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Messages - jasthill

#17
I'll bite - Well IMHO nothing objectionable, somewhat in the genre of the Meyerbeer, Saint-Saens, Suppé, Raff, pre-Ring Wagner, et.al. incidental music. It's like in the late 19th century groups of composers passed around a manuscript - each making their own addition to it without creating anything attributable or distinguishable from the other.
#18
First look link:
https://naxosdirect.co.uk/items/joset-bohuslav-foerster-symphony-no.-1-festive-overture-from-shakespeare-590664
Release 14/10/2022
I couldn't find a link to the album cover - it's out there somewhere - it looks similar to the MDG cover(s) - Art Nouveau ish
I wonder if Naxos will redo the 4th symphony they previously recorded with Friedel.
#19
Stumbling around the internet in my idle time with focused meandering I came across this announcement link: (https://english.radio.cz/new-czech-radio-cd-welcomes-arrival-spring-8747046), to wit Rozhlasová jarní ouvertura (Radio Spring Overture) featuring music by: Otakar Jeremiáš: Jarní (Spring) Overture, Op. 9, and Jarní (Spring) Suite, moods for orchestra; Josef Suk: Jaro (Spring), op. 22a - complete suite fully orchestrated by ?, and Josef Bohuslav Foerster: Jaro (Spring), lyrical suite for string orchestra and harp, op. 84.

Further perusal on the site's web page show a digital release of Martinů: Istar. Ballet suites with Jiří Waldhans and the Brno Philharmonic (circa 1975) presumably a digital remaster and not a LP rip.
#20
Looking at the ArcoDiva Prague clips on YouTube shows clips for two J.B. Foerster recordings - Symphony No 1. and Shakespeare Suite - maybe a Foerster cycle from Naxos?
#21
Recordings & Broadcasts / Re: Scenes from the Kalevala
Sunday 07 November 2021, 13:11
Addendum:
These links show better illustrations of the salacious bits of the gatefold cover.
https://www.discogs.com/master/259209-Jean-Sibelius-Buffalo-Philharmonic-Orchestra-Lukas-Foss-4-Legends-From-The-Kalevala-Op-22
(Hint - hit more images.)
https://classicalmusicselloff.weebly.com/store/p2132/Sibelius%2F4_Legends_from_%27The_Kalevala%27_-_Buffalo%2FFoss.html
(You can zoom in)
Gene Szafran is the artist who created this cover and two other gatefold covers (Iannis Xenakis - Krzysztof Penderecki), (John Cage - Lukas Foss) for the other LP's Nonesuch used for their recordings of Foss and the Buffalo Philharmonic.

I understand that there exists in the internet etherworld is a complete digital rip of the Sibelius album.
#22
Recordings & Broadcasts / Re: Scenes from the Kalevala
Saturday 06 November 2021, 22:21
Interesting, this makes the fourth CD from BIS with the Sibelius Lemminkäinen suite. Four versions of the suite are referenced in the notes of the current CD 1895, 1897, 1901, 1939.

Perusing the BIS Lemminkäinen Suite history we have:
1985 - BIS CD-294 Järvi Gottenberg Symphony no version listed (15'41)
1999 - BIS-1015 Vänskä Lahti Symphony with 1939 (17'41), flowed by movements I and IV from the original version, followed by appendices of III (1896) (1'35)
2014 - BIS-1745 Vänskä Lahti Symphony showing versions 1896, 1897, 1939 but no version listed (16'07)
1986-2007 - BIS-1900 The Sibelius Edition Tone Poems Vol. 1 Vänskä Lahti Symphony using the reconstructed 1896 version by Colin Davis (22'07), Vänskä Lahti Symphony using the 1939 version (17'41)
2021 - BIS 2371 Slobodeniouk with the 1897 version (15'57)

Well you can accuse Sibelius of imitating Bruckner with these innumerable revisions. Maybe something in the lagers in those Wein beer halls carried over and made composers have second thoughts or maybe it was the helpful advice of solicitous critics. (re: see Sibelius's quote on statues and critics).

