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Forthcoming Classical New Recordings (not reissues)


A Lark Ascending

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Don't know much about Hilary Hahn - I just have her recording of the Jennifer Higdon concerto (think I'll play that next) - but have to admire a celebrity golden goose putting out a double CD like this. Most (if not all) are her own commissions:

Franghiz Ali-Zadeh (1947) – Impulse

Somei Satoh (1947) – Bifū
Du Yun (1978) – When a Tiger Meets a Rosa Rugosa
David Lang (1957) – Light Moving
Bun-Ching Lam (1954) – Solitude d’automne
Paul Moravec (1957) – Blue Fiddle
Antón García Abril (1933) – Third Sigh
Avner Dorman (1975) - Memory Games
David del Tredici (1937) – Farewell
Mason Bates (1977) – Ford’s Farm
Einojuhani Rautavaara (1928) – Whispering
Gillian Whitehead (1941) – Tōrua
Richard Barrett (1959) – Shade
Jennifer Higdon (1962) – Echo Dash
Christos Hatzis (1953) – Coming To
Jeff Myers (1977) – The Angry Birds of Kauai
Mark-Anthony Turnage (1960) – Hilary’s Hoedown
Valentin Silvestrov (1937) – Two Pieces
Kala Ramnath (1967) – Aalap and Tarana
Lera Auerbach (1973) – Speak, Memory
Tina Davidson (1952) – Blue Curve of the Earth
Elliott Sharp (1951) - Storm of the Eye
Michiru Oshima (1961) – Memories
James Newton Howard (1951) – 133… At Least
Nico Muhly (1981) – Two Voices
Søren Nils Eichberg (1973) – Levitation
Max Richter (1966) – Mercy
Edited by A Lark Ascending
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The Hahn has been out for a couple of months (I think it was released earlier in the US than in the rest of the world). Not worth being offended by your calling her "celebrity golden goose", I guess ... girl can play! And she's alive, too. ;)

Anyway, it's a fine release, but very dense - not stuff that makes an easy listen if you have a go at all of it - as these pieces tend to be rather all-encompaassing and it gets a bit much, needs to be split up in tranches (or actually if you take it at face value, one at a piece).

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For all those who were wondering what Mark Wigglesworth would couple with his last remaining Shostakovich Symphony (15) on BIS, to complete his series, the wait is finally over:

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Yes! Mark has treated us to the 1st. Again. Which he released in 2012. So well done to Mark and everybody at BIS!


and whoa a Sibelius cycle all-in-one from the estimable John Storgards

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I hate the direction of marketing for new "classical" music. It makes me question my interests instead of reinforcing them.

If you mean "theme" albums with supposedly pretty women on the cover, I agree. I don't ever want a "theme" anything; my idea of a women i want to see on the cover of a classical album is Lotte Lehmann.

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also, Hindemith & Ancerl >>>>>>>>

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Hillary Hahn is excellent, Chandos doing another Sibelius cycle under anyone's baton is ridiculous, even if it's mostly a souvenir for the Limeys etc & Chandos has been down that road before-- sometimes even covering ** themselves ** unnecessarily, like when Polyansky & Noseda both recorded Rachmaninov "The Miserly Knight" within a few years of each other. Nemo Jarvi's Chandos recording of this is pretty hot tho'--

Edited by MomsMobley
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Well, preparing someone for the camera is not so crazy. If you are selling the artist then it isn't optional to use an image, and yes the photographs of certain artists are significantly re-touched, but that is just the visual culture of the time. It is also done with the male artists but male purchasers probably absorb that unconsciously. In fact all our tastes are the product of marketing which began with the cult of the conductor in the 1930s. Adorno keeps mentioning this. Once you sell music by the name of the musician - jazz has rarely done anything else - then the image of the musician, in all senses, becomes part of the package. In fact it can be a good idea, from the point of view of repertoire, since an artist with an established name can present more unusual repertoire and is also in position to commission works. Which brings us to the brilliant Hahn's Schoenberg, which she toured and recorded, and this latest disk of commissions - a great idea to commission encores, actually, if you think about it.

