Enrique Bátiz - Respighi: Symphonic Poems (1991) CD-Rip

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Artist:
Title: Respighi: Symphonic Poems
Year Of Release: 1991
Label: Naxos
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 61:01
Total Size: 307 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936)

Roman Festivals
1. Circus Games 4:51
2. The Jubilee 8:00
3. Harvest Festivals In October 7:05
4. Epiphany 5:20
Fountains Of Rome
5. The Fountain Of Valle Giulia At Dawn 4:35
6. The Triton Fountain In The Morning 2:43
7. The Trevi Fountain At Mid-Day 3:31
8. The Villa Medici Fountain At Sunset 5:48
Pines Of Rome
9. The Pines Of The Villa Borghese 2:40
10. Pines Near A Catacomb 5:28
11. The Pines Of The Janiculum 6:24
12. The Pines Of The Appian Way 4:15

Performers:
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Enrique Bátiz – conductor

This Naxos disc is an extraordinary bargain; it would be recommendable at full price; in the super-bargain area it's unbeatable. It has such excitement and verve that you can accept an extra degree of brazen extroversion, indeed revel in it. In Roman Festivals the opening 'Circuses' is immensely spectacular, its character in the unfettered gladiatorial tradition of the Coliseum: the trumpets and drums are quite thrilling. The gossamer opening of 'The Jubilee' leads to the most dramatic climax. In the 'October Festival' the strings play their Latin soliloquy very exotically for Bátiz. The closing section brings a gentle mandolin serenade. The great clamour of the Epiphany celebrations which follow unleashes a riotous mêlée from the RPO, which sounds as if it's enjoying itself hugely, and the obvious affinity with the final fairground scene of Petrushka is all the more striking when the strings have that bit more bite.
The Pines and Fountains are also very fine. When the unison horns signal the turning on of the Triton Fountain, and the cascade splashes through the orchestra, the RPO unleashes a real flood. Yet the lovely, radiant evocation of the central movements of The Pines, and the sensuous Italian light of the sunset at the Villa Medici, are most sensitively realised by the RPO, and at the very beginning of the finale, 'The Pines of the Appian Way', the ever present sound, with its growling bass clarinet, gives a sinister implication of the advancing Roman might.


Enrique Bátiz - Respighi: Symphonic Poems (1991) CD-Rip