Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categorías:
Carrito 0

Su carrito está vacío

John Storgårds|Antheil: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5 & Over the Plains

Antheil: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5 & Over the Plains

John Storgards, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

Disponible en
24-Bit/96 kHz Estéreo

Streaming ilimitado

Escuche este álbum ahora en alta calidad en nuestras apps

Comenzar mi periodo de prueba gratis y escuchar este álbum

Disfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción

Suscribir

Disfrute de este álbum en las apps Qobuz con sususcripción

Descarga digital

Compre y descargue este álbum en múltiples formatos, según sus necesidades.

The BBC Philharmonic has launched a highly interesting new series dedicated to George Antheil’s symphonic works, the totally underrated music of a composer who began his career with a reputation as an enfant terrible during his formative years in Europe, where he composed a succession of shockingly avant-garde works, including Ballet mécanique in 1925. In this and his other early modernist pieces, the self-styled “Bad Boy of Music” was heavily influenced by the rhythmic dynamism and crushing dissonances of Stravinsky’s early ballets, but his stylistic preoccupations would change markedly after his return to the USA in 1933. He moved towards a fundamentally tonal and melody-based style, surprising those who knew his earlier experimental music by now joining the growing ranks of US symphonists working in tuneful neo-classical and neo-romantic idioms. Antheil considered his Symphony No. 4, begun in 1942, to be a meditation on several aspects of the ongoing war: the massacre in Lidice for the second movement, while the third, a Scherzo, was “a brutal joke, the joke of war”. The Allies’ eventual triumph was adumbrated in the symphony’s dynamic finale. The work was a tremendous success with both critics and concert-goers, and Time magazine felt that the premiere was an “almost unprecedented” phenomenon: a new American symphony which “failed to bore its audience”. The Time reviewer, however, suggested strong influence of Shostakovich; particularly obvious were the apparent nods towards the Russian composer’s bombastic “Leningrad” Symphony (No. 7), first heard in the United States in July 1942. Antheil resented this implication, however, writing in his autobiography that the passage in the middle of his first movement which had most frequently been attributed to his fondness for Shostakovich had in fact been recycled note-for-note from his own opera Transatlantic published as early as 1928 (the reader can readily check that here, track 20). As Antheil was quick to point out, this music therefore had originated during a time just somewhat before Shostakovich had written even one symphony. In 1947, Antheil put the score of a new but unfinished Fifth symphony aside (the work would become the unnumbered tragic Symphony) and devoted himself instead to a completely different Symphony No. 5; this new work would have a far more celebratory nature, as its sobriquet, “Joyous”, unashamedly indicated. Antheil regarded the symphony as marking his final break from what he called “the now passé” musical modernism of the early twentieth century. In his review of the Carnegie Hall performance, music critic Virgil Thomson declared Symphony No. 5 to be Antheil’s best work to date. The album begins with the short Over the Plains (1945, here a world premiere recording), recalling the emotions that he had experienced when travelling through Texas ten years before, on which occasion he knew that one day he would write a piece celebrating not only the optimistic, pioneering spirit that the view had inspired but also the cheerfulness of the local inhabitants. © SM/Qobuz

Más información

Antheil: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5 & Over the Plains

John Storgårds

launch qobuz app Ya he descargado Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Abrir

download qobuz app Todavía no he descargado Qobuz para Windows / MacOS Descargar la app Qobuz

Está escuchando muestras.

Escuche más de 100 millones de pistas con un plan de streaming ilimitado.

Escuche esta playlist y más de 100 millones de pistas con nuestros planes de streaming ilimitado.

