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Thursday, March 9, 2023

The Look Of Love


The Look Of Love · Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Easy Listening Classical Dinner Music ℗ 2018 Black Barn Music

Warsaw Concerto (Richard Addinsell)


Live performance of Warsaw Concerto by Richard Addinsell. The soloist was Chris Hill with the West Forest Sinfonia. Recorded on 11th November 2006 in All Saints Church, High Wycombe. This performance is dedicated to Peter Branson, my first piano teacher. He sadly passed away before I ever performed in public, but his memory inspires every performance I give today.

Yvonne Elliman Hello Stranger HQ Remastered Extended Version


This is a remastered and extended high quality version of Hello Stranger from Yvonne Elliman. This one has a Hawaiian flair to it. NO CHALLANGE TO OWNERSHIP IS IMPLIED, AND THIS VIDEO IS FOR AN EDUCATIONAL EXAMPLE OF WHAT A PROPERLY CREATED EXTENDED VERSION OF AUDIO SOUNDS LIKE. "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."


The Wonderful World of Classical Music: Great English Classics


The Wonderful World of Classical Music: Great English Classics Edward Elgar: Pomp & Circumstance March #1 In D, Op. 39/1 0:00 Ralph Vaughan Williams: Fantasia On Greensleeves 6:04 Benjamin Britten: Sinfonía Da Requiem - Dies Irae - 2nd Movement 10:31 John Stanley: Organ Voluntary in G Op 6 No 9 16:03 William Boyce: Symphony No 1: Allegro 19:36 Symphony No 1: Moderato e dolce 22:15 Symphony No 1: Allegro 24:39 Edward Elgar: Serenade For Strings in E Minor Op 20 - Allegro Piacevole 26:48 Serenade For Strings in E Minor Op 20 - Larghetto 29:53 Serenade For Strings in E Minor Op 20 - Allegretto 34:58 Henry Purcell: The Indian Queen: Overture 37:28 Handel: Music For The Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 - 1. Overture: Adagio, Allegro, Lentement, Allegro 42:42 Music For The Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 - 2. Bourrée 50:11 Music For The Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 - 3. La Paix 51:39 Music For The Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 - 4. La Rejouissance 55:29 Music For The Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 - Menuet 1 57:18 Music For The Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 - Menuet 2 59:02 Edward Elgar: Enigma Variations: Nimrod 1:01:00 Enigma Variations: Dorabella 1:05:11 Enigma Variations: Finale 1:07:40

Esther Abrami and Her Ensemble spotlight French composer, Louise Farrenc, for International Women’s Day


By Sophia Alexandra Hall

19th-century French composer and equality campaigner Louise Farrenc sees her famed cello sonata reimagined for violin and string ensemble in a new arrangement by Esther Abrami and Her Ensemble. 

For International Women’s Day 2023, TikTok classical music sensation Esther Abrami has platformed an underperformed French classical composer from the 19th century, with the help of Her Ensemble.

The composer in question is Louise Farrenc, a musician renowned in her time for her ‘well-written’ compositions, mastery of the piano, and professor position at the Paris conservatoire.

Despite being an accomplished artist in her own right, due to 19th-century attitudes, Farrenc was often addressed with backhanded compliments from reviewers. Symphonic composer Hector Berlioz once called her knack for orchestration “a talent rare among women”.

Her gender aside, Farrenc wrote some of the most ethereal earworms to emerge out of the 19th century, including her Cello Sonata, Op. 46 which Abrami and Her Ensemble have chosen to perform in celebration of the international day.

Listen to the sweeping ‘Andante Sostenuto’, the second movement from Farrenc’s sonata, arranged for solo violin and strings above.

Esther Abrami and Her Ensemble play in celebration of International Women’s Day

Esther Abrami and Her Ensemble play in celebration of International Women’s Day. Picture: Classic FM

‘Her music was so beautiful, I knew I had to play it’

On how she discovered the work, Abrami told Classic FM that she was looking for various pieces composed by women, and ended up finding Louise Farrenc. “I was listening to many of her pieces, and I heard this movement,” Abrami recalled.

