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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sonic Spectacular!,
This review is from: Krzystof Penderecki: Utrenja (Audio CD)
If you like thorny and extravagant High Modernism, then you must hear this. I used to love this piece (circa 1070 when it was written), but no recording has been available for decades. Now comes a new recording from modest little Naxos, and it is a stunner - with a huge dynamic range and excellent work from the Warsaw Philharmonic and conductor Wit, who seems to specialize in these enormous choral works.
The chorus sings, shouts, chants, and whispers in sliding atonal clusters of sound, surrounded by great dramatic outbursts from the orchestra (there is a big part for the bass drum and something that sounds like an anvil!). Better yet are the several Basso Profundos who sing demented church-style chants. Interspersed are a number of quieter sections that recall, alternatively, Palestrina, Slavic folk songs, and Orthodox church music. It all builds repeatedly to gargantuan, even frightening, climaxes (your neighbors will hate you). Charles Ives used to boast the he didn't write music for "sissies" - neither did Penderecki.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Liberating sound beyond tradition",
By Tym S. (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Krzystof Penderecki: Utrenja (Audio CD)
Krzysztof PENDERECKI, "Utrenja"
"All I'm interested in is liberating sound beyond all tradition," declared the young Penderecki, who in the 60's formally undermined Communist control of Poland by using mostly textures and tones in avant-garde compositions, and flaunting catholic sources under an athiest state. His two-part "Utrenja" is a challenging and emotional evocation of the "Entombment" (I) and "Resurrection" (II) of Christ. This 1971 duo carried deep metaphorical resonance for the generation chafing under the post-'68 crackdown, and propelled Penderecki's international support. These are mainly choral pieces, led by three male and two female soloists, backed by a ephemeral choir and very percussive orchestra. They use the voice for emotional textures, not as angelic arias, to convey the anguish of the death of Jesus and astonishment at his return. Voices declare, argue, whisper, and lament. They shift between dissonant thickets of babble, chanted recitations, transcendent tones, penitent solos, fragmented murmurs, alarmed clarions, and white noise. It is intense and strangely beautiful. Sharp, bold orchestral rapids direct the flow of vocals like a rocky stream. This is a music of deep drama and complex emotional range, an epic story played out through a sonic landscape. Far from an aloof exercise, it is breathless, eerie, and alive. Penderecki's use of driving percussion, dissonant or alien choirs, and tense silences made him a natural for edgy film scores; many of his works have been used to classic effect in such films as Friedkin's "The Exorcist", Kubrik's "The Shining", Lynch's "Wild At Heart" and "Inland Empire", and Cuaron's "Children of Men".
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
If you love this piece try to get the earlier versions,
By I. Zopen "I. Zopen" (Bronx, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Krzystof Penderecki: Utrenja (Audio CD)
This is certainly a worthwhile recording of this monumental piece, and I would recommend it; however, serious Penderecki collectors will want to stick with the 1973 Polskie Nagrania recording also by the Warsaw Philharmonic. If you are a particularly fortunate record hunter, you may someday see the 1971 Eugene Ormandy Philadelphia Orchestra recording (only on LP). If you see it, buy it. The only drawback is that it is only of Part I of the piece and not Part II. In my opinion, the Ormandy is the best. Another collectors note: The Polskie Nagrania recording was also once published in the form of a Phillips Box Set (2LP's). That would be the 'holy grail' collector's item.
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