Rachmaninov: Symphony No 3 / Caprice Bohemien / Vocalise / etc

Rachmaninov: Symphony No 3 / Caprice Bohemien / Vocalise / etc cover $35.00 Special Order
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RACHMANINOV
Rachmaninov: Symphony No 3 / Caprice Bohemien / Vocalise / etc
Orchestre de Paris, Paavo Jarvi (conductor)

[ Erato / Warner Classics / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Thursday 1 October 2015

This item is only available to us via Special Order. We should be able to get it to you in 3 - 6 weeks from when you order it.

That theatrical thrill is captured in this 2-CD set of live recordings of works by Rachmaninoff, made in 2011 and 2013 at the Salle Pleyel, the Orchestre de Paris's home until its move in early 2015 to the French capital's new Philharmonie. To mark the inauguration of the spectacular new hall, Erato released an album of Järvi and the Orchestre de Paris in works by Henri Dutilleux, who died in 2013 (CD: 0825646242443). The French magazine Télérama described the recorded performance as "magnificent in its cohesion and sonic elegance".

This set follows another Erato disc of Russian music conducted by Järvi; released in the spring, it was a programme of Shostakovich cantatas performed by the Estonian Concert Choir and Estonian National Symphony Orchestra (CD: 0825646166664). There was some controversy in the Baltic state, with its painful memories of the Soviet era, over the performance of works with a Stalinist agenda. By contrast, Rachmaninoff's haunting Symphony No 3, written in 1936, is the work of a composer in exile (he had settled in Switzerland) and is filled with nostalgia for Russia. A subtler, more restrained work than the expansive Symphony No 2 - which was written nearly three decades earlier while Rachmaninoff was still living in his homeland - it comprises just three movements. It also ushers in the starker style of the composer's late works, typified by Rachmaninoff's final composition, the haunting Symphonic Dances, written in America in 1940. On these CDs, these two major works from the final decade of Rachmaninoff's live are complemented by two pieces from the 1890s, the Caprice Bohémien and the symphonic poem Le Rocher, and by the celebrated Vocalise, originally conceived in 1915 for voice and piano and later arranged for orchestra by the composer.

Paavo Järvi, one of Gramophone's nominees for Artist of the Year 2015, holds positions with three other orchestras, makes guest appearances with the world's leading ensembles, and becomes Chief Conductor of Japan's NHK Symphony Orchestra from the 2015/16 season. He feels, though, that the Orchestre de Paris has a very distinctive personality: "I've tried to analyse the reason why the woodwind, in particular, succeed in obtaining a colour that is simultaneously rich and transparent," he says, "and I think this comes from the personality of each player. In other countries, the musicians are obsessed with producing a homogeneous sound. Here, they play together, of course, but, when it comes down to it, they also see themselves as soloists: that is the big difference."

Tracks:

Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Op. 44
Caprice Bohémien, Op. 12
Symphonic Dances, Op. 45
The Rock - Fantasy for Orchestra, Op. 7
Vocalise, Op. 34 No. 14 - arrangement for orchestra