Desde 12,49€/mes

1
Over the Plains
00:07:41

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

Symphony No. 4, "1942" (George Antheil)

2
I. Moderato
00:10:59

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

3
II. Allegro
00:09:33

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

4
III. Scherzo. Allegro molto
00:05:24

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

5
IV. Allegro non troppo
00:08:00

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

Symphony No. 5, "Joyous" (George Antheil)

6
I. Allegro
00:09:09

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

7
II. Adagio molto
00:08:00

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

8
III. Finale. Allegretto maestoso
00:06:52

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestra, MainArtist - John Storgårds, Conductor, MainArtist - George Antheil, Composer

2017 Chandos Records 2017 Chandos Records

Presentación del Álbum

The BBC Philharmonic has launched a highly interesting new series dedicated to George Antheil’s symphonic works, the totally underrated music of a composer who began his career with a reputation as an enfant terrible during his formative years in Europe, where he composed a succession of shockingly avant-garde works, including Ballet mécanique in 1925. In this and his other early modernist pieces, the self-styled “Bad Boy of Music” was heavily influenced by the rhythmic dynamism and crushing dissonances of Stravinsky’s early ballets, but his stylistic preoccupations would change markedly after his return to the USA in 1933. He moved towards a fundamentally tonal and melody-based style, surprising those who knew his earlier experimental music by now joining the growing ranks of US symphonists working in tuneful neo-classical and neo-romantic idioms. Antheil considered his Symphony No. 4, begun in 1942, to be a meditation on several aspects of the ongoing war: the massacre in Lidice for the second movement, while the third, a Scherzo, was “a brutal joke, the joke of war”. The Allies’ eventual triumph was adumbrated in the symphony’s dynamic finale. The work was a tremendous success with both critics and concert-goers, and Time magazine felt that the premiere was an “almost unprecedented” phenomenon: a new American symphony which “failed to bore its audience”. The Time reviewer, however, suggested strong influence of Shostakovich; particularly obvious were the apparent nods towards the Russian composer’s bombastic “Leningrad” Symphony (No. 7), first heard in the United States in July 1942. Antheil resented this implication, however, writing in his autobiography that the passage in the middle of his first movement which had most frequently been attributed to his fondness for Shostakovich had in fact been recycled note-for-note from his own opera Transatlantic published as early as 1928 (the reader can readily check that here, track 20). As Antheil was quick to point out, this music therefore had originated during a time just somewhat before Shostakovich had written even one symphony. In 1947, Antheil put the score of a new but unfinished Fifth symphony aside (the work would become the unnumbered tragic Symphony) and devoted himself instead to a completely different Symphony No. 5; this new work would have a far more celebratory nature, as its sobriquet, “Joyous”, unashamedly indicated. Antheil regarded the symphony as marking his final break from what he called “the now passé” musical modernism of the early twentieth century. In his review of the Carnegie Hall performance, music critic Virgil Thomson declared Symphony No. 5 to be Antheil’s best work to date. The album begins with the short Over the Plains (1945, here a world premiere recording), recalling the emotions that he had experienced when travelling through Texas ten years before, on which occasion he knew that one day he would write a piece celebrating not only the optimistic, pioneering spirit that the view had inspired but also the cheerfulness of the local inhabitants. © SM/Qobuz

Acerca del álbum

Premios:

Mejorar la información del álbum

Qobuz logo Por qué comprar en Qobuz...

De oferta actualmente...

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms

Dire Straits

Brothers In Arms Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
Más en Qobuz
Por John Storgårds

Shostakovich: Symphony No. 11 "The Year 1905"

John Storgårds

Nielsen: Symphony No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, No. 4, No. 5, No. 6

John Storgårds

Sibelius: Complete Symphonies

John Storgårds

Antheil : Symphonies Nos. 3 & 6 & Other Works

John Storgårds

Antheil : Orchestral Works, Vol. 3

John Storgårds

Quizás también le guste...

Bruckner: 11 Symphonies

Christian Thielemann

Bruckner: 11 Symphonies Christian Thielemann

Saint-Saëns: Symphonic Poems - Le Carnaval des animaux - L'Assassinat du duc de Guise

Les Siècles

Dutilleux: Tout un monde lointain - Symphony No. 1 - Métaboles

Jean-Guihen Queyras

Stravinsky: Violin Concerto, Orchestral Works

James Ehnes

Tchaikovsky: The Tempest, Francesca da Rimini, The Voyevoda, Overture and Polonaise from 'Cherevichki'

BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra