Amazon.com: Bloch: Concerto Symphonique; Concerto Grosso #1; Scherzo Fantasque: Ernest Bloch, Jiri Starek, SWR Radio Orchestra Kaiserslautern, Jenny Lin: Music


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Bloch: Concerto Symphonique; Concerto Grosso #1; Scherzo Fantasque
 
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Bloch: Concerto Symphonique; Concerto Grosso #1; Scherzo Fantasque [Import]

Ernest Bloch , Jiri Starek , SWR Radio Orchestra Kaiserslautern , Jenny Lin Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

Price: $18.76 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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MP3 Download, 8 Songs, 2007 $8.99  
Audio CD, Import, 2008 $18.76  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Concerto symphonique: I. Pesante16:50Album Only
listen  2. Concerto symphonique: II. Allegro vivace14:25Album Only
listen  3. Concerto symphonique: III. Allegro deciso12:49Album Only
listen  4. Concerto Grosso No. 1: I. Prelude: Allegro energico e pesante 3:14$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Concerto Grosso No. 1: II. Dirge: Andante moderato 6:37$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Concerto Grosso No. 1: III. Pastorale and Rustic Dances 7:16$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Concerto Grosso No. 1: IV. Fugue 6:25$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Scherzo fantasque 9:26Album Only


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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this album with Bloch: Violin Concerto/ Baal Shem/ Suite Hebraique $12.19

Bloch: Concerto Symphonique; Concerto Grosso #1; Scherzo Fantasque + Bloch: Violin Concerto/ Baal Shem/ Suite Hebraique
  • This item: Bloch: Concerto Symphonique; Concerto Grosso #1; Scherzo Fantasque

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    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
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  • Bloch: Violin Concerto/ Baal Shem/ Suite Hebraique

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Product Details

  • Performer: Jenny Lin
  • Orchestra: SWR Radio Orchestra Kaiserslautern
  • Conductor: Jiri Starek
  • Composer: Ernest Bloch
  • Audio CD (February 12, 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Hanssler Classics
  • ASIN: B000YKNVGG
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #232,595 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fresh take on Bloch's concerto, May 3, 2009
This review is from: Bloch: Concerto Symphonique; Concerto Grosso #1; Scherzo Fantasque (Audio CD)
Ernest Bloch, who wrote so authentically and intimately for solo strings, was also (like Enescu) pianist enough to develop a personal keyboard style, including brilliant and effective accompaniments and, especially in his solo sonata, a modern manner spangled with handfuls of percussive note-clusters, somewhat akin to soundscapes by Ornstein and Rudhyar although ultimately personal. In his 1948 piano concerto, however, Bloch attempted to appeal to virtuosi by diluting his personal piano style with conventional passagework of the sort that littered concertos popular in his youth. For this listener it has always been discomfiting to hear such derivative material coming from a composer who had only recently completed the bravely original and mesmerizing second string quartet.

Happily, the present 2006 recording presents Bloch's ambitious concerto in a new light. The story is told most simply by comparing timings of the opening movement, marked Pesante: Mitchell and Golschmann, 15:18; Dinova and Tschernushenko, 15:39; Yui and Amos, 15:45; Lin and Starek, 16:51. Lin and Starek are, in fact, so much slower as to be startling. I had made the mistake of reading the booklet notes before listening (more on this below), so at first the performance struck me as plodding -- either sour, bored, and kapellmeisterisch or, worse, high handed, as if playing badly would demonstrate the music's meretriciousness.

Whatever baggage attended my initial audition, a few days of listening made clear the integrity and insight of Lin's and Starek's performance. What emerges is a work written in unflinching assent to the spiritual community of mankind at a time when unprecedented atrocities committed upon members of the composer's own race had been recently revealed. In this account the composer's virtuostic gestures are no less formulaic than before, yet their context is now so stark and powerful as to easily sublimate such flourishes into a larger and coherent whole. In short, as performed and engineered here, the concerto's shortcomings are dwarfed by its terrible beauties.

About the notes: it is difficult not to read them as (just barely) covertly anti-Semitic. It is one thing to be dismissive of the music you are annotating. It is another to distort and trivialize a composer's biography so as to suggest that he has known nothing of struggle, that his music is the effusion of a privileged, by implication superficial bystander. Such distortion is all the more regrettable when it echos closely the ad hominem arguments made by loyal Aryans from Wagner onwards against Mendelssohn, Hiller, and subsequent Jews of note. How disheartening that Haenssler Verlag would in 2006 disseminate an annotation written in the spirit of the glorious 1930s.
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