Classical Music CDs at ArkivMusic Cart Wish List My Account Gift Certificates Newsletter Help
Holiday Shipping Guid
elines
Composers | Conductors | Performers | Ensembles | Operas | Labels | ArkivCDs | DVDs | Search | More... Weekend Specials
New Releases Recommendations Top Sellers On Sale CDs Under $10 Broadway Reissues Super Audio CDs MP3s Blu-ray Discs Listen Magazine
 Home >
WGBH Radio WGBH Radio theclassicalstation.org
 Stravinsky: Oedipus Rex, Les Noces / Wells, Craft
Release Date: 01/18/2005 
Label:  Naxos   Catalog #: 8557499   Spars Code: DDD 
Composer:  Igor Stravinsky
Performer:  Martyn HillEdward FoxAndrew GreenanJennifer LaneDavid Wilson-Johnson
Joseph CornwellSusan BickleyAlison WellsAlan Ewing

Conductor:  Robert Craft
Orchestra/Ensemble:  Philharmonia OrchestraSimon Joly Male ChorusSimon Joly ChorusInternational Piano Quartet
Fry

Number of Discs: 1 
Recorded in: Stereo 
Length: 1 Hours 17 Mins. 

CD  $8.99
Add To Your Cart
In Stock
Add To Your Cart

MP3 $7.99
In Stock: Usually ships in 24 hours.
Notes & Reviews   Works on This Recording   Sound Samples   
 Notes & Reviews Back to Top 

Robert Craft leads a thrilling performance of Oedipus Rex--incisive, swift, and as mercilessly inevitable as fate itself. From the opening bars, where those spine-chilling runs in the trumpet penetrate the orchestral tutti like screams of horror, you can tell that Craft has every detail of this work (his second recording) well in hand, and so for that matter does the Philharmonia. Anyone who believes that Craft is a dull conductor should listen to this urgent account--from the great choruses (first announcing Jocasta's entrance, with particularly clear timpani and piano ostinatos, and later her death), to the Verdian energy he brings to the Oedipus/Jocasta duet in Act 2. It would have been even better if Craft had followed Stravinsky's lead in his own early-1960s recording: repeat the "Gloria" chorus with the opening Act 2 narration in the middle. It's not a major point, and strictly speaking it's not what's in the score; but it's such marvelous music, and hearing it twice simply doubles the pleasure.

As for the singers, they do well--for the most part. After some initial unsteadiness Martyn Hill settles down to close Act 1 most affectingly, and his singing in Act 2 is very good. Jennifer Lane's Jocasta sounds younger than, say, Jessye Norman's, and her lighter touch gets around the notes better than many a bigger, heavier voice. As Creon, David Wilson-Johnson offers disappointingly approximate pitch in his big Act 1 aria, but he does much better in the slower-moving proclamations of the Messenger. The smaller roles come off without any problems, and the Simon Joly Male Chorus sings more confidently than it did in Craft's Symphony of Psalms. Speaker Edward Fox sounds like a bored Oxford don, but at least he admirably refrains from the annoying histrionics that some bring to the part (particularly in its French-language version). And Craft naturally makes sure that as Stravinsky wanted, Fox pronounces the protagonist's name "Eedipus" as opposed to the chorus' "Oydipus".

Craft's Les Noces--he would with good reason prefer the Russian title "Svadebka"--is simply spectacular. Not only does it feature both superb playing by the four pianos and percussion and marvelous singing by soprano Alison Wells and Martyn Hill, but it's clear that Craft has invested a great deal of care and attention in getting clear articulation of the Russian text. This is critical because, as Craft explains in his notes, the music flows naturally from the speech-rhythms of the words. So many performances of this marvelous piece sound like garbled chanting in an unrecognizable tongue. Craft ensures that for once we really hear the Russian, and just as significantly he balances his forces perfectly so that singers and instrumentalists play off each other with an astonishing degree of rhythmic tension. The resulting explosion of color and energy (you can hear this at any point, but the transition from the third to the fourth scene offers an excellent example) has few if any equals in other performances--including Craft's earlier one on Music Masters. Ideally clear and focused sound completes this very desirable package, given new life thanks to Naxos (these performances previously appeared, differently coupled, on Koch). [2/5/2005]

--David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
 Works on This Recording Back to Top 
1.  Oedipus rex by Igor Stravinsky
Performer:  Martyn Hill (Tenor), Edward Fox (Spoken Vocals), Andrew Greenan (Bass),
Jennifer Lane (Mezzo Soprano), David Wilson-Johnson (Bass Baritone), Joseph Cornwell (Tenor)
Conductor:  Robert Craft
Orchestra/Ensemble:  Philharmonia Orchestra,  Simon Joly Male Chorus
Period: 20th Century 
Written: 1926-1927; France 
Date of Recording: 06/2001 
Venue:  EMI Abbey Road Studio 1, London, England 
Length: 52 Minutes 21 Secs. 
Notes: This selection is sung in English and Latin. 
2.  Les noces by Igor Stravinsky
Performer:  Susan Bickley (Mezzo Soprano), Alison Wells (Soprano), Alan Ewing (Bass),
Martyn Hill (Tenor)
Conductor:  Robert Craft
Orchestra/Ensemble:  Simon Joly Chorus,  International Piano Quartet,  Fry
Period: 20th Century 
Written: Switzerland 
Venue:  EMI Abbey Road Studio 1, London, England 
Length: 24 Minutes 10 Secs. 
Language: Russian 
Notes: EMI Abbey Road Studio 1, London, England (01/08/2001 - 01/09/2001)
Composition written: Switzerland (1917 - 1923). 
 Sound Samples Back to Top 
Oedipus Rex
Prologue
Oedipus Rex
Introducing Creon
Oedipus Rex
Introducing Tiresias
Oedipus Rex
Introducing Jocasta
Oedipus Rex
Introducing the Messenger
Oedipus Rex
Epilogue
Les Noces (The Wedding)
Scene 1: The Tresses (At the Bride's House)
Les Noces (The Wedding)
Scene 2: At the Bridegroom's House
Les Noces (The Wedding)
Scene 3: The Departure of the Bride
Les Noces (The Wedding)
Scene 4: The Wedding Feast
 About ArkivMusic  Contact Us  Partner Program  Institutional Sales  Terms & Conditions  Privacy Policy  Help  Your Account  Shortcuts  
ArkivMusic - The Source for Classical Music!

Copyright ArkivMusic LLC, 2009.
Data supplied by Muze, Inc. Copyright 1948-2009. For personal use only. All rights reserved. Muze logo
Reviews provided by ClassicsToday.com Copyright 1999-2004