“It was the kind of melody that you just keep singing once you’ve heard it, and I thought it was so beautiful and I knew I had to play it.” 

Not only did Abrami play it, but the track features on her debut album, released with Sony Classical last year.

While the work was originally scored for cello and piano, founder and leader of Her Ensemble, Ellie Consta arranged the work for Abrami and her own string group.

“I’m actually pretty new when it comes to arranging,” Consta divulged to Classic FM. “During lockdown I started writing string parts for my friends who are artists and singer-songwriters, and really enjoyed that. Now I use these same techniques when arranging classical works.”

Consta, a graduate of Chethams School of Music, the Royal Academy of Music, and the Royal College of Music, felt comfortable arranging pieces for her new ensemble as she “knows strings”.

Ellie Consta (centre) is a graduate of both the Royal College and Royal Academy of Music
Ellie Consta (centre) is a graduate of both the Royal College and Royal Academy of Music. Picture: Classic FM

Consta continued, “I know them because I work in ensembles, orchestras, chamber groups all the time, so I know what each instrument sounds like, and I know how they work, and what passages are going to be uncomfortable under the fingers.

“Sometimes I can just text a friend and ask ‘is xyz ridiculous to play on a bass?’ or like with Esther, we had some conversations about what passages we should move up the octave.”

Abrami added that this is one of the advantages of working directly with an arranger when reimagining works.

“I think you need to have that two-way conversation between performer and arranger,” Abrami said, “When you’re going to be the one playing the composition, you can’t work with somebody who’s just gonna arrange a piece and not taking consideration your style of playing or your even your instrument abilities... though this actually happens so often.”

Thea (L) and Natalia (R) from Her Ensemble
Thea (L) and Natalia (R) from Her Ensemble. Picture: Classic FM

‘There were female composers in 450BC!’

Set up during the 2020 lockdown, Ellie Consta leads this mould-breaking group of musicians in a quest to address the gender gap and gender stereotypes in the music industry.

Consta decided to start Her Ensemble after reading a statistic from Donne, Women in Music that just 3.6 percent of the classical music pieces performed worldwide were written by women.

Over the past year this figure has risen, but only to 7.7 percent, and Consta and her group believe more needs to be done.

“It’s not that there aren’t female composers,” Consta enthused. “There are. All the way back to – and even before – the year 450 BC.”

One of these composers is 19th-century French composer, Louise Farrenc, a French composer, pianist and teacher who was born in Paris in 1804 and grew up surrounded by sculptors, painters and artistic women.


Esther Abrami with Her Ensemble
Esther Abrami with Her Ensemble. Picture: Classic FM

Studying piano from a young age, Farrenc’s musical gift was picked up on and encouraged by the likes of Clementi and Hummel, leading her to become interested in composition.

She gained a place at the prestigious Paris Conservatory at the age of just 15, wherein after she became a renowned concert pianist.

At the age of 38, Farrenc became the only woman to be appointed to the position of professor at the Paris Conservatory in the 19th century – the only such appointment for a woman for the entire 19th century.

She stayed at the conservatory for 30 years, over which time she became one of the greatest piano professors in Europe.

Portrait Of The Pianist And Composer Louise Farrenc
Portrait Of The Pianist And Composer Louise Farrenc. Picture: Getty

As well as being remembered for her exceptional musicianship and compositional abilities, Farrenc is today also remembered for her public push to be paid the same as a man would; a century before the ‘gender pay gap’ become a reported on issue.

Farrenc won the Académie des Beaux-Arts’ Chartier Prize for chamber music composition twice in 1861 and 1869. Though despite having these acclaimed works in her name, alongside a deeply impressive wider portfolio, her salary at the Paris Conservatoire remained lower than her male counterparts.

So, the 19th-century composer challenged this over a decade, protesting to senior academics at the institution. Her moment arrived however, after a performance of her Nonet at the conservatoire, which was well received. She used this performance as a chance to push again for a change in pay, and this time, she was successful.


Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Yuja Wang/Through the Years: Ages 8~36


A Moonlight Night - The Most Beautiful Ukrainian Song


This is Gimnazija Kranj Symphony Orchestra and Choir's dedication to brave Ukrainian people who suffer under the brutal Russian invasion. Our musicians performed this beautiful love song a couple of years ago. Diana Novak did an amazing arrangement. It was composed by Mykola Lysenko with lyrics written by Mykhailo Starytsky. Arrangement: Diana Novak, Soloists: Rok Zupanc, Lovro Krišelj, Chorus Master: Erik Šmid, Conductor: Nejc Bečan. PPZ production dedicates this beautiful love song to all brave Ukrainian people, who will never surrender. Their freedom is our freedom. Their lives are our lives! Just turn on English subtitles. English translation: Tog Hoath Gimnazija Kranj Symphony Orchestra FLAVTE (FLUTES): Aleksandra Pleterski, Katja Stanovšek, Zarja Hude, Neža Čadež, Manca Teran, Pia Krumpestar, Katjuša Rupnik, Anja Kišek; PIKOLO (PICCOLO) Manca Rozman; OBOE: Pavli Kac Ana Stoshitzky; KLARINETI (CLARINETS): Nadja Drakslar, Uroš Gorenc, Drejc Flajnik, Domen Kos; BAS KLARINET (BASE CLARINET): Jan Šifrer; FAGOTI (BASOONS): Arpad Balazs Piri, Miha Petkovšek; ROGOVI (FRENCH HORNS): Žiga Cesar, Marko Pirc, Miha Lončar, Klever Felicio; TROBENTE: Aleš Klančar, Anžej Remšak, Marko Novak; POZAVNE: Domen Gantar, Žan Škrjanec, Filip Istenič; EVFONIJ: Nina Tajč; TUBA: Tilen Oblak; TOLKALA: Dan Ažman Pistotnik, Domen Blaznik, Vid Ušeničnik, Miha Ogris: KLAVIR (PIANO): Monika Podlogar, Rok Zupanc, Katja Jerič, Ana Maria Beguš; VIOLINE 1 (FIRST VIOLINS): Nejc Avbelj, Neža Capuder, Peter Jud, Oskar Longyka, Klavdija Jarc Bezlaj, Mojca Batič, Ajda Porenta, Dora Rakar, Tina Zajec, Neža Piry, Katarina Miklavčič, Evita Oberžan, Domen Lorenz; VIOLINE 2 (SECOND VIOLINS): Uroš Bičanin, Matija Udovič, Tjaša Gorjanc, Nina Pečar, Klara Gruden, Daniel Perez Tujillo, Laura Bartelj, Tonka Pogačnik, Eva Dukarič, Ana Marija Lazari, Vivijana Rogina; VIOLE (VIOLAS): Špela Pirnat, Neža Papler, Anuša Plesničar, Vanja Kojić, Jurij Gracej, Neža Sečnik, Hana Lavrinc, Anita Gnamuš, Urša Žun, Martin Kokošinek; VIOLONČELA (CELLOS): Urh Mrak, Arslan Hamidulin, Lucija Rupert, Alenka Piotrowicz, Katarina Kozjek, Nika Vremšak, Klara Pahor, Katarina Minatti, Ana Zupan; KONTRABASI (DOUBLE BASSES): Grega Rus, Todor Markovič, Andrej Kašič, Gašper Livk, Joana Gonzales Subira, Arthur Piotrowicz; HARFA (HARPS): Urša Rihtaršič Ajda Krišelj; SAKSOFONI (SAXOFONES): Gal Grobovšek, Urša Uršič, Manca Krivec; BAS KITARA/KITARA (BASS GUITAR / GUITAR): Luka Štibelj, Urh Zupan, Rok Klančar, Karim Zajec; HARMONIKA (ACCORDEON): Ana Lombar Gimnazija Kranj Mixed Choir SOPRAN (SOPRANO): Jerica Kuhar, Nika Markun, Urša Grohar, Julija Horvat, Neža Konc, Vesna Logonder, Sara Kemperle, Asja Boni Pivk, Lana Uhan, Karmen Jošt, Lara Porenta, Estera Erzar; ALT (ALTO): Jera Toporiš, Lana Ahačič, Maja Blanc, Anja Jerala, Maša Pavuna, Sara Štebe, Ema Oblak, Živa Krajnik, Anita Hudobivnik, Maša Papler, Špela Vovk, Tinkara Krišelj, Eva Zupan, Jedrt Mikelj; TENOR (TENOR): Karim Zajec, Lovro Krišelj, Rok Zupanc, Martin Draksler, Jure Mubi, Filip Kralj; BAS (BASS): Matej Logar, Matic Oman, Rok Klančar, Peter Pintar, Štefan Kuhar, Benjamin Tajč, Žan Govekar, Urh Šenk, Luka Golob, Tadej Smerke Concert and broadcast director: Primož Zevnik

