Last year we offered an extensive tribute to the genius of Gershwin, and another - a few months later - to the compelling art of avant-garde Masters like Carter and Feldman. Yet, American music has a lot more to offer, having been, undeniably, one of the most fertile breeding ground for a variety of styles and movements both in the classical and popular repertoire over the last century.
Today, we have assembled a collection of some of the greatest and most diverse personalities of the 20th Century's North American output, which we can fittingly refer to as "The Romantics".
The extraordinary composers who brought new lifeblood into the great European symphonic tradition are presented here. The likes of Copland, Bernstein, Barber, Joplin, Grofé, or, years later, Bolcom, Adams, Corigliano and - to a certain extent - Glass, plus pure visionaries like Charles Ives or French born Edgard Varèse.
Their immortal greatest works are all available here in one single post, including some "lighter" yet poignant samples of the Great American Songbook (Kern, Bernstein, Arlen, van Heusen, Ellington) and the ever mesmerising movies scores by a great master like Bernard Herrmann...
John Adams
Harmonielehre
San Francisco Symphony
Edo de Waart
Nonesuch 79115-2 (1985)
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10/26/2014
3/15/2013
"Lasting Encounter" with Sergej Rachmaninov # 1
The last true voice of Romanticism, Rachmaninov has a special place in our hearts.
His art has always been popular, and over the last decades has finally earned the consideration it deserves amongst musicologists and historians as well.
We are going to present a handful of classic and rare recordings of his main repertoire in two posts, starting with his symphonic masterpieces and later concentrating on his renowned 4 Piano Concertos.
So, let's start by diving into the sweeping themes of Symphony No. 2, the haunting melodies of the amazing Symphonic Dances, the dense and exhilarating harmonies of his cantata The Bells, the amazing writing of his ravishing Sonata No. 2, encompassing all of the technical skills we can find in Rachmaninov's celebrated piano literature - sometimes fiendishly virtuosic, but always deeply human and genuinely touching.
Sergej Rachmaninov
Symphony No. 2 Op. 27 in E Minor
La Mer et les Mouettes (Etude-Tableau Op. 39 No. 2 Orch. Respighi)
Vocalise Op. 34 No. 14
Oregon Symphony
James DePreist
Delos 3071 - 1987
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His art has always been popular, and over the last decades has finally earned the consideration it deserves amongst musicologists and historians as well.
We are going to present a handful of classic and rare recordings of his main repertoire in two posts, starting with his symphonic masterpieces and later concentrating on his renowned 4 Piano Concertos.
So, let's start by diving into the sweeping themes of Symphony No. 2, the haunting melodies of the amazing Symphonic Dances, the dense and exhilarating harmonies of his cantata The Bells, the amazing writing of his ravishing Sonata No. 2, encompassing all of the technical skills we can find in Rachmaninov's celebrated piano literature - sometimes fiendishly virtuosic, but always deeply human and genuinely touching.
Sergej Rachmaninov
Symphony No. 2 Op. 27 in E Minor
La Mer et les Mouettes (Etude-Tableau Op. 39 No. 2 Orch. Respighi)
Vocalise Op. 34 No. 14
Oregon Symphony
James DePreist
Delos 3071 - 1987
READ MORE...
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