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Stravinsky: Le Sacre du Printemps, Debussy: La Mer, Boulez: Notations VII
 
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Stravinsky: Le Sacre du Printemps, Debussy: La Mer, Boulez: Notations VII

Pierre Boulez , Claude Debussy , Igor Stravinsky , Daniel Barenboim , Chicago Symphony Orchestra Audio CD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)


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PIERRE BOULEZ – A BIOGRAPHICAL TIMELINE
“. . . the great artist Pierre Boulez is making more relaxed and more sovereign music than ever before.”
Die Zeit, Hamburg
Pierre Boulez was born in 1925 in Montbrison, France. He first studied mathematics, then music at the Paris Conservatory, where his teachers included Olivier Messiaen and René Leibowitz. In 1954, with the support of Jean-Louis Barrault, he… Read more in Amazon's Pierre Boulez Store

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Product Details

  • Orchestra: Chicago Symphony Orchestra
  • Conductor: Daniel Barenboim
  • Composer: Pierre Boulez, Claude Debussy, Igor Stravinsky
  • Audio CD (November 6, 2001)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Teldec
  • ASIN: B000059QW2
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #422,039 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Stravinsky: Le Sacre Du Printemps: Premiere Partie: L'Adoration De La Terre
2. Stravinsky: Le Sacre Du Printemps: Deuxieme Partie: Le Sacrifice
3. Debussy: La Mer-Trois Esquisses Symphoniques: De L'Aube A Midi Sur La Mer
4. Debussy: La Mer-Trois Esquisses Symphoniques: Jeux De Vagues
5. Debussy: La Mer-Trois Esquisses Symphoniques: Dialogue Du Vent Et De La Mer
6. Boulez: Notations VII

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

This selection of 20th-century works is perfectly designed to display a virtuoso orchestra in all its glory. The music glows and glitters with a myriad colors, exploits every imaginable instrumental effect, and offers many solo opportunities to all the principal string and wind players. The program also requires a virtuoso conductor, especially the Stravinsky, with its extraordinary, previously unprecedented rhythmic irregularities, its massed sonorities, its cumulative sense of tension, and its driving, pent-up energy that explodes intermittently. No wonder the 1913 Paris premiere of Printemps caused the most famous riot in musical history and spread Stravinsky's name across the world. Barenboim's performance has enormous sweep and a sort of controlled wildness, with tremendously exciting rhythmic incisiveness, great crashing climaxes, and wonderful wind playing in the lyrical parts.

The Debussy, based on fond recollections of childhood summers the composer spent at the seaside, is all color: three almost visual evocations of the glittering water, the sparkling play of the waves and the wind, the glowing sky, and the final glorious sunrise with the violins shimmering above grand brass sonorities. The Boulez is also full of color effects, with glassy, thin sounds, but it seems more like an abstract painting. Composed when he was 21, it was part of a set of 12 very brief piano pieces, which he expanded and orchestrated 30 years later; this one was commissioned and premiered by the Chicago Symphony in 1999. Based on short figures and motives, it is called "Hiératique" and described as formal and stylized; the composer asks that it be played slowly and steadily, but not rigidly. The playing throughout is fabulous. --Edith Eisler


 

Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very good. But for GREAT, to back to 1969!, May 7, 2005
By 
Mark I. Kaufman (Silver Lake, Ohio) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
When George Szell was appointed Music Director of the Cleveland Orchestra in 1946, he sculpted an ensemble that even 35 years after his death remains the most technically proficient orchestra in the history of recorded classical music. Quite simply, this orchestra is so tight and precise that it is easy to forget that one is hearing 100-plus musicians!

However, much of the 20th century repertoire was beyond his intellectual purview. No greater evidence of this is the dreadful Szell/Cleveland Orchestra recording of Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra.

Enter Pierre Boulez, who seems to understand contemporary music at a cellular level.

Therefore, when a conductor like Boulez is leading an ensemble like the Cleveland Orchestra, the listener will experience such music in a way seemingly impossible with any other orchestra/conductor pairing. Clearly, these musicians love playing for Boulez.

