphonic, bitingly urgent. He underlines the purity of the bare lines of the second movement. The playing of the LPO is excellent, with refined tone and superb attack, and the recording is both analytical and atmospheric'
Rosette (highest rating) Penguin Stereo Guide

One of the greatest conductors of today, Bernard Haitink will remain as Music Director of London's Royal Opera House, Covent Garden until 2002. He was previously Music Director at Glyndebourne (1978-88), and has conducted many operas for television and video with both companies. Bernard Haitink's career as an orchestral conductor is no less distinguished: Chief Conductor of the Concertgebouw (1964-88); Principal Conductor of the London Philharmonic (1967-79) becoming their President in 1990; Music Director of the European Union Youth Orchestra (1994-) and Principal Guest Conductor of the Boston Symphony (1995-). The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra also recently announced that Bernard Haitink has been appointed their Conductor Laureate - the first time that such a title has been awarded in the history of the orchestra. The award was made in recognition of the great contribution he has made to the orchestra since his conducting debut with them in 1956.
During the closure of the Royal Opera House, Bernard Haitink conducted performances of the Ring Cycle in London and Birmingham, Der Freischutz and Mephistopheles in the Barbican, Don Carlos at the Edinburgh Festival and Bartered Bride at the newly refurbished Saddlers Wells theatre. In December 1999, Bernard Haitink conducted the inaugural Gala concerts at the Royal Opera House immediately followed by performances of Falstaff. Later in the 1999 / 2000 season, he also conducted Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. Bernard Haitink led a new production of Tristan und Isolde at the Royal Opera House and returned there for performances of Falstaff in January 2000.

Beside these commitments at the Royal Opera House in London, Mr Haitink is a regular guest with the world's leading orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw, Vienna Philharmonic, Dresden Staatskapelle, London Philharmonic and London Symphony Orchestras. He toured with the Berlin Philharmonic throughout Europe during the summer of 2000, including concerts at the Salzburg Festival, BBC Proms and the Lucerne Festival. As Principal Guest Conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra he also makes regular appearances with them in Boston, and in New York, and will tour with them in Europe during the summer of 2001.

Bernard Haitink has made many recordings for Philips, Decca and EMI. Those with the London Philharmonic include Shostakovich, Stravinsky, Elgar and Vaughan Williams. His Concertgebouw recordings of the symphonies of Mahler, Bruckner and Beethoven, and Vienna Philharmonic recordings of Brahms and Bruckner, rank among the finest in the world. For Philips, Haitink has recorded Fidelio with the Dresden Staatskapelle, Mahler Symphonies with the Berlin Philharmonic, works by Ravel and Brahms Symphonies with the Boston Symphony. With the Royal Opera House Orchestra he recorded Verdi's Don Carlos, and Haitink's Concertgebouw recordings of the symphonies of Mahler, Bruckner and Beethoven, along with his Vienna Philharmonic recordings of Brahms and Bruckner rank among the best in the world. "He tended to understate emotions, particularly in Mahler," writes Norman Lebrecht in 'The Maestro Myth', "but his level-headedness proved invaluable in reassessing Shostakovich... Despite his workmanlike attitude and matter-of-fact remarks, his music-making was at times surprisingly passionate." His most recent releases on Philips have included a recording of Ravel's Orchestral Works with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Beethoven Piano Sonatas with Claudio Arrau, and two recordings of the Great Pianists of the Twentieth Century series. To celebrate the 50th Year in 2001, the renowned recording of Mahler's Symphony No. 9/ Das Knaben Wunderhorn with Jessye Norman has just been reissued.

In his seventh decade, Haitink's his ability to invigorate and stimulate musicians seems to be as powerful as ever, as described in a concert review with the London Philharmonic a few years ago: "For the twelve years up to 1979 that Bernard Haitink was the London Philharmonic's music director, the orchestra was arguably the finest in the land. But orchestral fortunes change; on recent form the LPO would struggle to make it into a British Top 5. Yet reunited with Haitink for two concerts last week, it was transformed. All the unhappy recent history was forgotten and on Saturday with a conductor of the highest class, the strings rediscovered their bloom, the woodwind their articulacy, the brass their attack and the whole orchestra its concentration and commitment." (The Guardian, March 26, 1996).

Bernard Haitink has received many awards in recognition of his services to music, notably an Honorary KBE in 1977 and the Erasmus Prize in Holland in 1991. Most recently he received a House Order of Orange-Nassau, given to him by the Queen of The Netherlands for his achievements in the Arts.

Tracks:

Symphony No.15, Op.141
From Jewish Folk Poetry, Op.79 :
1. Lament for a dead infant
2. Fussy Mummy and Auntie
3. Lullaby
4. Before a long separation
5. A warning
6. The deserted father
7. A song of poverty
8. Winter
9. The good life
10. A girl's song
11. Happiness