Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker (complete ballet)

 
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PYOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOSVKY
Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker (complete ballet)
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Simon Rattle

[ Warner Classics / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Monday 1 November 2010

"Some of the tunes are so famous that you even forget that someone had to write them: what could be more perfect than the pas de deux after the Waltz of the Flowers, which is just a G major scale? We fell in love with this music, rehearsing and performing it, and we think it is magic." Simon Rattle

Simon Rattle and the Berliner Philharmoniker have recorded the most performed ballet of all time, Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker. The release marks the conductor's first Tchaikovsky recording and is one of several releases this season celebrating Rattle's 30th anniversary on the EMI Classics label.

The Nutcracker, in which the boy band Libera makes a brief appearance in the wordless children's chorus of The Waltz of the Snowflakes, appears in two editions: the 2-CD Standard and Experience editions containing the complete ballet score. The different versions contain varying amounts of background material and links to online content.

The Nutcracker story takes place around a Christmas Eve celebration in the Stahlbaums' grand house with a beautiful tree surrounded by family and friends. Godfather Drosselmeyer, a clock and toy maker, arrives and presents dolls and gifts to all the children. He gives the Stahlbaums' young daughter Clara a nutcracker that she adores. Her jealous brother, Fritz, grabs it and breaks it but Drosselmeyer deftly repairs it. The guests leave and the Stahlbaum family goes to bed but Clara, worried about her Nutcracker, steals downstairs to check up on him. At midnight, the tree seems to grow bigger. The toys come alive and the room is filled with an army of mice led by the Mouse King. The Nutcracker awakes and leads an army of toy soldiers in a fight with the mice. The mouse army is on the verge of winning when Clara hits the Mouse King on the head with her slipper, causing him to fall to the ground and his mouse army to scurry away. The Nutcracker turns into a prince and leads Clara to the Land of Snow where they are entertained by dancing snowflakes. In the Land of Sweets, the Sugar Plum Fairy treats them to a series of fantastic dances. Clara awakens to find herself by the Christmas tree in her own home. She is still hugging the Nutcracker.

"It's so infectiously, festively fun that even the Berlin Philharmoniker, famed more for their rich, smooth perfection than for letting their hair down, has fallen into party mode, albeit of the cocktail rather than the student shin-dig variety." BBC

"There are certain things one can take for granted with a Berlin Phil recording. The silky sheen of the upper strings, the accuracy of the ensemble playing, the variety of tonal colours in the woodwind, the now-mellow-now-blazing brass playing - and they're all here on this highly enjoyable performance." ClassicFM

"There is a consistent sense here that Rattle has the consistent scenario and its detail firmly in view, so that the children's fluctuating emotions of wonderment, vexation and disappointment are clearly etched in...this magnificent recording underlines its magical and musical magnetism" Gramophone

"the playing of the Berlin Philharmonic is superb, the precision and articulation of the woodwind and of the first oboe, in particular, a delight; every detail is there, perfectly realised and balanced." the Guardian