Moscow-Cheryomushki-Suite / Jazz Suite No. 1 / etc

Moscow-Cheryomushki-Suite / Jazz Suite No. 1 / etc cover $52.00 Out of Stock
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SHOSTAKOVICH
Moscow-Cheryomushki-Suite / Jazz Suite No. 1 / etc
Radio Symphony Orchestra of Berlin / Steven Sloane

[ Capriccio SACD / SACD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 1 May 2007

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.

Capriccio launches an ambitious recording project with Russian violinist Vladmir Spivakov and American conductor james Conlon: violin concertos of the 20th century. The first recording to be issued includes Dmitri Shostakovitch's First Violin Concerto. This muisc, composed in 1948, fascinates by marked contrasts. James Conlon has compiled a suite from the opera "Lady Macbeth of Mtsesnk" which presents Shostakovitch's masterpiece in purely orchestral colours.

SACD Hybrid MultiChannel. Plays on all SACD and CD Players

Much of Shostakovich's music in popular style is quite good; it just doesn't sound much like Shostakovich. Most other great composers writing in a lighter vein retain more of their "serious music" style. But here, despite the brilliant orchestration and the occasional rhythmic game, the music sounds merely, indeed anonymously, popular, even if it is "good" popular. Perhaps that's why Shostakovich reused much of it from work to work. For example, the second movement of the Jazz Suite No. 2 appears as the "Folk Festival" in the suite from The Gadfly. Tahiti Trot pops up in one of the ballets; all of the waltzes sound similar.

This isn't to denegrate the music, and it's also no mark against Steven Sloane's ability as a conductor to point out that this isn't the kind of stuff that requires much in the way of interpretive effort. Set the right tempo, play it well, and it just goes merrily along. In short, there is absolutely nothing here that begs to be criticized. The Suite from the musical Moscow Cheryomushki is particularly welcome, although not quite the equal of Chailly's Decca performance in terms of sheer orchestral finesse. Never mind; I like this music, and I enjoyed these very well recorded performances (in regular and surround formats). You will too.

Tracks:

Suite for Variety Orchestra
(Suite for Jazz Orchestra No 2)

Moscow-Cheryomushki - Suite from the operetta, Op. 105

Jazz Suite No. 1:
Waltz
Polka
Foxtrot

Tahiti Trot (Tea for Two), Op. 16