|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
6 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Truly historical,
By A Customer
This review is from: Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy (Audio CD)
This truly historical edition once and for all puts to rest the old putdown that Strawinsky could not conduct. In fact many of the works in this box have never sounded beter, and this includes works like Petrushka, Apollon and La baiser de la Fee. For seeing the real and strong continuity in Strawinskys often chameleontic carreer, there is nothing like listening to these CD's again and again. After some time the differences fade into the background and it becomes clear what all these works have in common: a search for the essence of the European classical tradition. It also becomes clear why the Russians consider Strawinsky not really one of their own. But most of all, this is music by one of the really great composers and recorded by himself.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Treasure Trove,
This review is from: Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy (Audio CD)
You will never find the majority of these works better played than here. A few minor quibbles though. The set is not absolutely complete as the Fanfare for Two Trumpets and Stravinsky's arr. of The Star-Spangled Banner are missing. They where recorded by Columbia during this period and issued on LP. More serious is that the first note is missing from the sixth of the 8 Instrumental Miniatures. Also I think Sony could have included Robert Craft's performance of Les Noces as it outshines Stravinsky's. Using the original Russian language, as Craft does (the composer's is in English) does give it an extra edge. And why has the producer chosen to place the orchestral Ode on the "Oratorio - Melodrama" album, between Perséphone and Monumentum pro Gesualdo...
Otherwise all is fine and one can only admire the composer's way with the music. The rhythms are knife-sharp, the melodies phrased con amore and you will find none of the sluggishness that that many conductors seem to prefer. A gold-mine indeed!
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Magnificent Achievement,
This review is from: Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy (Audio CD)
Having been immersed in the study of Stravinsky at university, I have developed a new appreciation and love for this music and the man who composed it. To single out any one work or performance as the finest would be impossible, although certain pieces will need to be taken with a dose of salt as Stravinsky covers more than one style. My own personal favourite is the D major Violin Concerto at the end of the concerto disc- a brilliant piece of music brilliantly performed. If I had to point out what is not good about this album, it is really more a criticism of Stravinsky's work- the "Cantata" is probably the dullest thing he ever wrote (even he admitted not to liking it that much). Nonetheless, this IS his complete music, completely recorded under his watchful gaze. What a magnificent achievement- and how well preserved and mastered by Sony!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The ultimate collection,
By Pork Chop (Lisbon, Portugal) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy (Audio CD)
This box set, sometimes referred to as a "lunchbox " is most
likely out of print, considering the 22 CD's it comprises and the price tag. Nevertheless, any classical music fan will want to own this item, despite the sales price of over $350 USD. On the one side, you have the classic, big-name numbers that are sterotypical of Stravinsky, in the minds of the public, such as Firebird, Petrushka, Rite of Spring, etc. Obviously, being this a COMPLETE edition of ALL of the composer's career works, they had to be performed, recorded and conducted by the composer too. However, they've been performed, recorded a lot better elsewhere, no doubt. So, the real focus and attraction of this box edition, is that it presents a huge amount of previously unavailable, hard to find, overpriced, unrecorded, underappreciated compositions in a one-stop-shop release, the current one. Some highlights, I feel, is THE RAKE, as well as AGON, BLUEBIRD, and many others. The recording is impeccable, and considering that the author was focusing on the underrepresented repertoire in his recorded legacy, those are especially well presented, performed and conducted. Therefore, for the above reasons, and also the fact that there's so much to choose from - a new opus every day of the month is possible, almost - it's a can't miss proposition. If it's still available on the retail market, that is.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The prime building block of any Stravinsky collection, with interpretations that have rarely been equalled, let alone surpassed,
By
This review is from: Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy (Audio CD)
There is this notion circulated in some quarters that Stravinsky was a bad conductor. I think it confuses two things. I will make no pronouncement on Stravinsky's conducting skills in live performance, I'd need to hear more live recordings (the premiere performance of The Rake's Progress in 1951, Stravinsky: The Rake's Progress, does have its faulty moments - but not the 1951 recording of the tricky Symphonies for Wind Instruments included in vol. 7). And how the studio recordings were made, who prepared the orchestras (common wisdom is that it was Stravinsky's assistant Robert Craft), how many takes and splices they required, is as uninteresting to me as what happens in the kitchen of a great chef. What we have and what we hear are the "final product", the recordings, and it is solely on those, independent of any other consideration or "reputation", that I base my claim that Stravinsky was in general the greatest interpreter of his own works.