Monday, March 6, 2023

Top 10 Symphony Composers

 

After the extraordinary musical developments of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven the composition of a symphony became a daunting challenge, for many years the ultimate challenge for any composer. Many rose magnificently to that challenge, not least Brahms, Mahler, Sibelius and Shostakovich

Johannes Brahms
Johannes Brahms

As Richard Bratby notes in his article What is a Symphony?: 'Few musical terms carry such baggage. And to write a symphony, now as then, means engaging with Western music’s most ambitious ongoing attempt to create meaning out of sound; declaring to the world that you have something important to say – and are about to deploy all your creative powers to say it.' 

We hope that the gathering of the 10 composers below serves as a informative introduction to the vast universe of symphonic writing, outlining the diverse ways that the greatest composers have responded to the task of writing a symphony, from the 18th century to the 20th. There are many outstanding symphonists to explore outside this initial list of 10 (Mendelssohn, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Dvořák, Copland, Carl Nielsen, Florence Price, Per Nørgård, Malcolm Arnold, John Adams – to name just a few), but we hope that this guide will set you off an an inspiring listening journey. 

We have recommended both a complete symphony-cycle and a recording of an individual symphony for each composer.


Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)

Haydn’s contribution to musical history is immense, he was nicknamed ‘the father of the symphony’ (despite Stamitz’s prior claim) and was progenitor of the string quartet. Like all his well-trained contemporaries, Haydn had a thorough knowledge of polyphony and counterpoint (and, indeed, was not averse to using it) but his music is predominantly homophonic. His 104 symphonies cover a wide range of expression and harmonic ingenuity.

Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra / Adám Fischer (Brilliant Classics)

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Haydn 2032, Volume 4 – Il Distratto

Il Giardino Armonico / Giovanni Antonini (Alpha)

Gramophone Award winner – Orchestral category (2017)

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)

There is less than half a century between the death of Handel (1759) and the first performance of Beethoven’s Fidelio (1809). Bach and Handel were still composing when Haydn was a teenager. To compare the individual ‘sound world’ of any of these four composers is to hear amazingly rapid progress in musical thinking. Without doubt, the most important element of this was the development of the sonata and symphonic forms. During this period, a typical example generally followed the same basic pattern: four movements – 1) the longest, sometimes with a slow introduction, 2) slow movement, 3) minuet, 4) fast, short and light in character. Working within this formal structure, each movement in turn had its own internal structure and order of progress. Most of Haydn’s and Mozart’s sonatas, symphonies and chamber music are written in accordance with this pattern and three-quarters of all Beethoven’s music conforms to ‘sonata form’ in one way or another.

Mozart composed 41 symphonies and in the later ones (try the famous opening of No 40 in G minor) enters a realm beyond Haydn’s – searching, moving and far from impersonal.