Re. the Sibelius cycle - well, there are not so many, in fact. How many new ones this century, I wonder? Nothing wrong with documenting your work. Anyone interested can pay a few dollars and listen to it. It might be interesting. If it will sell, why not? I bet quite a few orchestras and conductors would like to get their Sibelius out, but few create the opportunity. Good for BBCPO that they are in a position to do it. Not just souvenirs, I don't think, but also brand and audience development. That's why so many orchestras have their own label (starting with LSO) and BBCPO have this exclusive Chandos deal. Lucky for BBCPO that they can step out of the marginal repertoire for a time. Only guessing, but as Rattle is doing the cycle with BPO we may also be getting another one on disk.

Edited by David Ayers
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dude got older but younger at the same time, crazy ;)

but:

Well, preparing someone for the camera is not so crazy. If you are selling the artist then it isn't optional to use an image, and yes the photographs of certain artists are significantly re-touched, but that is just the visual culture of the time. It is also done with the male artists but male purchasers probably absorb that unconsciously. In fact all our tastes are the product of marketing which began with the cult of the conductor in the 1930s. Adorno keeps mentioning this. Once you sell music by the name of the musician - jazz has rarely done anything else - then the image of the musician, in all senses, becomes part of the package. In fact it can be a good idea, from the point of view of repertoire, since an artist with an established name can present more unusual repertoire and is also in position to commission works. Which brings us to the brilliant Hahn's Schoenberg, which she toured and recorded, and this latest disk of commissions - a great idea to commission encores, actually, if you think about it.

very valid points, all :tup

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There's also this - judged on the disc from last year (sixth book of madrigals by Gesualdo) it ought to be glorious:

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Gesualdo: Responsoria (1611)
La Compagnia del Madrigale
(Glossa)

Also recently released:

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Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro
Musica Aeterna, Theodor Currentzis
(Sony Classical)

gets fine reviews ... but Kermes as countess? don't know if I need that ....

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To almost come back to the theme of the thread - except that this is a reissue - a very welcome return for this one:

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Not so much if this is the latter-day Juilliard, as I think it is. Robert Mann's hand had begun to lose its cunning, and Joel Krosnick is no Claus Adam.

Elliott Carter's String Quartets: discography (thanks to David Gable)

This discography includes all of the studio recordings and several recordings of live broadcasts that have been posted at various sites online.

I. Complete Studio Recordings

The Juilliard and Arditti String Quartets recorded complete cycles before Carter composed the fifth quartet. The Pacifica made an integral recording of all five quartets. (It would seem that the Juilliard since has recorded the Fifth Quartet.)

String Quartets 1 & 4

String Quartets 2 & 3

Arditti Quartet

Irvine Arditti & David Alberman, violins;

Levine Andrade, viola; Rohan de Saram, cello

Recorded June 1988

String Quartets 1 & 4, Et Cetera KTC 1065

String Quartets 2 & 3, Et Cetera KTC 1066

String Quartets 1-4

Juilliard Quartet

Robert Mann & Joel Smirnoff, violins;

Samuel Rhodes, viola; Joel Krosnick, cello

Recorded May 28-June 15, 1991

Sony S2K 47229

String Quartet no. 1 (1951)

String Quartet no. 5 (1995)

Pacifica Quartet

Simin Ganatra & Sibbi Bernhardsson, violins;

Masumi Per Rostad, viola; Brandon Vamos, cello

Recorded March 16-18, 2007 (no. 1); June 3-4, 2007

Naxos 8.559362, (P) 2008

String Quartet no. 2 (1959)

String Quartet no. 3 (1971)

String Quartet no. 4 (1985-86)

Pacifica Quartet

Simin Ganatra & Sibbi Bernhardsson, violins;