This conclusion is based on thorough comparative listening, with score, of many versions of the following works: the Octet, the Suite from The Soldier's Tale, the Piano Concerto and Capriccio, Violin Concerto, Ebony Concerto, Symphonies for Wind Instruments, Symphony in Three Movements, Symphony of Psalms, Mass, In Memoriam Dylan Thomas, The Rake's Progress. Some of that listening was made some years ago (Symphonies, Mass, Dylan Thomas), so maybe things have changed with subsequent recordings. Still, in those works Stravinsky has rarely been equaled, let alone surpassed. Only in the three Russian ballets (I also did lots of comparative listening on The Rite of Spring years ago) was he a bit tame compared to the best recordings already available then. What makes these recordings so great? The authority in conception and the excellence in execution, all abetted by the stupendous Columbia sonics, always affording great clarity of the counterpoint and secondary voices, and, more important still, pungent instrumental character - two essential traits in these compositions (often inspired by the baroque Concerto Grosso model, and always marked by their brilliant and imaginative orchestration) and a distinguishing feature of Stravinsky's recordings. Obviously Stravinsky knew exactly what he wanted to get - and he got it. These interpretations are always remarkable not only for their unique instrumental character, but also for a bite and crispness of articulation which has rarely been emulated, sometimes even their massive power, as in the Piano Concerto and Capriccio, and the Symphony in three movements. Speaking of the two Concertos, I had long thought of Philippe Entremont as a hack pianist, based on the rehearsal excerpts that are now included in vol. 4, in which he smears egg over his face by seeming unable to understand the syncopation that Stravinsky demands of him. Entirely wrong: he was then a formidable pianist, and hardly anybody has played these works before and since with such massive power, grandeur, bite, muscular staccato, but also sense of wistfulness in some passages (volume 5). Part of the "anti-Stravinsky' notion is also that with age, his interpretations mellowed and slowed down. This is not always the case. Yes, it is true with The Soldier's Tale-suite. As fine as Stravinsky's reading is in 1961, it had more bite and urgency in 1954, making it a preferable version (Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky: The Mono Years 1952-1955). But few other versions, then and now, have more bite and urgency - and true swing - that his Ebony Concerto with Benny Goodman on vol. 7 (Rattle maybe), or his Dumbarton Oaks Concerto (vol. 6). One fascinating aspect is that usually Stravinsky does NOT follow his own metronome marks. Sometimes he is faster, sometimes slower, but rarely exactly there. That raises endless questions I find about the art of interpretation. If a composer as finicky and demanding as Stravinsky for respect and precision in the execution of his scores could pay so little heed to his own metronome marks, what implications does that have on the performance, say, of Beethoven? Does it mean that Stravinsky considered tempo to be less essential to the character of music than pitch, rhythm, articulation, dynamics? But God knows a different tempo can change the character of the music much more dramatically than fiddling with the dynamics and articulation. Or did he realize in performance that his metronome marks didn't work, and should the tempo of the recording be considered the "right" one? But then which is the "right" tempo, considering that he himself adopted different tempos in his different recordings? And why then didn't he change the metronome marks in the subsequent editions of his scores? But I guess all this leaves complete liberty to the other performers in their approach to tempo - which is exactly what they do. Equally valid versions can be found of course, sometimes with widely different interpretive approaches - and not always by who you'd expect. For the Psalm Symphony, who would expect Gary Bertini (Stravinsky: Symphony of Psalms; Abraham and Isaac)? For the Piano Concerto and Capriccio, East-German teams have provided surprisingly good alternatives (Stravinsky: Piano Concerto; Concerto Dumbarton Oaks; Suites Nos. 1 & 2; Piano Pieces, Strawinsky: Pulcinella Suite; Chant du Rossignol; Capriccio). For the Violin Concerto, to limit myself to the recordings made in Stravinsky's lifetime, Oistrakh-Haitink (Mozart Violin Concerto 1 / Stravinsky Violin Concerto - Oistrakh, Haitink) and Grumiaux-Bour (Berg / Stravinsky: Violin Concerto - Grumiaux, Markevitch, Bour) are great, and let me extend that to Chung-Previn from 1974 (Prokofiev: Violin Concertos 1 & 2; Stravinsky: Violin Concerto). Rattle in the Ebony Concerto should not be missed - especially at that price: Simon Rattle: The Jazz Album. There have been many good versions of The Rake's Progress, but Stravinsky remains a great one for its instrumental verve. The Sony edition has been reissued cheaper (Works of Igor Stravinsky [Box Set]). The original edition came with a lavish introductory booklet containing a pertinent introduction by the reissue's executive producer Vera Zorina (the famous dancer, and also narrator in many Columbia recordings of those years), a moving tribute written on the occasion of Stravinsky's death by her husband Goddard Lieberson, Columbia's top executive who masterminded the company's involvement with Stravinsky, a chronology, a collection of quotes from Stravinsky or contemporary newspapers, and an invaluable portfolio of photos. Each volume comes with its own booklet with presentations of the works, sometimes frustratingly short. Some qualms? A few - but this website 1000-word limit doesn't allow me to state them here. Don't worry, I've found the loophole: follow me in the comments section for the conclusion.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A must have for Stravinsky lovers,
By
This review is from: Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy (Audio CD)
This "recorded legacy" marks the first time any major composer availed himself of the medium of recording so as to leave an almost complete edition of his own works -- works which he conducted, works which he played, and works which he supervised. Not every last work he wrote was recorded (originally on LP for Columbia) but the vast majority is present on these CD's and they make a handsome addition to a collection. Anyone who seriously admires Stravinsky should have this and it is beyond belief that Sony discontinued it. From his earliest works (The Faun and the Shepherdess, Op. 2 and Symphony in E Flat, Op. 1) to his last (Requiem Canticles and The Owl and the Pussycat) one is able to trace the gradual evolution of Stravinsky's style, from a diligent pupil of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov to a serialist of a vastly different order than that of the so-called Second Viennese School (Schoenberg, Berg, Webern). Everything is a masterpiece and it serves as a glittering testament that was the talented genius that was Igor Stravinsky, most definitely one of the titans of all time.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Igor Stravinsky: The Recorded Legacy by Igor Stravinsky (Audio CD - 1991)
Used & New from: $294.00
| ||