Vladimir Jurowski & Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin - Massenet: Werther (1999)
Artist: Vladimir Jurowski, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Title: Massenet: Werther
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: RCA
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 02:10:26
Total Size: 513 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Massenet: Werther
Year Of Release: 1999
Label: RCA
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 02:10:26
Total Size: 513 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
CD 1
01. Prelude
Act I:
02. "Assez! Assez! M'ecoutera-t-on cette fois?"
03. "Bravo pour les enfants!"
04. "Alors, c'est bien ici la maison du bailli?"
05. "Jesus vient de naitre!"
06. "Arrivez donc, Bruhlmann!"
07. "Sophie!... Albert!"
08. "Il faut nous separer"
09. "Mais vous ne savez rien de moi!"
10. "Reve! Extase! Bonheur!"
Act II:
11. Prelude
12. "Vivat Bacchus! Semper vivat!"
13. "Trois mois! Voici trois mois que nous sommes unis!"
14. "Un autre est son epoux!"
15. "Au bonheur dont mon ame est pleine"
16. "Frere, voyez le beau bouquet!"
17. "Ai-je dit vrai?"
18. "Oui, ce qu'elle m'ordonne"
19. "Mais venez donc! Le cortege s'approche"
CD 2
Act III:
01. Prelude
02. "Je vous ecris de ma petite chambre"
03. "Bonjour, grande soeur!"
04. "Ah! Le rire est beni!"
05. "Va! Laisse couler mes larmes"
06. "Ah! Mon courage m'abandonne!"
07. "Oui, c'est moi! Je reviens"
08. "Toute mon ame est la!"
09. "Ah! Moi! Moi! Dans ses bras!"
10. "Werther est et retour"
Act IV:
11. Symphony
12. "Werther!... Rien!"
13. "Et moi, Werther, et moi je t'aime!"
14. "Noel! Noel! Noel!"
15. "Ah! Ses yeux se ferment"
It is rare that a conductor achieves international acclaim within a few years of his debut, but such was the case with Vladimir Jurowski, whose star is still on the ascent. When he made his debut in 1995 at the Wexford Festival in Ireland with Rimsky-Korsakov's May Night, he was only 23. That success led to his debut at Covent Garden later that season in Verdi's Nabucco. His first operatic recording appeared on Marco Polo in 1997, an acclaimed three-CD set containing Meyerbeer's rarely encountered L'etoile du nord, derived from live performances at the 1996 Wexford Festival. Soon he became known in the concert hall as well, earning a sequence of steadily more significant orchestral posts.
Vladimir Jurowski was born in Moscow on April 4, 1972. His father is famed conductor Michail Jurowski, his grandfather a composer also named Vladimir Jurowski. Vladimir's first serious music studies were in his teens at the Moscow Conservatory. The Jurowski family moved to Germany in 1990, where young Vladimir studied conducting with Rolf Reuter.
Jurowski made his first recording, Kancheli's cantata Exil, in 1994 (ECM Records) even before his official debut the following year. After his appearances at the Wexford Festival and Covent Garden he began conducting at the Komische Oper Berlin, where he worked as an assistant to Yakov Kreizberg during the 1996-1997 season. The following year he was appointed kapellmeister there.
Jurowski left his Berlin post in 2001, the year he assumed music directorship of the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, remaining there through 2013. He was already busy (since 2000) as principal guest conductor of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna, a post he held for three seasons.
In 2003 Jurowski was appointed principal guest conductor of the London Philharmonic Orchestra and two years later began serving in the same capacity with the Russian National Orchestra. As of 2007, he was principal conductor of the LPO. His conductorship of the LPO has been extended twice, first to 2014 and then to 2018, and he was one of ten conductors to endorse and participate in a major outreach program designed to introduce classical music to students.
Jurowski's post as leader of the LPO has made him one of the most prolific conductors of the 2000s and 2010s. His recordings have focused on late Romantic repertory, by no means all of it Russian, and he has recorded music from Beethoven (the "Eroica" Symphony No. 3 in E flat major, Op. 55) to contemporary repertory. In the U.S., Jurowski has had recurring guest conductor slots with the Philadelphia Orchestra, and he has returned to Russia for conducting and recording engagements with the Russian National Orchestra and the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Russian Federation. In 2017 Jurowski, a resident of Berlin with his wife, Patricia, and two children, was named principal conductor of the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. ~ Robert Cummings & James Manheim
Vladimir Jurowski was born in Moscow on April 4, 1972. His father is famed conductor Michail Jurowski, his grandfather a composer also named Vladimir Jurowski. Vladimir's first serious music studies were in his teens at the Moscow Conservatory. The Jurowski family moved to Germany in 1990, where young Vladimir studied conducting with Rolf Reuter.
Jurowski made his first recording, Kancheli's cantata Exil, in 1994 (ECM Records) even before his official debut the following year. After his appearances at the Wexford Festival and Covent Garden he began conducting at the Komische Oper Berlin, where he worked as an assistant to Yakov Kreizberg during the 1996-1997 season. The following year he was appointed kapellmeister there.
Jurowski left his Berlin post in 2001, the year he assumed music directorship of the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, remaining there through 2013. He was already busy (since 2000) as principal guest conductor of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna, a post he held for three seasons.
In 2003 Jurowski was appointed principal guest conductor of the London Philharmonic Orchestra and two years later began serving in the same capacity with the Russian National Orchestra. As of 2007, he was principal conductor of the LPO. His conductorship of the LPO has been extended twice, first to 2014 and then to 2018, and he was one of ten conductors to endorse and participate in a major outreach program designed to introduce classical music to students.
Jurowski's post as leader of the LPO has made him one of the most prolific conductors of the 2000s and 2010s. His recordings have focused on late Romantic repertory, by no means all of it Russian, and he has recorded music from Beethoven (the "Eroica" Symphony No. 3 in E flat major, Op. 55) to contemporary repertory. In the U.S., Jurowski has had recurring guest conductor slots with the Philadelphia Orchestra, and he has returned to Russia for conducting and recording engagements with the Russian National Orchestra and the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Russian Federation. In 2017 Jurowski, a resident of Berlin with his wife, Patricia, and two children, was named principal conductor of the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. ~ Robert Cummings & James Manheim
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