As for this second recording with Boulez and the Cleveland Orchestra, it is as one might expect. That is to say, it is very good. Clean, well, conceived, with excellent balance, and for the most part, intelligently paced.

However, it can never be regarded as the definitive recording because of perhaps the most vivid and electrifying recording ever of this work, created in Severance Hall with the Cleveland Orchestra and Boulez in 1969.

The only criticism one might have is that the sound quality is obviously not up to the standards of this DGG digital recording. But the playing on the 1969 CBS recording so precise, so clean, so alive, that even the hardest of hardcore audiophiles, if he or she loves this work, will be taken completely beyond the sound, and into the music.

If I had only one recording of this 20th century masterpiece, it would be with this orchestra and this conductor. But not this recording.

Seek out the 1969 CBS recording, for which a five-star rating is inadequte. Once you hear THAT stunning performance, you will never be satisfied with anything less.


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 80 YEARS ON, August 14, 2006
By 
DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Both Petrushka and the Rite date from 1911, and these performances of them were recorded in 1991. By that date Boulez himself was not in the springtime of his youth, and it may well be, as some comment seems to suggest, that his readings are less incisive than in earlier days. Myself, I am not even fully convinced that this is the case, and even if it is the compensations seem to me more than to make up for it. These readings are less strident than some, and there is no sense of straining to obtain effects of contrast. Petrushka's cry, for one thing, is relatively euphonious here, and the Rite in general is probably not quite as dramatic as my wonderful performance, extraordinarily well recorded on a Mercury LP about 50 years ago, by Dorati with the Minneapolis orchestra. On the other hand, Boulez at this stage of his career seems concerned more than before with beauty of orchestral tone, and I say without hesitation that this is the most beautiful Petrushka that I have ever heard in my own lengthening life.

In any case, even if the new approach is less forceful than previously, I detect no loss whatsoever of underlying strength. Boulez has always seemed to me ideally suited as a conductor of Stravinsky. His dynamics may be less `terraced' here than he would once have made them, but the clarity of texture that he obtains is as absolute as ever, and his strength of line and rock-steady firmness of rhythm mark him out as they always did. Above all what is bound to strike you in this performance is the sheer quality of it all. Listening to sound as magnificent as this, I was astonished that it had been achieved so long ago as 1991. Szell had turned the Cleveland Orchestra into a mighty playing-machine, so bring on the right maestro to mould and direct the virtuosity of every section of the band, give them all world-beating engineering, and the end product is an outright orgy of acoustical perfection and beauty. What an amazing bunch of orchestrators the Russian masters were! Stravinsky was a pupil of Rimsky himself, and the master might have envied his pupil if he had heard what we can all, in the third millennium, hear on this disc.

Occasionally everything seems to go right, just as all too often nothing seems to, and here, on top of the outstanding performance and recording, we have a first class liner-essay by Professor Richard Taruskin. I personally wonder whether, even in 1911, the Rite of Spring was as much of a shock to its hearers as Taruskin lets on - he himself admits that what caused the misbehaviour during the Paris premiere was more Nijinsky's choreography than Stravinsky's harmonies. However he has been given adequate space to set out his erudition and his insights, and he has the appropriate material to fill the space with. These days I find it hard to suppose that Stravinsky in general, and these two works in particular, are capable of shocking any but the least experienced music-lovers. To them, and to those who have been around the matter longer, I say that if the word that you would have used to characterise Stravinsky was not `beautiful' it will be after you have got to know this disc. He is my own favourite Russian composer of them all, but I'm not sure I had quite understood what he amounts to in all ways until I had heard what I have heard on this occasion.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some flaws.., February 1, 2006
This review is from: Stravinsky: Le Sacre du Printemps, Debussy: La Mer, Boulez: Notations VII (Audio CD)
I always find it amazing that record companies, in this case Teldec, don't take the little extra effort to turn a good product into a great one. In this case their error was to not split The Rite of Spring into 11 tracks for each of the subparts like everyone has done (this recording has only two for each of the two main parts) and include liner notes that explain each of the sections. For collectors that already have other versions this may not be a problem, but for novices that are trying to study the music, the omission is unacceptable. Also, the liner notes stink--2 pages total for the 3 pieces and then 3 pages on Barenboim!

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