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| Shostakovich: Execution Of Stepan Razin / Schwarz, Et Al | ||||||
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Release Date: 03/21/2006 Label: Naxos Catalog #: 8557812 Spars Code: DDD Composer: Dmitri Shostakovich Performer: Charles Austin Conductor: Gerard Schwarz Orchestra/Ensemble: Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Seattle Symphony Chorus
Number of Discs: 1 |
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| Notes & Reviews | Back to Top | ||||
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The Execution of Stepan Razin is a sort of sequel to the 13th Symphony, in that it sets a poem by Yevtushenko and even shares some thematic elements. It really is a magnificent work, and at half an hour, a major statement. Shostakovich put all of his considerable skill as a composer of film music into making the accompaniments as colorful as possible, while the choral writing and passages for bass solo are thrilling. Why it's not better known remains a mystery: it deserves to be as popular as Prokofiev's Alexander Nevsky or Rachmaninov's The Bells. This is a very exciting performance, with fine work from the chorus and a terrific orchestral contribution making for climaxes of terrifying impact. Bass soloist Charles Robert Austin lacks the last degree of Russian depth to his tone, and he has a tendency to shout in order to compensate for the lack of weight, but he gets through the part with his honor intact. If you don't know this spectacular piece, here at last is an easy and inexpensive way to hear it. I enjoyed the couplings too, though they are not significant Shostakovich. October is a typical piece of Socialist Realism close in tone to the 12th Symphony, but it's very exciting and effectively written, and only the obligatory triumphant ending, which Shostakovich makes no attempt to reconcile with the tone of the rest of the piece, lets it down a bit. Once again, the performance has the necessary grit and drive. The Four Fragments bear a slight relationship to the music of the Fourth Symphony (the goofy waltz in the finale, especially), but are so, well, fragmentary that I wonder why they are played at all. In last analysis, they remain a curiosity and little more, but I can't argue with including them to round out a program nicely organized as "sequels and prequels" to various symphonies. Very fine sound, with a big, rich bass response that suits the music well, seals the deal. Essential for Shostakovich fans. [3/22/2006] --David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com |
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| Works on This Recording | Back to Top | |||||||||||||
| 1. |
Execution of Stepan Razin, Op. 119 by Dmitri Shostakovich | |||||||||||||
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Performer:
Charles Austin (Bass Baritone)
Conductor: Gerard Schwarz Orchestra/Ensemble: Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Seattle Symphony Chorus Period: 20th Century Written: 1964; USSR |
Date of Recording: 06/1996 Venue: Center Opera House, Seattle Length: 28 Minutes 37 Secs. Language: Russian |
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| 2. |
October, Op. 131 by Dmitri Shostakovich | |||||||||||||
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Conductor:
Gerard Schwarz
Orchestra/Ensemble: Seattle Symphony Orchestra Period: 20th Century Written: 1967; USSR |
Date of Recording: 02/2000 Venue: Benaroya Hall, Seattle, Washington Length: 13 Minutes 10 Secs. |
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| 3. |
Fragments (5) for Orchestra, Op. 42 by Dmitri Shostakovich | |||||||||||||
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Conductor:
Gerard Schwarz
Orchestra/Ensemble: Seattle Symphony Orchestra Period: 20th Century Written: 1935; USSR |
Date of Recording: 02/2005 Venue: Benaroya Hall, Seattle, Washington Length: 10 Minutes 35 Secs. |
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