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Carter: Concerto for orchestra; Three Occasions
 
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Carter: Concerto for orchestra; Three Occasions

Elliott Carter (Composer), Oliver Knussen (Conductor), London Sinfonietta (Performer), Eric Crees (Performer), Ole Bohn (Performer)
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Product Details

  • Performer: London Sinfonietta, Eric Crees, Ole Bohn
  • Conductor: Oliver Knussen
  • Composer: Elliott Carter
  • Audio CD (January 9, 2001)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: EMI Classics Imports
  • ASIN: B00000DNWH
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #371,711 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

 
1. Three Occasions for orchestra: A Celebration of Some 100x150 Notes
2. Three Occasions for orchestra: Remembrance
3. Three Occasions for orchestra: Anniversary
4. Violin Concerto: 1. Impulsivo
5. Violin Concerto: 2. Tranquillo/Angosciato
6. Violin Concerto: 3. Scherzando
7. Concerto for Orchestra: Introduction
8. Concerto for Orchestra: Movement 1 - Allegro Non Troppo
9. Concerto for Orchestra: Movement II - Presto Volando
10. Concerto for Orchestra: Movement III - Maestoso
11. Concerto for Orchestra: Movement IV - Allegro Agitatio
12. Concerto for Orchestra: Coda (Allegro Molto)

On this CD:
  1. Three Occasions for orchestra
    Composed by Elliott Carter
    with Eric Crees, London Sinfonietta
    Conducted by Oliver Knussen

  2. Violin Concerto
    Composed by Elliott Carter
    with Ole Bohn, London Sinfonietta
    Conducted by Oliver Knussen

  3. Concerto for Orchestra
    Composed by Elliott Carter
    with London Sinfonietta
    Conducted by Oliver Knussen


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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "great winds of change, destruction, and renewal...", September 8, 2001
By R. Hutchinson "autonomeus" (a world ruled by fossil fuels and fossil minds) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Truly it is a shame that this music, recorded in 1991 and released in 1992 in the U.K., is so hard to come by in the U.S.! This is one of three recordings of "Concerto for Orchestra," including the original commissioned version by Bernstein and the NY Philharmonic. I sought out this version on hearing that Knussen and the London Sinfonietta were the first to do it justice, and based on their brilliant recent premiere recording of Carter's "Symphonia." This "Concerto" is also brilliant, I am happy to say! As it turns out, Carter was in the studio with Knussen and supervised the recording. First performed in 1970, it reflects the turmoil of the times -- Bayan Northcott in the liner notes describes it as "a large structure as a kind of vortex of interacting forces." The "great winds" quote above refers to the poem "Vents" which was an inspiration for the composition. With his "Concerto for Orchestra," Carter created one of the most powerful and distinctive orchestral works of the late 20th century. "Three Occasions for Orchestra" and the "Violin Concerto" are more recent compositions (1986-9, 1990), and both are superb. Interestingly, "3 Occasions" was composed in the same way as "Symphonia" -- the three movements were composed separately, and then brought together. While neither piece is as stunning as the "Concerto for Orchestra" or the recent "Symphonia," they work perfectly here in creating a diverse and absolutely compelling set of modern music!

8/05 UPDATE) This is the best version of the "Concerto." The Michael Gielen recording of 1992, which has just been reissued by Arte Nova (see my review), is fine, but not as detailed as Knussen's. Knussen's interpretation is more Boulezian, revealing every detail of the score, while Gielen's is more lush and romantic, with more powerful crescendos, but missing some of the rich complexity. Another advantage to this Virgin disc is that the "Concerto" is separated into six tracks, so each movement can be heard on its own, while the Arte Nova disc places the entire piece on one track. An interesting element of this recording's genesis is the involvement of Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead, a devotee of modern music! Lesh and the Rex Foundation helped subsidize this 1991 recording.

Try amazon.co.uk for a copy of this Virgin recording, as it seems to unavailable for now in the States.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not ideal performances, but still good, December 4, 2003
By Edward Wright (Toronto, ON, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This early-1990s recording from the London Sinfonietta under Oliver Knussen was the one that introduced the Violin Concerto and the Three Occasions to the record catalogue, as well as reintroducing the Concerto for Orchestra. This recording of the Violin Concerto remains the only one of that piece, but there are now more rivals for the other pieces.

The Three Occasions for Orchestra are three short pieces, assembled piecemeal over the late 1980s. A Celebration of some 100 x 150 Notes is a highly complex fanfare; Remembrance an elegy with a prominent part for solo trombone; Anniversary a delightful essay in atonal melody, the melodic lines always ascending. Those who have heard Carter's 1990s masterpiece Symphonia may note that in some ways the Occasions feel rather like a study for the later piece. This is a good performance, and comparable to Gielen's rival recording on Arte Nova.

The Violin Concerto will, for many Carter fans, be the prime reason to get hold of this disc. It's very much a piece of 1990s Carter, in as much as that the writing is much less complex than in earlier music, and more melodic. Indeed, this is the first of Carter's concerti to explicitly follow the historical concerto model--fast first movement, slow second and a light-hearted finale. Being Carter, of course, the model isn't followed exactly (even if the violin soloist barely has a bar of rest through the work) but nonetheless this could in some ways be considered a late-20th century analogue of, say, the Schoenberg concerto. I don't personally find it as compelling as Carter's best works; even with a good solo performance from the concerto's dedicatee Ole Bohn, it strikes me as rather less ambitious than, say, Symphonia or the Piano Concerto.

The Concerto for Orchestra, however, is a bona fide Carter classic. One of the most complex works Carter ever wrote, it's based on St John Perse's poem Vents, in which destructive winds destroy and then renew America. It's in four movements with a prologue and epilogue, all played without a break (usefully tracked separately here, unlike in rival performances); the first movement dominated by the tenor region, the second the treble, the third the bass and the finale the alto. (Of course, being Carter, the music that dominates each movement is going on all the time, constantly transforming itself--it's just that each of these four loci of musical argument come to the forefront in the appropriate movement.) This is a very difficult work to bring off, and despite the formidable technical abilities of Knussen and the London Sinfonietta, I found Michael Gielen's broader, more expansive rendition on Arte Nova more convincing. (It's also a lot cheaper.)

Nonetheless, this disc won't disappoint Carter fans, who will certainly want to hear the Violin Concerto. Those new to the composer might want to try a more accessible introduction first (Carter's music is notoriously difficult to get into, though extremely rewarding). For such listeners, I'd recommend either the Nonesuch disc with the Cello Sonata and Double Concerto, or possibly the DG disc with Symphonia.

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