Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Poemas sinfonicos sorprendentes..., November 29, 2004
This review is from: Tchaikovsky: Complete Tone Poems (Audio CD)
La virtud de este CD es tener todos los poemas sinfonicos de Tchaikovsky en una misma compra, pero por cierto ese es su mayor defecto. La calidad es insuperable y la sorpresa de ir de una obra ingeniosa y casi magica a otra es incomparable. Eliahu Inbal es un director de bajo perfil pero de grandiosa calidad y recia direccion, sus versiones del Fatum, el Voyevoda y La tormenta son geniales, para esta ultima Rodesvensky es grandioso. Igor Markevitch toma a su cargo Hamlet, Francesca da Rimini y la obertura 1812, es un gran director ruso y lo demuestra, quizas le falta espectacularidad en la 1812, para Hamlet Dutoit es muy bueno, la 1812 de Ormandy y la de Jarvi son de antologia. Bernard Haitink dirige en forma suprema la fantasia obertura Romeo y Julieta, version alternativa podrian buscar a Leonard Bernstein o Igor Markevitch.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tchaikovsky's best all in one set, November 3, 2006
This review is from: Tchaikovsky: Complete Tone Poems (Audio CD)
This collection contains two Tchaikovsky war horses: "The 1812 Overture" and "Romeo and Juliet." Both works have been heard millions of times for a good reason--they are great works of music that do not tire easily. I bought this set for another reason, however. "Fatum," "Hamlet," "The Storm," "The Tempest" and "The Voyevode" are all great works that are way under-heard. They don't deserve the relatively obscure status they have received. The first three are performed very well on the first CD and each runs a familiar pattern of dramatic intensity followed by beautiful lyrical themes in the middle. Tchaikovsky was very generous with his melodies and these three works are no exception. Listen for an unusual and compelling ending to "Fatum." It is quite good and includes and unexpected "twist of fate." "The Storm" has several Berlioz-sounding devices which I found quite interesting. The first CD also contains his masterpiece "Francesca da Rimini." The sound quality is excellent, but to me the tempo was a little too fast in the beginning. This makes it more exciting perhaps, but it's almost as if the orchestra is rushing into the whirlwinds instead of lettling listeners be drawn into them. I have other versions that add a lot more artistic flourishes to this music, but still what you'll hear here is flawless if slightly perfunctory. On the 2nd CD, "The Tempest" is one of Tchaikovsky's earlier works. It is also beautiful, but I can't help but think it could use a little editing. It is a bit too long. The real gem of this collection is "The Voyevode" and it is not heard often enough. This set is worth buying for this performance alone. It was one of the last of his orchestral works next to his 6th symphony. One can hear echoes and parallels to his last symphony. "The Voyevode" is one of his most intensely dark, mysterious, desolate--and the most Russian-sounding of any of his works. I have only 2 other versions and this one is by far the best I've heard. This music can easily sound muddy but this performance is rich with dramatic clarity. It was like I was listening to it for the first time--the way it 'should' sound. Listen to this masterpiece and you may be reminded of a Russian winter. At midnight. Spring is so very far away that it seems an impossible hope. But there is a brief respite from the frozen winds on this moonless night: A small fire inside a Russian peasant dwelling provides some feeble warmth. Unlike his other tone poems, there is no love theme here, but it is still splendid and flows like a shot of vodka. Then suddenly SLAM--the door is shut. We are once again lost in the numbing brutality of the Siberian winter. The ending is similar to the 6th symphony only this time it is even less gentle and sympathetic. There is no heartbeat or the slightest speck of hope. Just a Stalin-like cruel ending. Tchaikovsky tore up the score and called it 'rubbish.' This is very curious and indicates the distressed state of mind he was in before he drank the cholera-laden water. Fortunately they reconstructed the work from the remaining orchestral parts. Finally, I'm happy they put the Voyevode and others with this set and not the over-heard "Cappricio Italien." It takes way too long to get going and the main theme tires easily. This set would make a great gift for any Tchaikovsky fan.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Composed by Francesca and Paolo Themselves, February 10, 2007
This review is from: Tchaikovsky: Complete Tone Poems (Audio CD)
This review is a tribute to Tchaikovsky's Francesca da Rimimi, perhaps the finest program piece ever written. The work is uncannily appropriate for its subject as though Dante's Francesca and Paolo composed it themselves! This uncanny mimetic power is apparent from the opening bars, not just because of the whirlwind effect but because of something inherent in the harmony and orchestration. The middle section of the work cannot live up to the whirlwind sequences at the start and finish; but that would have been impossible. It's the idea of the lost souls of two lovers in a whirlwind that enabled Tchaikovsky to "find himself" as never before or since. On the strength of Francesca da Rimini, Hamlet, Romeo and the Manfred Symphony (not included in this Philips Duo), I have always felt that program music is the heart of Tchaikovsky's accomplishment rather than his symphonies and other classical forms. Although there is fine music in the composer's 2nd, 4th and 6th symphonies, Tchaikovsky does not really make anything of the form. The phrase "tone poem" describes what he really does with his basic style. There is a note of total authority in the high intensity emotional world of Francesca da Rimini that seems out of place in the classical design of the four-movement classical symphony. The Manfred Symphony is in four movements but is really a suite of four tone poems analogous to the three in Liszt's Faust Symphony. There is far more involved in Francesca da Rimini than attempt to represent a scene in a poem. Essays are attempts; poems are realizations. Francesca da Rimini is a realization-- a musical embodiment of the subject itself.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|