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Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Leos Janacek: Taras Buba
 
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Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Leos Janacek: Taras Buba

Leos Janacek (Composer), Dmitry Shostakovich (Composer), Jascha Horenstein (Conductor), Vienna Pro Musica Choir (Orchestra)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review) More about this product

Price: $8.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Leos Janacek: Taras Buba + Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 / Janacek: Sinfonietta + Brahms: Symphony No.1 / Variations on a Theme of Haydn
Price For All Three: $26.94

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  • This item: Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Leos Janacek: Taras Buba ~ Leos Janacek

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  • Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 / Janacek: Sinfonietta ~ Antonin Dvorak

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  • Brahms: Symphony No.1 / Variations on a Theme of Haydn ~ Johannes Brahms

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Product Details

  • Orchestra: Vienna Pro Musica Choir
  • Conductor: Jascha Horenstein
  • Composer: Leos Janacek, Dmitry Shostakovich
  • Audio CD (July 11, 2000)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Vox (Classical)
  • ASIN: B00004U1CG
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #239,693 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

 
1. Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47: 1st movement, Moderato
2. Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47: 2nd movement, Allegretto (Scherzo)
3. Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47: 3rd movement, Largo
4. Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47: 4th movement, Allegro non troppo
5. Taras Bulba, rhapsody for orchestra, JW 6/15: No. 1, Death of Andryj
6. Taras Bulba, rhapsody for orchestra, JW 6/15: No. 2, Death of Ostap
7. Taras Bulba, rhapsody for orchestra, JW 6/15: No. 3, Prophecy and Death of Taras Bulba

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Horenstein's Hair-Raising Janacek, October 11, 2000
By Thomas F. Bertonneau (Oswego, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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It's not that there are no satisfying contemporary recordings. There are. Some of them boast absolutely spectacular sound courtesy of digital technology. And yet, so much of today's music-making seems routine; the excitement of discovery has gone out of it and, anyway, faithless postmodern types no longer acknowledge the possibility of transcendental revelation. Maybe that's why, in order to recapture the psychic "kick" that I used to get from just about any classical music LP when I was a high school kid thirty years ago and stereo was still relatively new and vacuum tubes had not yet completely vanished - maybe that's why, I say, to reanimate that old gooseflesh, I turn increasingly to archival recordings as the specialty companies reissue them on CD. I know not what precise words will convince the uninitiated that, despite the snap-crackle-pop from pitted 78rpm surfaces, a 1930s Abendroth or a 1940s Furtwängler (or even, yea! a 1950s Klemperer) can catch fire the way no up-to-date performance can. As my old dissertation adviser Eric Gans (UCLA French) says, there are declarative truths that require propositions and there are ostensive truths to which one can only point. I point you, then, to one of a batch of recent reissues on Vox that give us vintage 1950s performances by Jascha Horenstein (1898-1973), in particular to the coupling of Shostakovich 5 with Janacek's "Taras Bulba." Horenstein, German-speaking but Russian-born, briefly an assistant to Furtwängler, an exile from Nazi Germany, qualifies as one of the great independents among conductors, exacting, ingenious, impractical, never finding a tenured post, and yet acknowledged as pioneer in bringing late-romantic and early modern repertory to audiences in a persuasive manner. (He blazed an early path on Vox for Bruckner and Mahler.) "Taras Bulba" presents difficulties and even a crystal-clear digital "take" with a crack ensemble can flag. Finding the right pacing to work up to Janacek's precipitous and brief climaxes is the trick, and Horenstein has divined it. By the way, there's no snap-crackle-pop here; these are magnetic tape recordings from the early 1950s, monophonic, but close to high fidelity. "The Death of Taras Bulba" indeed raises my hackles pleasurably. Shostakovich 5 was not, when Horenstein made this recording, familiar fare. True - Volkov's Shostakovich memoir hadn't yet given us the irony that interpreters now bring to this score. What Horenstein does find is the dark electricity of the First Movement and the bleak pathos of the Largo. If he treats the Finale as a Stalinist triumph, who cares, the rest of it is so superb. Visit also the two Brahms symphonies (1 and 3) that are part of this Horenstein-Vox release.
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