Recommended recordings

Complete Symphonies (Nos 1-41)

The English Concert / Trevor Pinnock (Archiv)

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Symphonies Nos 29, 31, 32, 35 & 36

Scottish Chamber Orchestra / Sir Charles Mackerras (Linn Records)

Gramophone Awards shortlist (2010)

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Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)

Ludwig van Beethoven coupled his genius for music with profoundly held political beliefs and an almost religious certainty about his purpose. With the possible exception of Wagner, no other composer has, single-handedly, changed the course of music so dramatically and continued to develop and experiment throughout his entire career. His early music, built on the Classical paths trod by Haydn and Mozart, demonstrates his individuality in taking established musical structures and re-shaping them to his own ends. Unusual keys and harmonic relationships are explored, while as early as the Third Symphony (Eroica), the music is vastly more inventive and cogent than anything Mozart achieved even in a late masterpiece like the Jupiter. Six more symphonies followed, all different in character, all attempting new goals of human expression, culminating in the great Choral Symphony (No 9) with its ecstatic final choral movement celebrating man’s existence. No wonder so many composers felt daunted by attempting the symphonic form after Beethoven and that few ever attempted more than the magic Beethovenian number of nine.


Chamber Orchestra of Europe, Arnold Schoenberg Choir / Nikolaus Harnoncourt (Teldec)

Gramophone's Recording of the Year (1992)

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Symphonies Nos 5 & 7

Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra / Carlos Kleiber (DG)

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Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

On March 26, 1828, in the Musikverein of Vienna, there was given for the first time a programme entirely devoted to Schubert’s music. It was put on by his friends, of course, but though successful, was never even reviewed. Less than eight months later, Schubert died of typhoid, delirious, babbling of Beethoven. He was 31 and was buried as near to him as was practicable, with the epitaph ‘Here lie rich treasure and still fairer hopes’. Schubert left no estate at all, absolutely nothing – except his manuscripts.

It was only by chance and the diligence of a few musicians that some of it came to light – in 1838 Schumann happened to visit Schubert’s brother and came across the great Symphony in C (the Ninth) and urged its publication; the Unfinished Symphony was not heard until 1865, after the score was found in a chest; it was George Grove (of Grove’s Dictionary fame) and the young Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert and Sullivan fame) who unearthed in a publisher’s house in Vienna Schubert’s Symphonies Nos 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6, 60 songs and the music for Rosamunde. That was in 1867. Over a century later, in 1978, the sketches for a tenth symphony were unearthed in another Viennese archive.


Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra / Karl Böhm (DG)

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Symphonies Nos 3, 5 & 6

Royal Philharmonic Orchestra / Sir Thomas Beecham (Warner Classics)


Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)

‘I never had a more serious pupil than you,’ remarked Bruckner’s renowned teacher of counterpoint, Simon Sechter. Certainly, no one could ever accuse Bruckner of being frivolous and quite how this unsophisticated, obsequious boor came to write nine symphonies of such originality and epic splendour is one of music’s contradictions. You don’t turn to Bruckner the man or the musician for the light touch. His worship of Wagner verged on the neurotic for, really, there is something worrying about his debasement before the composer of Tristan. The dedication of his Third Symphony to Wagner reads: ‘To the eminent Excellency Richard Wagner the Unattainable, World-Famous, and Exalted Master of Poetry and Music, in Deepest Reverence Dedicated by Anton Bruckner’; before the two men eventually met, Bruckner would sit and stare at his idol in silent admiration, and after hearing Parsifal for the first time, fell on his knees in front of Wagner crying, ‘Master – I worship you’. His soliciting of honours, his craving for recognition and lack of self-confidence, allied with an unprepossessing appearance and a predilection for unattainable young girls, paints a disagreeable picture. The reverse of the coin is that of the humble peasant ill at ease in society, devoutly religious (most of his works were inscribed ‘Omnia ad majorem Dei gloriam’) and a personality of almost childlike simplicity and ingenuousness. God, Wagner and Music were his three deities.


Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra / Herbert von Karajan (DG)

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Symphony No 9

Lucerne Festival Orchestra / Claudio Abbado (DG)

Gramophone's Recording of the Year (2015)

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Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)

Not all composers fell under Wagner’s spell. Brahms was the epitome of traditional musical thought. His four symphonies are far nearer the style of Beethoven than those of Mendelssohn or Schumann, and the first of these was not written until 1875, when Wagner had all but completed The Ring. Indeed Brahms is by far the most classical of the German Romantics. He wrote little programme music and no operas. It’s a curious coincidence that he distinguished himself in the very musical forms that Wagner chose to ignore – the fields of chamber music, concertos, variation writing and symphonies.


