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Glass / Rorem / Bernstein: Violin Concertos / Serenade
 
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Glass / Rorem / Bernstein: Violin Concertos / Serenade

Leonard Bernstein (Composer), Philip Glass (Composer), Ned Rorem (Composer), Christoph von Dohnányi (Conductor), Leonard Bernstein (Conductor), Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (Orchestra), New York Philharmonic (Orchestra), Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (Orchestra), Gidon Kremer (Performer)
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Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Concerto for Violin and Orchestra - = 104 - = 120 6:40$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Concerto for Violin and Orchestra - = ca. 108 8:46Album Only
listen  3. Concerto for Violin and Orchestra - = ca. 150 - Coda: Poco meno = 104 9:30Album Only
listen  4. Violin Concerto (1984) - 1. Twilight: Free and Spacious - attacca 3:18$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Violin Concerto (1984) - 2. Toccata-Chaconne: Very Fast 3:17$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Violin Concerto (1984) - 3. Romance without Words: Hardly moving 2:51$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Violin Concerto (1984) - 4. Midnight: Slow 6:48$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Violin Concerto (1984) - 5. Toccata-Rondo: Very Fast 2:36$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Violin Concerto (1984) - 6. Dawn: Wistful 4:56$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. Serenade (1954) after Plato's "Symposium" - 1. Phaedrus - Pausanias: Lento - Allegro marcato 7:01$0.99 Buy Track
listen11. Serenade (1954) after Plato's "Symposium" - 2. Aristophanes: Allegretto 4:12$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. Serenade (1954) after Plato's "Symposium" - 3. Erixymachus: Presto 1:31$0.45 Buy Track
listen13. Serenade (1954) after Plato's "Symposium" - 4. Agathon: Adagio 6:34$0.99 Buy Track
listen14. Serenade (1954) after Plato's "Symposium" - 5. Socrates - Alcibiades: Molto tenuto - Allegro molto vivace10:31Album Only


On this CD:
  1. Violin Concerto
    Composed by Philip Glass
    Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
    with Gidon Kremer
    Conducted by Christoph von Dohnanyi

  2. Violin Concerto
    Composed by Ned Rorem
    Performed by New York Philharmonic
    with Gidon Kremer
    Conducted by Leonard Bernstein

  3. Serenade (after Plato: Symposium), for violin, harp, percussion & strings; also for violin & piano
    Composed by Leonard Bernstein
    Performed by Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
    with Gidon Kremer
    Conducted by Leonard Bernstein


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Here are three 20th-century violin concertos written within a 30-year period in three totally different styles, played by a soloist equally at home in all of them. Bernstein's Serenade, the earliest and most accessible work, takes its inspiration from Plato's Symposium; its five movements, musical portraits of the banquet's guests, represent different aspects of love as well as running the gamut of Bernstein's contrasting compositional styles. Rorem's concerto sounds wonderful. Its six movements have titles corresponding to their forms or moods; their character ranges from fast, brilliant, explosive to slow, passionate, melodious. Philip Glass's concerto, despite its conventional three movements and tonal, consonant harmonies, is the most elusive. Written in the "minimalist" style, which for most ordinary listeners is an acquired taste, it is based on repetition of small running figures both for orchestra and soloist, occasionally interrupted by long, high, singing lines in the violin against or above the orchestra's pulsation. Gidon Kremer, well known for his championship of contemporary composers, plays fabulously; his tone soars, shimmers, and glows. His identification with the music is complete. --Edith Eisler

