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Stravinsky: Les Noces, Mass / Leonard Bernstein, English Bach Festival Orchestra
Stravinsky, Bernstein, English Bach Festival
Stravinsky: Les Noces, Mass / Leonard Bernstein, English Bach Festival Orchestra
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Les Noces is a screaming, shrieking, flat-out masterpiece. Leonard Bernstein himself has referred to it as Stravinsky's greatest work, and listening to this incendiary performance, it's awfully hard to disagree. Scored ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Stravinsky, Bernstein, English Bach Festival
Title: Stravinsky: Les Noces, Mass / Leonard Bernstein, English Bach Festival Orchestra
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Dg Imports
Release Date: 10/25/1990
Album Type: Import
Genre: Classical
Styles: Opera & Classical Vocal, Ballets & Dances, Ballets, Historical Periods, Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 028942325128

Synopsis

Amazon.com essential recording
Les Noces is a screaming, shrieking, flat-out masterpiece. Leonard Bernstein himself has referred to it as Stravinsky's greatest work, and listening to this incendiary performance, it's awfully hard to disagree. Scored for voices, four pianos, and percussion, the work provided the inspiration for the entire career of Orff (of Carmina Burana fame), but it's so much better as sheer music than anything Orff wrote. And what a cast! The pianists for this performance include Martha Argerich, Krystian Zimerman, Cyprien Katsaris, and Homero Francesch, four certified virtuoso performers, while the singers of the English Bach Festival Chorus really cover themselves with glory in both works. A stunner. --David Hurwitz

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CD Reviews

Perfect marriage of conductor and piece
CharlesRWilson@msn.com | Dallas, Texas | 01/09/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)

"For Leonard Bernstein, that historically histrionic maestro, to turn in a performance which is at once entirely idiomatic and faithful to the inspirations of the piece, and entirely in character for himself as an artist, is an accomplishment of the first order. Those in search of a brilliant, well-recorded performance of this supreme masterwork could scarcely do better than this mid-priced recording in DG's 20th Century Classics line. Bernstein's besetting passion for extrovert, razor-sharp percussion ensemble is here indulged in its ripest form, yet entirely contained within the conception of the work. The singing, in both works, is incandescent. No sonorous juxtaposition, no rhythmic filigree passes without intelligent remark and the entire piece blazes forth to a coda of rapt benediction. To this listener's ears, who first came to the work through the Bernstein performance, even the composer's own star-studded recording (Copland and Barber, among others, performed as pianists) seems tame. One hears origins of many of Bernstein's own compositional patterns in this work; compare the opening of Les Noces with that of Bernstein's Mass. Bernstein as composer shared Stravinsky's fondness for jazzy, cell-like piano figures and gives them full voice as conductor. There is also of course the unceasing air-raid of the percussion. After the searing attack that is Les Noces, the unadorned Mass is monastic by comparison. Intelligence and care grace each phrase and the singing of the Trinity Boys' Choir exposes the piece with anatomical precision. However, in Bernstein's hands the ritual, mechanistic elements combine into a graceful, pious wonder. The two pieces, taken together in these performances, are a virtual storyboard of Bernstein's compositional career and here, as conductor, he glories in them as will any listener congenial to Stravinsky's distinct gifts."
Excellent performance, awful Russian.
Hannes Neuenschwander | Barnstead, NH | 05/16/2001
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The musicianship on this disc is excellent. If you do not speak Russian you will enjoy the performance of Svadebka immensely. However, if you do speak Russian the atrocious pronunciation and intonation of the English Bach Festival Orchestra will grate on you. Unfortunately, until Gergiev decides to take a stab at this excellent work, Bernstein's recording will have to do."
Better than Stravinsky could do himself?
A. Michaelson | Bay Area, CA | 04/21/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Stravinsky failed in his attempt to create conductor-proof music. In fact, he did quite the opposite - he created music so complex in its layering that only a virtuosic ensemble led by a master conductor can pull it off correctly, and even then, it still proves difficult. This is very much the reason that it is difficult to find good recordings of Stravinsky's revolutionary masterpieces. However, every so often there emerges a Stravinsky recording that stands out as possibly being the definitive version. This particular version of Les Noces, conducted by Leonard Bernstein, is a perfect example of one of the few Stravinsky recordings that can be called definitive. Even Stravinsky himself believed Bernstein to be the best conductor of his music. If you want to know why, then just listen to this recording of Les Noces. Bernstein, arguably the century's greatest conductor, really works his magic and outdoes himself in this recording. He is very rythmically precise(as is required when playing Stravinsky) and yet he and his ensemble of virtuoso pianists, percussionists and the chorus never sound like they're making an exercise of this piece. So often conductors sacrafice emotion, mood and color when they play a piece with extreme precision. But not Bernstein. He is able to elicit a great deal of emotion and warmth from his performers while maintaining a high level of precision. Great performance, but that's not all. The sound quality is amazing, almost sounding as if the listener were there live. The engineers and technichians really did great work as well. This is truly an essential Stravinsky CD of unparalleled quality. The mass is the filler, which actually sounds quite a bit more BACHic than STRAVINSKYesque, but it's still well written and performed, but the highlight is Les Noces. A must hear!"