Gewandhaus Orchestra / Riccardo Chailly (Decca)

Gramophone's Recording of the Year (2014); Recording of the Month (October 2013)

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Symphony No 3

Budapest Festival Orchestra / Iván Fischer (Channel Classics)

Gramophone Editor's Choice (August 2021)

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Gustav Mahler (1860-1911)

Mahler is the last great Romantic symphonist, music conceived on the grandest scale and employing elaborate forces. He wanted to express his view of the human condition, to set down his lofty ideals about Life, Death and the Universe. 'My symphonies represent the contents of my entire life.'


CBSO; Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra / Sir Simon Rattle (Warner Classics)

Gramophone's Recording of the Year (Symphony No 2, 1988); Gramophone's Recording of the Year (Symphony No 10, 2000)

Read the review of Symphony No 10


Symphony No 9

Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra / Herbert von Karajan (DG)

Gramophone's Recording of the Year (1984)

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Jean Sibelius (1865-1957)

To most people Sibelius is the composer of Finlandia and the Karelia Suite; to others he is one of the great symphony composers; to the people of Finland he is these things and a national hero. While he was still alive the Finnish government issued stamps with his portrait and would have erected a statue to him as well had not Sibelius himself discouraged the project. Probably no composer in history has meant so much to his native country as did Sibelius. He still does. ‘He is Finland in music; and he is Finnish music,’ observed one critic.


BBC Philharmonic / John Storgårds (Chandos)

Gramophone Awards shortlisted – Orchestral category (2015)


Symphonies Nos 3, 6 & 7

Minnesota Orchestra / Osmo Vänskä (BIS)

Gramophone Awards shortlisted – Orchestral category (2017); Editor's Choice (September 2016)

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Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)

Vaughan Williams emerged as an adventurous, unmistakably English composer with a distinct voice of his own. His discovery in the early 1900s of English folksong, through the recently formed English Folk Music Society, focused his style. VW and Gustav Holst, his lifelong friend whom he’d met at the Royal College, went out seeking the source of their country’s folksongs; many had never been written down before and the cataloguing and research that VW and Holst undertook in this area was of considerable cultural significance. His music now took on a different character. Apart from war service (for which he volunteered, although over 40), Vaughan Williams devoted the rest of his long life to composition, teaching and conducting.

Vaughan Williams worked on into old age with undiminished creative powers – his Eighth Symphony appeared in 1955 (the score includes parts for vibraphone and xylophone) while his Ninth, composed at the age of 85, uses a trio of saxophones.


London Philharmonic Orchestra / Bernard Haitink (Warner Classics)

Gramophone Award winner – Orchestral category (Sinfonia Antartica, 1986); Gramophone Award winner – Orchestral category (A Sea Symphony, 1990)

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A London Symphony (original 1913 version)

London Symphony Orchestra / Richard Hickox (Chandos)

Gramophone's Recording of the Year (2001)

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Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975)

Following his death, the government of the USSR issued the following summary of Shostakovich’s work, drawing attention to a ‘remarkable example of fidelity to the traditions of musical classicism, and above all, to the Russian traditions, finding his inspiration in the reality of Soviet life, reasserting and developing in his creative innovations the art of socialist realism and, in so doing, contributing to universal progressive musical culture’. The Times wrote of him in its obituary that he was beyond doubt ‘the last great symphonist’.


Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra / Vasily Petrenko (Naxos)

Editor's Choice (Symphonies Nos 5 & 9, December 2009); Gramophone Award winner – Orchestral category (Symphony No 10, 2011); Gramophone Awards shortlist – Orchestral category (Symphony No 4, 2014); Recording of the Month (Symphony No 4, November 2013); Editor's Choice (Symphony No 14, June 2014)

Read the review of Symphony No 10


Symphony No 10

Boston Symphony Orchestra / Andris Nelsons (DG)

Gramophone Award winner – Orchestral category (2016); Recording of the Month (August 2015)

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