All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | The Very Best of Nicolai Gedda
Adam: | Mes amis, écoutez l'histoire (from Le Postillon de Lonjumeau) | Beethoven: | Adelaide, Op. 46 | Bellini: | Prendi l'anel ti dono (from La Sonnambula) | Berlioz: | La gloire etait ma seule idole (from Benvenuto Cellini) | Bizet: | Au fond du temple saint (from Les Pêcheurs de Perles) La fleur que tu m'avais jetée (from Carmen) | Donizetti: | Quanto è bella, quanto è cara! (from L'Elisir d'amore) Una furtiva lagrima (from L'elisir d'amore) Fra poco a me ricovero...Tu che a Dio spiegasti l'ali (from Lucia di Lammermoor) | Flotow: | Ach, so fromm (from Martha) | Glinka: | Souvenir | Goldmark: | Magische Töne, berauschender Duft (from Die Königin von Saba) | Gounod: | L'amour, l'amour... Ah, lève-toi soleil (from Roméo et Juliette) | Lehár: | Gern hab' ich die Frau'n geküßt (from Paganini) Dein ist mein ganzes Herz (from Das Land des Lächelns) | Massenet: | Pourquoi me reveiller (from Werther) Instant charmant … En fermant les yeux (from Manon) | Mozart: | Il mio tesoro intanto (from Don Giovanni) Dies Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön (from Die Zauberflöte) | Mussorgsky: | Boris Godunov: Dmitry! Tsarevich | Offenbach: | Va pour Kleinzach...Il était une fois à la cour (from Les Contes d'Hoffmann) | Puccini: | Donna non vidi mai (from Manon Lescaut) | Rachmaninov: | Sing not, O lovely one (Ne poi, krasavitsa, pri mne), Op. 4 No. 4 How fair this spot, Op. 21 No. 7 | Rossini: | Asile héréditaire (from Guillaume Tell) | Strauss, J, II: | Ja, das alles auf Ehr' (from Der Zigeunerbaron) | Strauss, R: | Heimliche Aufforderung, Op. 27 No. 3 Ständchen, Op. 17 No. 2 | Tchaikovsky: | Kuda, Kuda 'Lensky's Aria' (from Eugene Onegin) In this moonlight, Op.73, No.3 Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 Serenada Don-Zhuana (Don Juan's Serenade), Op. 38 No. 1 | Thomas, Ambroise: | Elle ne croyait pas, dans sa candeur naïve (from Mignon) | Verdi: | Di' tu se fedele (from Un ballo in maschera) La donna è mobile (from Rigoletto) | Wagner: | In fernem Land (from Lohengrin) |
Nicolai Gedda, the most recorded tenor in history, is an exceptionally versatile artist who has excelled in a wide variety of operatic roles as well as in the art song. With a magnificent lyric tenor voice and extraordinary range, Gedda makes the notorious top D at the end of ‘Mes amis, écoutez l’histoire’ sound positively effortless. This collection offers a wealth of repertoire that has helped to cement Gedda’s reputation as one of the greatest tenors of his generation. | 
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| |  | Piano Rarities Vol. 3: Transcriptions
With this third volume in the series “Piano Rarities”, Cyprien Katsaris continues exploring the almost limitless world of transcriptions for solo piano. This album, largely devoted to Russian and Central European composers, offers us tastes of the many aspects of the art of transcription. | 
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| |  | Transfigured TchaikovskyThe complete lieder transcriptions by Isaac Mikhnovsky and Samuil Feinberg
Tchaikovsky: | Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 Nochy bezumnïye, Op. 60 No. 6 In this moonlight, Op.73, No.3 None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 Wait, Op. 16 No. 2 O ditya, pod okoshkom tvoim (Serenade), Op. 63 No. 6 Both painfully and sweetly, Op. 6 No. 3 Kak nad goratcheïou zoloï, Op. 25 No. 2 We sat with you, Op. 73 No. 1 Qu'importe op.16 No.5 Primiren'ye (Reconciliation), Op. 25 No. 1 Rastvoril ya okno (I opened the window), Op. 63 No. 2 Den' li tsarit? (Does the day reign?), Op. 47 No. 6 |
This is the fourth CD in the “Transfigured” series featuring South African pianist Petronel Malan. She received a Grammy nomination for the first in the series, “Transfigured Bach” (HAEN98424). Here she takes us on a fascinating excursion through the songs of Tchaikovsky, transfigured by several of his distinguished compatriots. “The Feinberg transcriptions of three songs from Op. 54 show Malan at her best, played with the greater fluency and innate poetic refinement familiar from her earlier discs. This one is fine but it misses the range of the others” Gramophone Magazine, July 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Galina Vishnevskaya sings Russian Songs
Mussorgsky: | Songs and Dances of Death | Prokofiev: | Five Poems of Anna Akhmatova, Op. 27 | Tchaikovsky: | None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 Ni slova, o drug moy (Not a word, O my friend), Op. 6 No. 2 Do not believe, my friend Op. 6 No. 1 Otchevo? (Why?), Op. 6 No. 5 Why did I dream of you?, Op. 28 No. 3 Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 Na nivi zhyoltiye (On the golden cornfields), Op. 57 No.2 O ditya, pod okoshkom tvoim (Serenade), Op. 63 No. 6 Merknet slaby svet svechi, Op. 73 No. 2 |
