Rachmaninov: The Bells Op 35 / The Rock Op 7

Rachmaninov: The Bells Op 35 / The Rock Op 7 cover $25.00 Out of Stock
6+ weeks
add to cart

SERGEI RACHMANINOV
Rachmaninov: The Bells Op 35 / The Rock Op 7
Ivan Choupenitch (tenor) / Helen Field (soprano) / Oleg Melnikov (bass) / RTE Philharmonic Choir. Choupenitch, Alexander Anissimov

[ Naxos / CD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 2 April 2002

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

"Budget or no, these are Bells you ought to hear."

"Alexander Anissimov's 1997 Naxos one with National Symphony Orchestra and RTÉ Philharmonic Choir…Helen Field, singing for Anissimov, is a real delight in the slow movement, poignant, lyrical and clear in enunciation in a performance that has two fine Russians (tenor Ivan Choupenitch and baritone Oleg Melnikov) as the other soloists and an approach to the score that transmits a broad, well honed spectrum of emotion." Gramophone

"In his atmospheric rendition of Rachmaninov's The Rock, conductor Alexander Anissimov delights in the Rimsky-Korsakov-style fantasy of the music while emphasizing its drama, making this one of the best recordings since Walter Weller's fluid and expressive reading on Decca (which, along with his Rachmaninov symphonies has yet to see laser light). Though it might not seem so at first, The Rock actually makes a nice lead-in to The Bells, with its somber sounds gently usurped by the joyful ringing of the celesta and flutes. Joyful also describes Anissimov's performance of The Bells' first movement. After tenor Ivan Choupenitch's record long-held note on 'Slyshish', the chorus enters exuberantly though not with the voluminous massed sonority of the Russian Republican Capelle for Kondrashin.

The RTE Philharmonic Choir, an Irish-based ensemble, makes a pretty impressive show of itself throughout this performance, not least for its convincingly Slavic sound. Ireland's National Symphony also transcends geography, paradoxically sounding more Russian than Pletnev's Russian National band does on his recent Deutsche Grammophon recording. For this Anissimov certainly deserves the credit: listen to how his trumpets peal against the strings in the second movement's great ascending orchestral interlude, or how in the finale the winds and brass snarl like ghostly specters from the yet-to-be-composed Symphonic Dances. Helen Field's singing in the wedding song is at once soothing and seductive, while Oleg Melnikov intones the bells of death with the requisite gravity and sense of finality. Despite the enormous dynamic range inherent in this work, Naxos' recording captures it all vividly, managing to convey both size and detail. Budget or no, these are Bells you ought to hear."
- Victor Carr Jr., ClassicsToday.com, December 12, 2001

Tracks:

The Rock Op.7

The Bells Op.35