Michael Collins, Tasmin Little, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Edward Gardner - Lutoslawski Orchestral Works IV (2013) [Hi-Res]

  • 01 Nov, 10:17
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Artist:
Title: Lutoslawski Orchestral Works IV
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Chandos
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 01:10:59
Total Size: 291 / 799 mb
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Tracklist

01. Symphony No. 1: I. Allegro giusto
02. Symphony No. 1: II. Poco adagio
03. Symphony No. 1: III. Allegretto misterioso
04. Symphony No. 1: IV. Allegro vivace
05. Partita (Version for Violin & Orchestra): I. Allegro giusto
06. Partita (Version for Violin & Orchestra): II. Ad libitum
07. Partita (Version for Violin & Orchestra): III. Largo
08. Partita (Version for Violin & Orchestra): IV. Ad libitum
09. Partita (Version for Violin & Orchestra): V. Presto
10. Chain II: I. Ad libitum
11. Chain II: II. A battuta
12. Chain II: III. Ad libitum
13. Chain II: IV. A battuta - Ad libitum - A battuta
14. Dance Preludes: No. 1, Allegro molto
15. Dance Preludes: No. 2, Andantino
16. Dance Preludes: No. 3, Allegro giocoso
17. Dance Preludes: No. 4, Andante
18. Dance Preludes: No. 5, Allegro molto

Michael Collins, Tasmin Little, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Edward Gardner - Lutoslawski Orchestral Works IV (2013) [Hi-Res]


This is the fifth and now final volume in our survey of orchestral works by the Polish composer Witold Lutosławski. Gramophone wrote of a previous volume in the series (CHSA5106) that it ‘offers a broad view of Lutosławski’s creative profile, which the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Edward Gardner fleshes out with playing that is as polished as it is animated, and alert to the individuality of Lutosławski’s musical vocabulary and mode of expression’.

Lutosławski wrote his Symphony No. 1 between 1941 and 1947, but interestingly it does not display any obvious signs of his trying to come to terms with the ordeal that befell his people. Quite the opposite, in fact. Lutosławski himself described the symphony as bright and cheerful, ‘because that was the idea of the composition, which was conceived in the period of independence before the war, but brought into being during the terrible wartime and in far from idyllic post-war years’. At the time, one Polish colleague went so far as to call it ‘fauvist’, so wild and vibrant did it appear to the audiences at its first performance in April 1948.

Lutosławski was a meticulous collector of folk materials in the first half of the 1950s, but for him, Dance Preludes was a ‘farewell to folklore’, even though he privately still explored folk tunes for several more years. Here the orchestra and conductor are joined by the clarinettist Michael Collins, an exclusive Chandos artist.

As his career developed in the more open environment that emerged after the ‘socialist-realist’ period, Lutosławski began to receive international recognition, and with the Partita (1984, orchestrated 1988), for violin and orchestra, he presented a newly relaxed, more melodic compositional style to the public. The soloist is the exclusive Chandos artist Tasmin Little.

Chain 2 (1984 – 85) was premiered by Anne-Sophie Mutter on 31 January 1986 with Collegium Musicum, conducted by Paul Sacher to whom it was dedicated. On this recording Tasmin Little leads the orchestra through a succession of ideas, much as the soloist had done in the ‘Episodes’ movement of the Cello Concerto (recorded on CHSA5106 with Paul Watkins).