20th Century Portraits


20th Century Portraits
Lorin Maazel
Label
DG
Catalogue No.
4808477
Barcode
00028948084777
Format
2-CD
About

Some of Lorin Maazel’s first recordings were made for Deutsche Grammophon when he was merely 27. This collection presents vivid performances of three great twentieth-century ballet scores, all infused with the folk rhythms of their respective composers’ native lands – Falla’s Andalusia and Stravinsky’s Russia. Both composers also exploited the most sophisticated orchestral textures available to the late Romantics, creating virtuoso showpieces of kaleidoscopic variety. They are interpreted here by the young Maazel and his Berlin Radio Orchestra, in recordings whose orchestral splendor astounds the ear today just as the original releases dazzled critics and the public decades ago. ‘To achieve this level of fluency – to say nothing of the sheer élan and idiomatic awareness in the Berlin orchestra’s playing – Maazel clearly rehearsed the music with astonishing vigour and conducted it inspiringly. Even to our ears now, the way he confronts us with the pounding force of Stravinsky’s ostinatos is invigorating,’ writes Richard Morrison. Completing his survey of music from the early part of the twentieth century, recorded for DG with orchestras from Berlin, are recordings of music by Bartók made in 1979 and released internationally on CD for the first time.

TRACK LISTING / ARTISTS

MANUEL DE FALLA
El amor brujo
Grace Bumbry,
mezzo-soprano

Dances from El sombrero de tres picos

IGOR STRAVINSKY
L’Oiseau de feu – Suite (1919 version)
Le chant du rossignol

Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Lorin Maazel

BÉLA BARTÓK
Two Pictures, Op. 10 (Sz. 46)*
Concerto for Orchestra, Sz. 116*

Berliner Philharmoniker
Lorin Maazel

*FIRST INTERNATIONAL RELEASE ON CD

Recording information

Executive Producers: Prof. Elsa Schiller (Stravinsky); Otto Gerdes (Falla); Günther Breest (Bartók)
Recording Producers: Wolfgang Lohse (Stravinsky); Karl Faust (Falla); Wolfgang Stengel (Bartók)
Recording Engineers: Werner Wolf (Stravinsky); Günter Hermanns (Falla); Klaus Scheibe (Bartók)
Recording Location: Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin, Germany, November 1957 (Stravinsky), June 1965 (Falla), 19–20 December 1979 (Bartók)

Reviews

‘a good orchestra, with excellent players and admirable cohesion, plenty of imagination, warm recording; and by far the best singer this ballet has yet had on disc. Grace Bumbry has not only a rich, well-managed voice but a true understanding of the style (El amor brujo) … exuberance of spirit, splendid playing, with great finesse of tonal gradations and first rate attack in the farruca; excellent balance (El sombrero de tres picos)’ Gramophone (Falla)

‘these recordings capture a fearless, even brash talent … the edge-of-your-seat results end up as some of the most exciting records he would ever make’ Star Ledger (Falla, Stravinsky)

‘there is some bewitching playing here … in the kaleidoscopic, entrancing Song of the Nightingale. The recording could hardly be bettered’ Gramophone (Stravinsky)

‘plenty of atmosphere and good perspective. Detail is well defined and there is a wide frequency response … As a recording the work has never been better served […] a Bartók performance which has warmth as well as bite … the DG sound for the whole record is as full and brilliant as one could want’ Gramophone (Bartók)