Shostakovich - Symphonies 4 & 11 | ICA Classics ICAC5169

Shostakovich - Symphonies 4 & 11

£22.75

In stock - available for despatch within 1 working day

Label: ICA Classics

Cat No: ICAC5169

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 23rd September 2022

Contents

Artists

BBC Symphony Orchestra
BBC Philharmonic

Conductor

Gennady Rozhdestvensky

Works

Shostakovich, Dmitri

Symphony no.4 in C minor, op.43
Symphony no.11 in G minor, op.103 'The Year 1905'

Artists

BBC Symphony Orchestra
BBC Philharmonic

Conductor

Gennady Rozhdestvensky

About

Gennady Rozhdestvensky (1931-2018) was one of Russia’s greatest conductors along with Evgeny Mravinsky and Kirill Kondrashin. His close personal and musical relationship with Shostakovich began in the 1950s and continued until the composer’s death in 1975. Rozhdestvensky said at the time, ‘It would be difficult to overestimate the significance of my relations with Dmitri Shostakovich since he opened before me a musical universe like a gigantic magnifying glass reflecting our fragile world’. Rozhdestvensky conducted the first western premiere of Shostakovich’s Symphony no.4 in Edinburgh in 1962 and after many subsequent performances internationally, it was also the inaugural piece in his tenure as chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra (1979-81). Composed in 1936 but condemned by the Soviet authorities, it did not receive its first performance until 1961 in Moscow. The epic Symphony no.11, given a dramatic performance by the BBC Philharmonic in 1997, is based on revolutionary folksongs relating to the 1905 Russian Revolution, and received the Lenin Prize in 1958. Despite this, questions arose as to whether Shostakovich was denouncing the Soviet regime’s brutal treatment of its opponents in it, specifically the 1956 invasion of Hungary or the Tsarist tyranny and oppression of 1905, to which there are no conclusive answers.

- Supremely authoritative performances from Rozhdestvensky, who was closely associated with the composer and his works

- Both symphonies benefit from the additional atmosphere and excitement generated by being caught ‘live’

- A wide soundstage coupled with powerful and immediate stereo recordings

- Highly informative notes from Harlow Robinson, an authority on Russian and Soviet music

Reviews

Any and everyone who loves Shostakovich as I do needs to hear this performance of the renegade Fourth Symphony. ... In this electrifying performance from 1978 (at the Royal Albert Hall) Rozhdestvensky galvanises the BBC Symphony Orchestra into thinking that this is the first performance, that this ambitious post-Mahlerian epic is at the very cusp of where sonata form is exploded and new frontiers are dramatically established. He positively revels in its bold and subversive shock tactics. ...this is a must-hear album and no mistake – and the Fourth is as good as it gets.  Edward Seckerson
Gramophone November 2022
Gramophone Editor's Choice

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