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Out of Russia

Gidon Kremer Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Music

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Photos

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Biography

Over the course of more than 30 years of a distinguished career, violinist Gidon Kremer, born in Riga in 1947, has established a worldwide reputation as one of the most original and compelling artists of his generation, praised for his high degree of individualism, his rejection of the well-trodden paths of interpretation, and his search for new possibilities. Gidon Kremer has made more than 100… Read more in Amazon's Gidon Kremer Store

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (November 11, 1997)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Elektra / Wea
  • ASIN: B000000SRB
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #571,457 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Pastorale For Violin And Wind Quartet
2. Violin Concerto No. 4: Andante
3. Violin Concerto No. 4: Vivo (Cadenza Visuale)
4. Violin Concerto No. 4: Adagio
5. Violin Concerto No. 4: Lento (Cadenze Visuale)
6. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Introduzione: Lento
7. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Game Of Dice: Allegro
8. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Introduction To The Ballets: Lento
9. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Ballet No. 1: The Dance Of The Night And The Wind
10. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Ballet No. 2: The Appearance Of The Silver Egg
11. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Ballet No. 3: Hymn To Eros
12. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Ballet No. 4: Amor's Aria
13. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Toccatina
14. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Dance Of The Skomorochs (Harlequins)
15. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Les Adieux: Prelude De Concert
16. The Blackamoor Of Peter The Great - Symphonic Prose - Orchestral Suite Based On Original Instrumental And Vocal Passages Adapted From The Opera: Coda
17. The Sleeping Beauty: Variation De Le Fee De Lilas: Allegro Con Moto
18. The Sleeping Beauty: Entr'Acte: Andante Sostenuto
19. Funeral Games In Honor Of Chronos

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Schnittke violin concerto N.4 best performance, June 9, 2007
This review is from: Out of Russia (Audio CD)
This violin concerto is my favorite. It is Schnittke at his best, with amazing orchestral colors, frightening sounds and serene beauty. Kremer is still scratchy but manages to give a meaningful performance well seconded by the orchestra.

If the music and music making are 5 stars, this is not true of Teldec's sound engineers. In order to capture the "visual cadenza", gestures where the soloist plays but doesn't make sound -a sense of what lies behind the soundscape according to Schnittke-, composer, soloist and producers agreed to replace the visual gestures by a series of loud breathings. Already the tonal balance of the recording is slanted toward a rich upper midrange -orchestral tuttis are not very defined with too much reverb of the hall, a typical attribute of recording engineers in the 90's who believed digital could replace the lessons learned by the best of Mercury living presence or Decca- but during these passages, they must have opened a microphone to capture Kremer's breathing. Had they mixed this album on decent equipment it would have been evident that the midrange level during portions the second movements is simply unbearable and ruins the musical experience! Indeed during the finale, the violin of Kremer seems taken from different positions depending if the music is loud or not. Shame on Teldec's engineers for such sloppy job. This disc should be re-issued with a new mastering so this gets corrected.

That is why I give only 4 stars.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unusual "mini-concert" with a Schnittke centerpiece, July 22, 2006
By 
This review is from: Out of Russia (Audio CD)
This somewhat esoteric Russian program begins with the charming little Stravinsky "Pastorale" for violin and wind quartet. An arrangement of the composer's "Vocalese" from 1907, this droll piece makes a perfect opening for this unusual program, and is beautifully done by members of the Philharmonia.

But listeners should brace themselves for what follows, the disturbing, violent (and totally terrific) Schnittke Violin Concerto No. 4 (1984). In four movements, it lurches from genial passages to those that are positively scorching. Gidon Kremer (the work's dedicatee) will be hard to top in his frightening intensity, including some eerie vocal work, and Christoph Eschenbach and the Philharmonia are right up there with him in virtuosity. It is easily one of the most brilliant Schnittke performances I've ever heard.

An orchestral suite from Arthur Vincent Lourie's opera, "The Blackamoor of Peter the Great" (1961) comes next and is a fascinating oddity, and also notable for Schnittke's hand in orchestrating one of the middle movements, the "Ballet No. 3: Hymn to Eros." Throughout, the language is not too distant from Schnittke himself, perhaps with Shostakovich hovering nearby. The Philharmonia woodwind work is particularly notable and satisfying, but the entire ensemble presents the score with great power and commitment (as with everything here).

Stravinsky appears again in a charming instrumentation of two short excerpts from Tchaikovsky's "Sleeping Beauty" which make a lovely break after the intensity of the Schnittke and Lourie works. Stravinsky's effort here transforms the sound into something resembling his own "Baiser de la fee" ("The Fairy's Kiss") and is completely winning, including a star turn for solo violin that Kremer executes beautifully.

The ten-minute Lourie that follows, "Funeral Games in Honor of Chronos" (1964) is scored for three flutes, piano (Eschenbach, who contributes some gorgeous playing) and cymbals, and makes a beautiful, somber ending to the program. I really admire the slightly offbeat programming of this recording, which combines massive orchestral works with lighter chamber pieces in between, and shows Eschenbach at his most imaginative.

Once again Kremer shows himself to be one of the current scene's great champions of this repertoire, and the Schnittke in particular, is one of the finest examples of this composer's output on disc. (It has been re-issued on a Teldec set of all four violin concertos, all conducted by Eschenbach.) The sound quality is excellent throughout, with a keen "you are there" presence.

NOTE: I notice this is now out-of-print. While it's worth seeking out as a used copy, I can't really see paying close to $100 for it that some are asking. However, the Schnittke is available on the re-released set of all four Schnittke violin concertos, and highly recommended.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Irresistible proposal, February 25, 2012
This review is from: Out of Russia (Audio CD)
This is an amazing and very smart selection of contemporary music from russian composers.
The highlights are with no doubt the wonderful Schnittke's 4th violin concerto and the very
interesting ballet by Lourié. Kremer's playing is superb and Eschenbach's accompaniment is
ideal. A great sample to introduce into the modern academic russian music.
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