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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
These performances are wonderful,
By Samuel (Montreal) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rachmaninov: Symphonies Nos. 1-3 / The Isle of the Dead / Symphonic Dances / Vocalise, Opp. 13,14,27,29,44,45 / Aleko (extracts) (Audio CD)
The second symphony from this recording is by the far the stormiest and loveliest recording of this momenumental masterpiece that I have heard. The opening with its brooding melody has never failed to induce within me a certain tinge of despair. The quality of sound on these recordings are certainly not as not advanced as the set by Ashkenazy, but I certainly do feel that the recordings here give a more honest reading of the symphonies gigantic depth. No other recording features chimes in the first symphony's opening movement (the middle section after the music has exploded into a rage of uncalculated fury-leaping into cosmos of bittersweetness and savoured elegia), you certainly don't find these chimes present in Maazel's or Ashkenazy's recordings. Although I must say that the third symphony is a bit ill-conceived here by Previn and the LSO, they still manage to deliver a solid performance with much emotion: the performers were never lazy from the start- contrary to other opinions..... I think the true gem comes from the second symphony's Largo movement, I certainly see this beautiful movement as a sort of soundtrack to a "romantic outting =) ", and quite honestly, Previn's rendition of it has been the only one that has ever conduced a feeling of absolute warmth and beauty to me the listener... Buy it, and see for yourself why Previn's rendition truly matches up to other recordings of these masterpieces.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent set,
By
This review is from: Rachmaninov: Symphonies Nos. 1-3 / The Isle of the Dead / Symphonic Dances / Vocalise, Opp. 13,14,27,29,44,45 / Aleko (extracts) (Audio CD)
An excellent set.
Sym 1, Isle of the Dead and Symphonic Dances are all done extremely well, which is all that matters, since these are Rachmaninov's orchestral works of sheer genius (plus the Bells), in my view. Pletnev's Rach Sym 1 on DG is pretty good too, but you can't go wrong with this set.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Accept No Substitutes- This is It !,
By
This review is from: Rachmaninov: Symphonies Nos. 1-3 / The Isle of the Dead / Symphonic Dances / Vocalise, Opp. 13,14,27,29,44,45 / Aleko (extracts) (Audio CD)
Sir Andre and the 1970s LSO had a unique, symbiotic relationship. Together with their Decca Rachmaninov Piano Concertos & Paganini Rhapsody (with Vladimir Ashkenazy), this cycle of the Symphonies (and the other major orchestral pieces) just may be their greatest work ever. The fantastic LSO strings, admittedly lacking the famous post-war Ormandy/Philly gloss, make it easier to take these works more seriously than before. (Granted, R's symphonies are not the Brahms FOURTH, or the Bruckner EIGHTH, but they deserve better than "pops-concert" condescension.) Everything runs deeper.
First off, a respectful nod to all the other reviewers here and a small, salient fact: RACHMANINOV COMPOSED MORE THAN THE SECOND SYMPHONY !!! (And yes, this SECOND is stupendous in its breadth and commitment.) This FIRST SYMPHONY is pungent, exotic, at times even barbaric...The VOCALISE is bittersweet, not merely sweet. And Sir Andre actually takes the repeat !... The ALEKO fragments are tantalizing. The ISLE OF THE DEAD is no-holds barred and heady...But the real glories of this set are the THIRD and the SYMPHONIC DANCES...They pick up where Ormandy left off, great as Ormandy undoubtedly was with these works (after all, he DID prepare the THIRD's premiere for Stokowski, and conducted the premiere of the DANCES himself- and both under R's supervision). Throughout the THIRD, you get a whiff of both the Russian countyside AND the American plains, with a Deliusian "sensuous heartbreak." Play the beginning of the THIRD's second movement and be instructed by its ontological sadness; marvel at the sly, compassionate humor of R's sticking a scherzo within an adagio and how this humor plays out at the end of the movement; be uplifted by the gamut of moods which Sir Andre holds together so beautifully in the last movement. The SYMPHONIC DANCES were originally titled FANTASTIC DANCES- which is a better description of this music...It was to have been a three-movement ballet depicting Noon, Twilight and Midnight. The Noon of the first movement is restless and adolescent in mood (culminating with a regretful quote from the FIRST SYMPHONY, whose undeservedly failed premiere scarred R for life). The second movement (described in several places as a "haunted ballroom") is elfin & ghostly. The final movement of the DANCES is frighteningly deep and modern (in parts of this movement you'll think of Bartok !). By its very end, the DIES IRAE motiv (ever present in R's music) morphs into a kind of phrygian-mode, death-tinged "flamenco-gone-nuts"...But not before all kinds of ethereal encounters with lost youth, regret & sensuality (some faint, swaying echoes of the THE BELLS' 2nd movement: the "golden bells of happiness"), and adoration of God (a pentultimate, jazzed-up quote from R's VESPERS: "Blagosloven Yesi, Gospodi" - "Blessed Art Thou, O Lord"). Sir Andre & his band plunge into all this with a shattering, "total immersion" which will show you why R called the DANCES "my last spark."
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