My first introduction to the Lemminkäinen Suite came on a 1968 Nonesuch LP with Lukas Foss and the Buffalo Philharmonic featuring a gorgeous bi-fold cover with slightly naughty images for that time.
#23
I just ran across these links of a Festival of music by Nikolai Myaskovsky on the stage of the Sverdlovsk Philharmonic (sic) earlier this year.
Four concerts are featured:
Symphony No. 17 (2021) https://www.aveclassics.net/news/2021-05-18-9713
String Quartet No. 13 and Cantata-Nocturne "Kremlin at Night" (2021) https://www.aveclassics.net/news/2021-05-17-9712
Symphony No. 6 (2021) https://www.aveclassics.net/news/2021-05-20-9718
Concerto for cello and orchestra (2021) https://www.aveclassics.net/news/2021-05-19-9716

All really excellent performances, I hope this posting doesn't violate any protocols.

Moderator's Note: Download at your own risk!
#24
Actually a recording of the Isasi tones poems is available (download services now - CD's wherever) as Vol. IV of the Basque Music Collection presented by Claves Records featuring the Basque Symphony Orchestra (Orquesta Sinfonia De Euskadi).  The series of 15 CD's cover a wide range of Basque composers from classical era to modern - I'd say most of them unsung but quite interesting music.  So now we can add the Swiss to the multi-national consortium of orchestras and labels crossing nationalistic boundaries.
#25
For the record let me state that I am delighted that Ondine has chose to release this disc - I know I will thoroughly enjoy it.  Ondine, as well as Chandos, Naxos, CPO, and Capriccio as examples seem to be willing to explore more of the unsung than some of the other labels.  Perhaps instead of injecting sarcasm into the post I should have used irony or amusement, and I confused the Ondine of myth with the little mermaid in Copenhagen harbor hence the Danish association. Always excited to see adventurous programming whatever the source rather than yet another reiteration of one of the warhorses in what critics will call a uniquely nuanced and distinctly articulated reading. Plenty of unsungs awaiting exposure like this.
#26
Browsing backwards through the Presto future releases I found this interesting future release.  https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/9247209--americascapes. Realizing Loeffler and Hanson might on the edges of the remit of this group and Cowell and Ruggles well beyond it leads me to ponder <here insert sarcasm> a release of unsung (obscure) Americana on a Danish record label recorded by a Basque orchestra lead by a American - might we expect a reciprocal release of the Isasi tone poems recorded by an American orchestra on a German label lead by a Basque? <sarcasm end>.  Ah! the mysteries of record labels and their repertory selections.
#27
Oops! I forgot to read the instructions - they have been remastered by Kritzerland - Sorry.
#28
It might be worth observing that the three American concertos on this Kritzerland CD are from previously available (although maybe somewhat obscure) recordings some from circa 1950's-60's instead of new recordings. I'm unsure if these sources have been remastered - its nice to have them available without the grouse chase to find them individually.
#29
Well speaking of the organ in the Slovak Suite - I. Kostele (In the Church) - Karel Šejna with the Brno Philharmonic Orchestra on an old Supraphon lets the organ rip, as does Libor Pešek and Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra in his Novák series from the 90's. Šejna's clocks in at about 7:30 and Pešek's at 9:00 so I'm not sure if a difference in editions is the reason.  Some of those Slovak composers found a nice way to incorporate the organ in their works re: Janáček Tarus Bulba - I. The Death of Andrei; Foester; et. al.
#30
Dario;
Since I started this - I can reply - delighted by the selections and the excellent orchestral, singers, and chorus combined with high quality sonics. Plus I enjoy the music of Humperdinck and his  cousin?, uncle? Siegfried Wagner as a transition from Richard Wagner to the early Mahler, Zemlinsky, Schreker, transitioning to the early Schoenberg, Berg, Webern. (Seems like they were all related in some tangential manner). Thanks for this intriguing collection - looking forward to your ensuing projects.

P.S. My Germanic grandfather says "Das lässt sich hören!"