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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Don Juan, move over!,
By Jeff Dunn (Alameda, California United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Victor de Sabata: La notte di Pląton; Gethsemani Juventus (Audio CD)
The 20th century was such a murderous embarrassment to the human race, it's no wonder so many angry, angsty, or nasty--but great--pieces of music were written during the period.De Sabata's "Juventus" is one of the far fewer great 20th-century works for the positive side of the human coin. Here we have a surging, yearning, flamboyant, let-it-all-hang-out saga of youthful ambition, brilliantly conceived and orchestrated by a conductor who chose the more financially reliable path of performance over that of posthumous fame for composition. There were many great orchestrators in the 20th century, but fewer who wrote great melodies as well. "Juventus" has such a melody, its second theme or "love" theme. Some may not catch it the first time around, but once you DO catch it, your heart will fly every time you hear it. The piece is similar in spirit to Strauss's "Don Juan" or the drama of a Korngold film score. It is for listeners who like to soar like Tchaikovsky, but eventually find the Russian master too repetitive. The other works are very fine as well, but less distinctive, less overtly passionate. Buy the CD, and be young again! Or continue to listen to Britten's War Requiem. The choice is yours.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Compelling and enjoyable music in excellent performances,
By
This review is from: Victor de Sabata: La notte di Pląton; Gethsemani Juventus (Audio CD)
Well, this certainly fills a gap, and does so in an excellent manner. Victor de Sabata's credentials as a conductor are widely recognized but his own compositions have languished in obscurity. I am not going to claim that they really change our picture of him - while this is fine music it is not particularly original, and none of the works here can be counted as masterpieces by any measure (perhaps except in terms of Sabata's skills as an orchestrator). Stylistically, they belong firmly in the opulent late-romantic tradition and the harmonic language is generally rather conservative; think of a cross between Richard Strauss and Respighi and you're in the ballpark.La Notte di Plato contains some good ideas and is expertly scored, but it sounds a little superficial and the music tends to meander; some pruning would have done wonders but what we got is still eminently worth hearing nonetheless and the climax is expertly shaped. The generally elegiac but heroically sounding Gethsemani is far stronger in that respect; although the thematic material is intriguing it is not quite memorable, but the work is well-constructed and manages to leave a lasting impression. Juventus is probably the only work here that fans of the conductor may have heard about (if not actually heard). It is a vigorous, slightly pompous but rousing work full of noise and orchestral effects - not really great music, but certainly very enjoyable. The performances are excellent; the London Symphony plays with passion, spirit and vigor under Aldo Ceccato; they are particularly effective in Juventus, but in general manage to realize the glittering brilliance of this generally lush, luscious but never overscored music with total conviction. The sound quality is up to Hyperion's usual high standards. Recommended.
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