Reinbert de Leeuw, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra & Edo de Waart - Der Nächtliche Wanderer | Abschied (2023) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Reinbert de Leeuw, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Edo de Waart
Title: Der Nächtliche Wanderer | Abschied
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Challenge Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 68:34
Total Size: 251 / 594 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Der Nächtliche Wanderer | Abschied
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Challenge Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 68:34
Total Size: 251 / 594 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Der nächtliche Wanderer (46:03)
2. Abschied (22:33)
De Leeuw may have started out as a composer, but that aspect receded into the background in the 1970s. He became more and more a performer of music of the major composers our own era. In 1974, he seemed to give up composing altogether: the title of his compact, stormy orchestral work Abschied, from that year, says what needs to be said on that front.
After four decades, Der nächtliche Wanderer was the first orchestral work by De Leeuw since Abschied. The stormy, compact nature of his first orchestral work gave way here to an enormous, dramatic structure, suffused with resonant memories. Der nächtliche Wanderer is named after the short poem of the same title by Friedrich Hölderlin. It crosses every boundary of pretention: over 50 minutes of music in a single movement, for large orchestra with another orchestra off-stage plus played and spoken fragments on tape. Der nächtliche Wanderer is an extreme work in every respect. Its structure and language are complex, but so is its orchestration: with musicians who play in the wings (in a fernorchester, à la Mahler) and with recordings that sound like shreds of recollection over the orchestra.
After four decades, Der nächtliche Wanderer was the first orchestral work by De Leeuw since Abschied. The stormy, compact nature of his first orchestral work gave way here to an enormous, dramatic structure, suffused with resonant memories. Der nächtliche Wanderer is named after the short poem of the same title by Friedrich Hölderlin. It crosses every boundary of pretention: over 50 minutes of music in a single movement, for large orchestra with another orchestra off-stage plus played and spoken fragments on tape. Der nächtliche Wanderer is an extreme work in every respect. Its structure and language are complex, but so is its orchestration: with musicians who play in the wings (in a fernorchester, à la Mahler) and with recordings that sound like shreds of recollection over the orchestra.