Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Great Recordings (2022)
Artist: Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Carlo Maria Giulini, Claudio Abbado, Pierre Boulez, Daniel Barenboim, James Levine
Title: Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Great Recordings
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: UMG Recordings, Inc.
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 10:33:57
Total Size: 2.53 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Chicago Symphony Orchestra - Great Recordings
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: UMG Recordings, Inc.
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 10:33:57
Total Size: 2.53 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Promenade I
02. The Tuileries Gardens
03. Ballet Of The Chickens In Their Shells
04. The Market-place At Limoges
05. 5b. Songe d'une nuit du Sabbat - Dies irae
06. 3. Gavotta (Non troppo allegro)
07. Fugue
08. 3. Aeterna fac
09. IV. Von den Freuden und Leidenschaften
10. Agitato: Again, the Frightened Tramps Discuss How to Eliminate the Mandarin
11. V. Comodo
12. Gnomus
13. Bydlo
14. Samuel Goldenberg And Schmuyle
15. The Catacombs (Sepulchrum romanum)
16. Cum mortuis in lingua mortua
17. 5c. Songe d'une nuit du Sabbat - Ronde du Sabbat
18. III. Noces de Kijé
19. IV. Troïka
20. 2. Te ergo
21. I. Einleitung, oder Sonnenaufgang
22. III. Von der großen Sehnsucht
23. V. Das Grablied
24. Allegro: The Girl Sinks Down to Embrace Him
25. Sempre vivo: The Tramps Leap Out
26. Più mosso - Vivo - She Resists No Longer - They Embrace.
27. II. Allegro molto
28. III. Allegro vivace
29. IV. Molto tranquillo
30. I. An Evening In The Village
31. II. Bear Melody
32. III. Melody
33. IV. Slightly Tipsy
34. V. Swineherd's Dance
35. No.8 in G minor (Presto)
36. No.1 in C (Presto)
37. The Old Castle
38. The Hut On Fowl's Legs (Baba-Yaga)
39. The Great Gate Of Kiev
40. 2. Un bal (Valse: Allegro non troppo)
41. 4. Marche au supplice (Allegretto non troppo)
42. 5a. Songe d'une nuit du Sabbat - Larghetto - Allegro
43. II. Kräftig bewegt
44. 4. "Urlicht". Sehr feierlich, aber schlicht "O Röschen rot!"
45. I. The Adoration of Veless and Ala
46. II. The Enemy God and the Dance of the Spirits of Darkness
47. III. Night
48. IV. The Glorious Departure of Lolly and the Sun's Procession
49. I. Naissance de Kijé
50. II. Romance
51. V. Enterrement de Kijé
52. II. Andante
53. III. Menuetto. Allegro vivace
54. IV. Allegro
55. 3. Scherzo (Molto vivace)
56. 1. Allegro
57. 2. Larghetto
58. 4. Finale (Vivace)