Masumi Per Rostad, viola; Brandon Vamos, cello

Recorded July 5-6, 2008 (no. 2); September 11-13, 2008 (no. 3);

September 24-25, 2008 (no. 4)

Naxos 8.559363, (P) 2009

II. Recordings of String Quartet no. 1

String Quartet no. 1 (1951)

Walden Quartet

Homer Schmitt & Bernard Goodman, violins;

John Garvey, viola; Robert Swenson, cello

Recorded February 2, 1955

Columbia ML 5104 (LP), (P) 1956

String Quartet no. 1 (1951)

[coupled with String Quartet no. 2]

Composers Quartet

Matthew Raimondi & Anahid Ajemian, violins;

Jean Dupouy, viola; Michael Rudiakov, cello

Recorded 21-23 April, 1970

Nonesuch H 71249 (LP), (P) 1970

CD reissues: Nonesuch 9 71249-2; Nonesuch 510893-2

III. Recordings of String Quartet no. 2

String Quartet no. 2 (1959)

Juilliard Quartet

Robert Mann & Isidore Cohen, violins;

Raphael Hillyer, viola; Claus Adam, cello

Recorded October 27 & 31, 1960

RCA LM 2481 (monaural LP) & LSC 2481 (stereo LP)

CD reissue: Testament SBT 1374

String Quartet no. 2 (1959)

[coupled with String Quartet no. 3]

The Juilliard String Quartet

Robert Mann & Earl Carlyss, violins;

Raphael Hillyer, viola; Claus Adam, cello

Recorded February 19, 1969

Columbia M 32738 (LP), (P) 1974

String Quartet no. 2 (1959)

[coupled with String Quartet no. 1]

Composers Quartet

Matthew Raimondi & Anahid Ajemian, violins;

Jean Dupouy, viola; Michael Rudiakov, cello

Recorded 21-23 April, 1970

Nonesuch H 71249 (LP), (P) 1970

CD reissues: Nonesuch 9 71249-2; Nonesuch 510893-2

String Quartet no. 2 (1959)

Quatuor Debussy

Christophe Collette & Dominique Lonca, violins

Vincent Deprecq, viola

Yannick Callier, 'cello

Live performance, Paris, February, 1994

String Quartet no. 2 (1959)

The Juilliard String Quartet

Joel Smirnoff & Ronald Copes, violins

Samuel Rhodes, viola

Joel Krosnick, 'cello

Live performance, Paris, Cité de la Musique, January 22, 2008

Troisième Biennale de Quatuors à cordes

IV. Recordings of String Quartet no. 3

String Quartet no. 3 (1971)

[coupled with String Quartet no. 2]

The Juilliard String Quartet

Duo I: Earl Carlyss, violin; Claus Adam, cello

Duo II : Robert Mann, violin; Samuel Rhodes, viola

Recorded November 19-21, 1973

Columbia M 32738 (LP), (P) 1974

String Quartet no. 3 (1971)

Arditti Quartet

Irvine Arditti & Levine Andrade, violins;

Lennnox MacKenzie, viola

Rohan de Saram, cello

Recorded February 1982

[british] RCA Red Seal RS 9006 (LP)

String Quartet no. 3 (1971)

Composers Quartet

Matthew Raimondi & Anahid Ajemian, violins;

Jean Dane, viola; Mark Shuman, cello

Musical Heritage Society MHS 4876 (LP), (P) 1983

String Quartet no. 3 (1971)

Arditti Quartet

Irvine Arditti & David Alberman, violins;

Garth Knox, viola

Rohan de Saram, cello

Live performance, Wien Modern, 4 November 1990

Schubert-Saal, Wiener Konzerthaus

String Quartet no. 3 (1971)

