Bartok - The Wooden Prince & Dance Suite | Linn CKD714

Bartok - The Wooden Prince & Dance Suite

£14.49

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Label: Linn

Cat No: CKD714

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 24th February 2023

Contents

Artists

WDR Sinfonieorchester

Conductor

Cristian Macelaru

Works

Bartok, Bela

Dance Suite, Sz77 BB86
The Wooden Prince (ballet in 1 act)

Artists

WDR Sinfonieorchester

Conductor

Cristian Macelaru

About

Following their first album for Linn (Dvořák - Legends, op.59, Czech Suite, op.39), the WDR Sinfonieorchester and Cristian Măcelaru pursue the same folk vein with two orchestral works by Béla Bartók. Based on a rather childish tale (prince, princess, fairies, and of course a happy ending!), the music of the ballet The Wooden Prince – recorded in full here – has all the ingredients of a masterpiece: masterful scoring for large forces, use of musical themes, an effortless amalgam of folk and late-Romantic elements. Composed in 1923 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the merging of the towns of Buda and Pest – alongside commissions by Ernö Dohnányi and Zoltán Kodály – the century-old Dance Suite is a six-movement work that has become one of Bartók’s best known compositions. Born in Timișoara, a short distance from Hungary, Măcelaru can boast an unparalleled understanding of Bartók, as evident here.

Reviews

The Cologne orchestra and its Romanian principal conductor suffuse Bartok's 1917 ballet with warmth, wit and pathos, alive to the work's marriage of the fraught and the skittish, the late Romantic and the bucolic. ... Theirs is an exceptional account, and they are similarly deft in Dance Suite (1923), written to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the unification of Buda and Pest, but sounding so new and alive here, the ink might still be wet on the staves.
The Sunday Times 5 March 2023
...  it is the humanity of The Wooden Prince which raises it above the realms of fanciful fairy tale and fuels the deeper drama. And in that regard great credit must go to the Romanian conductor Cristian Măcelaru, who displays real kinship here with the melodic colour and cast of the music – not least Bartók’s curvaceous lyricism – and marries it so compellingly to the textural elements. ... A terrific album.  Edward Seckerson
Gramophone March 2023
Gramophone Editor's Choice

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