59. 3. Allegretto grazioso - Molto vivace
60. Catfish Row
61. Porgy Sings
62. Hurricane
63. Good Morning, Brother (Sistuh)
64. III. Scherzo. Presto - Trio.
65. 3. Scherzo. Lebhaft
66. 1. Te Deum laudamus
67. 4. Salvum fac
68. 5. In te, Domine, speravi
69. 3. Scherzo (Ziemlich schnell)
70. Bruckner: Psalm 150 for Soprano, Chorus and Orchestra
71. 3. Scherzo: Bewegt
72. 3. Scherzo. Nicht schnell - Trio. Langsam
73. IIa. Allegro moderato - Presto - Allegro moderato
74. III. Maestoso - Allegro
75. Varèse: Ionisation
76. II. Kräftig bewegt
77. I. Allegro
78. II. Andante
79. II. Von den Hinterweltlern
80. VI. Von der Wissenschaft
81. VII. Der Genesende
82. VIII. Das Tanzlied - Das Nachtlied
83. IX. Das Nachtwandlerlied
84. Allegro: Introduction
85. Moderato: First Decoy Game
86. Second Decoy Game
87. Maestoso: The Mandarin Enters
88. Adagio: Suddenly The Mandarin's Head Appears
89. I. Andante tranquillo
90. II. Allegro
91. III. Adagio
92. IV. Allegro molto
93. I. Moderato
94. VI. Finale (Allegro)
95. In voller Blüte
96. Dorftanz
97. I. Allegro non troppo
98. II. Molto adagio
99. III. Allegro assai
100. 1. Mars, The Bringer Of War
101. 2. Venus, The Bringer Of Peace
102. 3. Mercury, The Winged Messenger
103. 4. Jupiter, The Bringer Of Jollity
104. 5. Saturn, The Bringer Of Old Age
105. 6. Uranus, The Magician
106. 7. Neptune, The Mystic
107. I. Preludio
108. II. Scherzo: Allegro
109. III. Intermezzo: Moderato
110. IV. Marcia funebre: Maestoso
111. I. Introduzione (Andante non troppo - Allegro vivace)
112. II. Allegro - Meno mosso (Live)
113. Promenade
114. Promenade
115. Promenade
116. Prologue
117. Pastoral - The Day's Grown Old
118. Nocturne - The Splendour Falls On Castle Walls
119. Elegy - O Rose, Thou Art Sick
120. Dirge - This Ae Nighte
121. Hymn - Queen And Huntress Chaste And Fair
122. Sonnet - O Soft Embalmer Of The Still Midnight
123. Epilogue
124. III. Lustiges Zusammensein der Landleute. Allegro
125. IV. Gewitter, Sturm. Allegro
126. 1. Allegro moderato - Allegro
127. 2. Andante
128. 3. Allegro molto
129. 1. Allegro
130. 3. Allegro molto
131. One Grotesque - Presto
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is one of the three most acclaimed orchestras in America and one of the few serious rivals the New York Philharmonic has had in its long history. Curiously, the histories of the two orchestras are somewhat intermingled.
Theodore Thomas had organized and led orchestras in New York during the 1870s and 1880s, competing with the Philharmonic Society of New York for audiences, soloists, and American premieres of works. His orchestra did very well as a major rival to the orchestra that would become the New York Philharmonic. The orchestra visited Chicago during several seasons, and it was intended that he would be music director of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in that city. However, in 1891 he abandoned New York entirely in favor of Chicago and arrived as the first conductor of what was then called the Chicago Orchestra. Thomas held that position until his death in 1905. In his honor, the Chicago Orchestra changed its name to the Theodore Thomas Orchestra in 1906. Six years later, the orchestra was renamed the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
It was under the leadership of Thomas' assistant, Frederick Stock, that the Chicago Symphony's modern reputation was formed. From 1905 until his death in 1942, Stock led the orchestra in decades of programs that featured not only the established classics but the American premieres of many post-romantic works. Additionally, Stock raised the level of performing and the financial status of his players and established the orchestra in a major teaching role for aspiring musicians in its home city. Its recordings were relatively few in number, because the long-playing record -- central to the appreciation of classical music -- had not yet been invented, which means there is little evidence by which modern listeners can judge the work of the orchestra during this period, but some of the recordings from that era were among the best in the world at the time. Among the few available from the period on major labels are the Beethoven Piano Concertos Nos. 4 and 5 on the BMG label, featuring soloist Arthur Schnabel with Stock conducting.
Stock's death in 1942 precipitated a difficult decade for the orchestra. Apart from the general complications of World War II, it had a great deal of trouble finding acceptable leadership. Désiré Defauw lasted for only four years, from 1943 until 1947, and Artur Rodzinski (best known for his leadership of the New York Philharmonic) was in the job for only one year (1947-1948). Rafael Kubelik served three years as music director from 1950 until 1953, but his gentlemanly manner and decidedly modern, European-centered taste in music proved unsuited to the players, critics, and management -- although it was under Kubelik that the orchestra made its first successful modern recordings, for the Mercury label, many of which were reissued in the mid-'90s.