Arditti String Quartet

Irvine Arditti & Ashot Sarkissjan, violins

Ralf Ehlers, viola

Lukas Fels, cello

Live performance, Paris, Cité de la Musique, January 25, 2008

Troisième Biennale de Quatuors à cordes

V. Recordings of String Quartet no. 4

Elliott Carter: String Quartet no. 4 (1985-1986)

Composers Quartet

Matthew Raimondi & Anahid Ajemian, violinists

Jean Dane, violist

Mark Shuman, 'cellist

New York première, December 12, 1986

Merkin Concert Hall

String Quartet no. 4 (1985-86)

Composers Quartet

Matthew Raimondi & Anahid Ajemian, violins;

Maureen Gallagher, viola; Mark Shuman, cello

Recorded 1988

Music & Arts CD-606, (P) 1990

String Quartet no. 4 (1985-86)

Arditti String Quartet

Irvine Arditti et Ashot Sarkissjan, violons

Ralf Ehlers, alto

Lukas Fels, violoncelle

Live performance, Paris, Cité de la Musique, January 26, 2008

Troisième Biennale de Quatuors à cordes

String Quartet no. 4 (1985-86)

Quatuor Arditti

Concert donné le 26 janvier 2008, Cité de la Musique à Paris

dans le cadre de la Troisième Biennale de Quatuors à cordes

VI. Recordings of String Quartet no. 5

String Quartet no. 5 (1995)

Arditti Quartet

Irvine Arditti & Graeme Jennings, violins;

Garth Knox, viola; Rohan de Saram, cello

Recorded 15-19 July 1996

Disques Montaigne CD

String Quartet no. 5 (1995)

Arditti String Quartet

Irvine Arditti & Graeme Jennings, violins

Garth Knox, viola

Rohan de Saram, cello

Live performance, Amsterdam, June 9, 1996

String Quartet no. 5 (1995)

Quatuor Amati

Sebastian Hamann et Katarzyna Nawrotek, violons

Nicolas Corti, alto Claudius Hermann, violoncelle

Live performance, Paris, Cité de la Musique, January 27, 2008

Troisième Biennale de Quatuors à cordes

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Carter mavens I trust say that the best versions of 1 and 2 are by the Composers Quartet. Not sure if they feel the same about 3 and 4 by a later version of that ensemble. I have the Arditti and have recently ordered the Composers' 1 and 2 and the Pacifica set. A/B comparison on Spotify between the Composers and Pacifica in No. 1 inclines me toward the Composers, but the Pacifica sure isn't chopped liver, just a bit less ... incisive, I suppose. The Composers play the piece as if they had -- that's right -- composed it.

BTW, the Composers' second violinist is the wife of George Avakian:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anahid_Ajemian

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  • 3 weeks later...

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http://www.mdt.co.uk/the-garden-of-mr-rameau-les-arts-florissants-william-christie.html

A mixture of Rameau and contemporaries sung by young singer nurtured by LAF.

Will have to check there's not too much overlap with the plethora of Rameau discs that keep springing up in the garden of my living room.

Good lord. Have you seen Mr Christie's garden!

http://www.festivalchezwilliamchristie.vendee.fr/Les-Jardins-de-William-Christie-a-Thire/Phototheque-des-Jardins-et-du-Festival-2012

Edited by A Lark Ascending
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  • 4 weeks later...

I've learned that the Scriabin cycle toured by Gergiev and LSO will be issued on LSO Live later this year. His next and final season with LSO will concentrate on staples - Prokofiev, Rachmaninov, Shostakovich - so this Scriabin has been the last of his programming adventures in London, at least for now. Did we need *all* of Scriabin's symphonies? Well, worth giving the cycle a go and it does tell a story.

I know folks here don't much warm to Gergiev, but really he is one of the most interesting around and there is no substitute for following a conductor and orchestra in real time, season after season, over an entire appointment span. That will be 10 years, or 11 if we count the Prokofiev cycle that preceded his appointment. Good run and I'm not sure if there would have been anywhere more interesting to be in the last ten years.

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