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Splendid music of our time, November 22, 2000
The Glass Violin Concerto is one of the best examples of his current "mature" style, that combines Minimalist techniques with surging lyrical flow and mastery of orchestral forces much larger that the Glass Ensemble. It's been called, with a fascinaring oxymoron, Maximalist Minimalism. This evolution implies the use of the traditional classical forms, such as symphonies and concertos, and, in this respect, the Violin Concerto is one of Glass's most convincing essays. Actually, it's the piece which "converted" me me to the appreciation of a composer whose early output I often criticized. This concerto astonishingly reminds me , of all composers, of Sibelius. There's something of that Nordic master in the otherworldly lyricism of this concerto, especially in the magnificent, impossible-to-forget slow movement, yet this is distinctly a Glassian sound-world. All his trademarks are present in new, enriched forms: arpeggios, repetitions, that marvelous "far/close" effect in the strings. In this respect the two exhilaratingly motoric outer movements are more typically Glassian, and they encapsulate splendidly the middle one, the hauntingly lyrical heart of the whole piece. Gidon Kremer is a splendid, silvery-toned soloist (I've heard him live recently just in the Sibelius and he was peerless) and also a most intelligent musician : very sensitively he doesn't overplay his part , which was written to go along with the orchestra and not in opposition to it in the traditional , virtuoso way. The Wiener Philharmoniker and Christoph von Dohnanyi (that's what I call luxury casting!) sound, somewhat unexpectedly, totally into the idiom. Actually, I'd say that the warm, aristocratic Vienna sound is very apt for this music. It does not surprise me that, after this premier recording, this beautiful work has enjoyed two further ones., from Telarc and Naxos: I bought the Naxos (mainly for the couplings) and it's very good, but probably Kremer's is destined to remain unmatched for a while. The recorded sound is excellent, if not quite state-of-the-art. If you liked this I recommend you warmly the symphonies (especially nos.2 and 3) and, less obviously, an undeservedly lesser-known masterpiece: the soundtrack for the "Secret Agent" , a suite of marvelously addictive music. The couplings are kind of unlikely, but very interesting: the Rorem concerto is a rhapsodic, varied work that grows on you on repeated listenings. There's kind of a Rorem re-discovery currently going on : I don't think it's unforgettably personal music, but this composer has been unjustly neglected for all the wrong reasons (too tonal, too fluent, too openly gay), and deserves to be heard more. The Bernstein Serenade is very enjoyable, if not exactly a milestone, but those who usually respond to his music more warmly than me will love its Stravinskian wit coupled with Bernsteinian flamboyance. A highly rewarding disc.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic violin music, December 19, 2000
First of all, Deutsche Grammaphon should be congratulated on their 20/21 series of "new music" recordings. So far all of them I've heard have been superb.

On to this specific disc though. The idea is simple: three violin concertos by American composers in the latter half of the 20th century. The previous sentence will frighten many folks, but rest assured those of you out there that fear contemporary classical music. All three of these works (with the exception of a few moments in the Rorem) are all melodic and beautiful works and shouldn't raise a stir even amongst the most hardline musical conservatives.

The Philip Glass violin concerto is without a doubt my favorite of the three pieces (and if you can believe it, actually the most traditionally structured of the three pieces.) Shimmering and intense (but not in an overbearing way) this lush, gorgeous piece foreces reflection and contemplation in the listener. The beautiful second movement with its longing violin part can evoke tears in the listener. The fast paced third movement has a triumphal sense about it and as always, Gidon Kremer's playing is flawless.

The Rorem piece is the quirkiest of the lot. The little sequences range in sound from primal to drunken cartoon music to sounding like a 1950s American sitcom theme song. Given an open mind the piece can be a lot of fun.

Finally, there is the Bernstein "Serenade" (after Plato's "Symposium.") It is a good piece, but ultimately the least memorable of the three (and ironic considering he is the most well known throughout the world.)

Even if this disc were just of Glass performance, it would be worth picking up. Once again, Gidon Kremer's expert handling of these three distinctly different pieces is a treat as well.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 3 Talented American Composers and 1 Gifted Violinist, May 19, 2000
By "amazonavi" (KOBE, Hyogo. JAPAN) - See all my reviews
"Kremer playing Bernstein (with Bernstein)" are quite enough to persuade me to buy this album (for me). If that is not enough, I promise you, you'll find the 3 greatest American violin concertos of this century played by maestros. Honestly speaking, I overlooked Ned Rorem untill I encounter Susan Graham's album. After listening to Graham's song, I listened this concerto again to find this talented composer. The episode, friendship between Bernstein and Rorem for over forty years and inviting Kremer for this concerto project are moving (you'll find in liner notes.) I love "adagio" from Bernstein's "Serenade" and "Romance without Words"(what a romantic title!) from Rorem's. (This lyricism reminds me Graham's songs.) You'll be one of the gifted if you have this.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Modern according to the date of composition, but really a rejection of innovation
This disc in Deutsche Grammaphon's "20/21" line of performances of contemporary music collects three violin concertos by three very different American composers with a spotlight... Read more
Published on November 5, 2005 by Christopher Culver

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