Fritz Reiner became the music director of the CSO in 1953, beginning the modern renaissance and blossoming of the orchestra. Under Reiner, the orchestra's playing sharpened and tightened, achieving a clean, precise, yet rich sound that made it one of the most popular orchestras in the United States. The CSO under Reiner became established once and for all as an international-level orchestra of the first order, rivaling the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Boston Symphony. Moreover, Reiner's arrival with the orchestra coincided with its move to RCA Victor, which, in 1954, was beginning to experiment with stereo recording. With Reiner as conductor, these "Living Stereo" recordings -- characterized by vivid textures, sharp stereo separation, and microphone placement that gave the impact of a live performance -- became some of the best-selling classical albums of all time and have since been reissued numerous times on compact disc to new acclaim from critics and listeners, more than a generation removed from their original era.
Reiner's death in 1963 led to another interregnum period, during which conductor Jean Martinon led the orchestra (1963-1968). In 1969, Sir Georg Solti joined the orchestra as its music director. Under Solti, the orchestra's national and international reputations soared, as did its record sales. Reiner had begun the process of cultivating the burgeoning audience for late romantic composers such as Mahler, but it was with Solti that the works of Mahler and Bruckner became standard fare in the orchestra's programs, right alongside those of Beethoven and Mozart. The playing standard achieved during Solti's tenure, in concert and recordings, was the highest in the history of the orchestra. Additionally, the orchestra under Solti began a quarter-century relationship with London Records that resulted in some of the best-sounding recordings of the era. Solti's approach to performance was very flamboyant, yet intensely serious -- even his performances of lighter opera and concert overtures strike a perfect balance between broad gestures and finely wrought detail, attributes that have made him perhaps the most admired conductor of a major American orchestra, if not the most famous (Leonard Bernstein inevitably got more headlines during the 1960s, especially with his knack for publicity). Solti was both popular and respected, and his tenure with the CSO coincided with his becoming the winner of the greatest number of Grammy Awards of any musician in history (he also recorded with orchestras in London and Vienna).
Daniel Barenboim succeeded Solti and served as music director from 1991 until 2006, with Solti remaining in the post of music director emeritus. Bernard Haitink was named the orchestra's first principal conductor, holding this position from 2006 through 2010. Riccardo Muti was chosen as the tenth music director in the orchestra's history in 2010.
As with other major American orchestras, the CSO found itself competing with its own history, especially where recordings are concerned. Reissues of its work under Reiner and Solti continue to sell well and are comparable or superior to the orchestra's current recordings in sound and interpretive detail. Even the early-1950s recordings under Kubelik were reissued by Mercury in the late 1990s, while RCA-BMG and some specialty collector's labels have re-released the recordings under Stock. The recordings of Solti and Reiner leading the CSO are uniformly excellent, and virtually all of them can be recommended. In 2019, the orchestra was featured on the album Riccardo Muti conducts Italian Masterworks. ~ Bruce Eder
Theodore Thomas had organized and led orchestras in New York during the 1870s and 1880s, competing with the Philharmonic Society of New York for audiences, soloists, and American premieres of works. His orchestra did very well as a major rival to the orchestra that would become the New York Philharmonic. The orchestra visited Chicago during several seasons, and it was intended that he would be music director of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in that city. However, in 1891 he abandoned New York entirely in favor of Chicago and arrived as the first conductor of what was then called the Chicago Orchestra. Thomas held that position until his death in 1905. In his honor, the Chicago Orchestra changed its name to the Theodore Thomas Orchestra in 1906. Six years later, the orchestra was renamed the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
It was under the leadership of Thomas' assistant, Frederick Stock, that the Chicago Symphony's modern reputation was formed. From 1905 until his death in 1942, Stock led the orchestra in decades of programs that featured not only the established classics but the American premieres of many post-romantic works. Additionally, Stock raised the level of performing and the financial status of his players and established the orchestra in a major teaching role for aspiring musicians in its home city. Its recordings were relatively few in number, because the long-playing record -- central to the appreciation of classical music -- had not yet been invented, which means there is little evidence by which modern listeners can judge the work of the orchestra during this period, but some of the recordings from that era were among the best in the world at the time. Among the few available from the period on major labels are the Beethoven Piano Concertos Nos. 4 and 5 on the BMG label, featuring soloist Arthur Schnabel with Stock conducting.
Stock's death in 1942 precipitated a difficult decade for the orchestra. Apart from the general complications of World War II, it had a great deal of trouble finding acceptable leadership. Désiré Defauw lasted for only four years, from 1943 until 1947, and Artur Rodzinski (best known for his leadership of the New York Philharmonic) was in the job for only one year (1947-1948). Rafael Kubelik served three years as music director from 1950 until 1953, but his gentlemanly manner and decidedly modern, European-centered taste in music proved unsuited to the players, critics, and management -- although it was under Kubelik that the orchestra made its first successful modern recordings, for the Mercury label, many of which were reissued in the mid-'90s.
Fritz Reiner became the music director of the CSO in 1953, beginning the modern renaissance and blossoming of the orchestra. Under Reiner, the orchestra's playing sharpened and tightened, achieving a clean, precise, yet rich sound that made it one of the most popular orchestras in the United States. The CSO under Reiner became established once and for all as an international-level orchestra of the first order, rivaling the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Boston Symphony. Moreover, Reiner's arrival with the orchestra coincided with its move to RCA Victor, which, in 1954, was beginning to experiment with stereo recording. With Reiner as conductor, these "Living Stereo" recordings -- characterized by vivid textures, sharp stereo separation, and microphone placement that gave the impact of a live performance -- became some of the best-selling classical albums of all time and have since been reissued numerous times on compact disc to new acclaim from critics and listeners, more than a generation removed from their original era.
Reiner's death in 1963 led to another interregnum period, during which conductor Jean Martinon led the orchestra (1963-1968). In 1969, Sir Georg Solti joined the orchestra as its music director. Under Solti, the orchestra's national and international reputations soared, as did its record sales. Reiner had begun the process of cultivating the burgeoning audience for late romantic composers such as Mahler, but it was with Solti that the works of Mahler and Bruckner became standard fare in the orchestra's programs, right alongside those of Beethoven and Mozart. The playing standard achieved during Solti's tenure, in concert and recordings, was the highest in the history of the orchestra. Additionally, the orchestra under Solti began a quarter-century relationship with London Records that resulted in some of the best-sounding recordings of the era. Solti's approach to performance was very flamboyant, yet intensely serious -- even his performances of lighter opera and concert overtures strike a perfect balance between broad gestures and finely wrought detail, attributes that have made him perhaps the most admired conductor of a major American orchestra, if not the most famous (Leonard Bernstein inevitably got more headlines during the 1960s, especially with his knack for publicity). Solti was both popular and respected, and his tenure with the CSO coincided with his becoming the winner of the greatest number of Grammy Awards of any musician in history (he also recorded with orchestras in London and Vienna).
Daniel Barenboim succeeded Solti and served as music director from 1991 until 2006, with Solti remaining in the post of music director emeritus. Bernard Haitink was named the orchestra's first principal conductor, holding this position from 2006 through 2010. Riccardo Muti was chosen as the tenth music director in the orchestra's history in 2010.
As with other major American orchestras, the CSO found itself competing with its own history, especially where recordings are concerned. Reissues of its work under Reiner and Solti continue to sell well and are comparable or superior to the orchestra's current recordings in sound and interpretive detail. Even the early-1950s recordings under Kubelik were reissued by Mercury in the late 1990s, while RCA-BMG and some specialty collector's labels have re-released the recordings under Stock. The recordings of Solti and Reiner leading the CSO are uniformly excellent, and virtually all of them can be recommended. In 2019, the orchestra was featured on the album Riccardo Muti conducts Italian Masterworks. ~ Bruce Eder