As one of the leading interpreters of Russian music, and Benjamin Britten’s soprano of choice for some of his works, including the mighty War Requiem, it may come as a surprise to some that Galina Vishnevskaya began her professional career in 1944, singing, of all things, Viennese operettas (in Russian translation!) in the chorus of a travelling company. When the company’s leading soubrette broke her leg, Vishnevskaya graduated to lead roles, but her destiny lay elsewhere. As a girl, she had been fascinated with Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin, and it was in the role of Tatiana that she made her operatic debut, in 1953, at the Bolshoi Theatre. Other roles followed, including Leonore in Fidelio (1954), Cherubino (!) in Le nozze di Figaro (1957), Madama Butterfly (1957) and Aida (1958). It was in the latter role that she made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1962, and she added Liù (from Puccini’s Turandot) for her La Scala debut in 1964. Western critics were agog over this force of nature who had come, if not from out of nowhere, then at least from behind the Iron Curtain. They spoke of her in the same breath as Maria Callas, Renata Tebaldi, Birgit Nilsson and other giants of the era. In 1955, she married Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, and together, they braved the Cold War tensions that continued to chill life in the Soviet Union. Rostropovich was, of course, a highly gifted pianist as well and accompanied his wife in recital on the stage and in the recording studio. In 1961, under the supervision of Mercury Living Presence’s executive producer Wilma Cozart-Fine, they recorded material for soprano and piano key to Vishnevskaya’s life and career. Mussorgsky’s Songs and Dances of Death she called ‘one of the most important projects of [her] career’ and wrote that the performances of this song-cycle made her feel, ‘for the first time, [her] ethnic identity as a Russian singer’. In addition to three Tchaikovsky songs recorded at these sessions, a further six were added to her discography seven years later, for Decca, these receiving their first release on CD. “Intensity is the keynote of these performances. Mme. Vishnevskaya has a rich dramatic voice of characteristically Slavonic timbre, highly charged emotionally … she is invaluably aided by accompaniments of infinite sensibility by her husband” Gramophone Magazine (Mussorgsky, Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky: 1961 recordings) “The engineers deserve special praise for the spacious recording they have given to the singer’s large voice in this first-rate recording. … I have only room to praise with equal warmth the beautifully sung and played group of Tchaikovsky’s lovely songs – still so neglected. Here Vishnevskaya has most grateful vocal lines and pours forth her voice gloriously” Gramophone Magazine (Tchaikovsky: 1968 recordings) | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Elisabeth Söderström: The Russian Songbook
Grechaninov: | The Lane – Five Children’s Songs, Op. 89 | Mussorgsky: | The Nursery | Prokofiev: | The Ugly Duckling, Op. 18 | Tchaikovsky: | The Cuckoo, Op. 54 No. 8 Evening, Op. 27, No. 4 The Nightingale Op. 60 No. 4 Last Night Op. 60 No. 1 None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 Lullaby, Op. 16 No. 1 Otchevo? (Why?), Op. 6 No. 5 Strashnaya minuta (The Fearful Moment), Op. 28 No. 6 Den' li tsarit? (Does the day reign?), Op. 47 No. 6 Spring, Op 54 No. 9 Simple Words, Op. 60, No. 5 Mezza notte Sérénade, Op. 65 No. 1 Déception, Op. 65 No. 2 Qu'importe que l'hiver, Op. 65 No. 4 Les Larmes, Op. 65 No. 5 Zakatilos solntse (The sun has set), Op. 73 No. 4 Kak nad goratcheïou zoloï, Op. 25 No. 2 Moy geni, moy angel, moy drug (My genius, my angel, my friend) Pesn' Zemfiri (Zemfira's song) Do not believe, my friend Op. 6 No. 1 Zabït tak skoro (So soon forgotten) Oh! Chante Encore!, Op.16 No.4 Spirit my heart away Why did I dream of you?, Op. 28 No. 3 To bilo ranneyu vesnoy (It happened in the early spring), Op. 38 No. 2 Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 If only I had known, Op.47, No.1 Was I not a blade of grass?, Op. 47 No. 7 My little garden, Op. 54 No. 4 Do not ask, Op. 57 No. 3 This, our first reunion, Op. 63 No. 4 O ditya, pod okoshkom tvoim (Serenade), Op. 63 No. 6 Rondel, Op. 65 No. 6 We sat with you, Op. 73 No. 1 Behind the window, Op 60 No. 10 |
Elisabeth Söderström was a born storyteller. She told stories not just in music, but also peppered her recitals on stage with tales and anecdotes. It made her a perfect interpreter for the collection of children’s songs by Mussorgsky, Prokofiev and Gretchaninov she recorded with Vladimir Ashkenazy in 1977–78 which appear on CD2 of this set, the first (LP) issue greeted with enthusiasm by Gramophone reviewer W.S.M. with the words ‘the best record of song to appear in 1979’. It later went on to win the 1979 Gramophone’s Solo Vocal Award. But there was more: a selection of Tchaikovsky songs over two LPs; a substantial survey of the Rachmaninov songs (‘one of the gramophone’s crown jewels’ wrote John Steane in Gramophone) as well as the complete Sibelius songs. Born in Stockholm on 7 May 1927 to a Russian mother and Swedish father, Söderström she was a talented recitalist, as much in demand in the concert hall as she was in the opera theatre. From 1991–96 she also directed the Drottingholm Festival Opera with much success. The two LPs of Tchaikovsky songs were issued in part by Decca on CD and this is their first complete release in this format. Overshadowed by his orchestral works, they are nonetheless absolute gems, with their piano parts of almost orchestral scope. Ashkenazy’s is, too, the disembodied voice that speaks a few of Pushkin’s lines in the early setting of Zemfira's song. ‘Söderström came to be known internationally in the late 1950s,’ wrote John Steane, ‘and over the next three decades, on until her retirement from singing in the early 1990s she never “blotted her copybook”. She neither sought nor won cheap success.’ Söderström passed away in Stockholm on 20 November 2009, aged 82, from complications from a stroke. This release marks the launch of an Eloquence series of notable recitals of songs and opera arias by some of the great voices of Decca and Deutsche Grammophon. “The Maikov Lullaby is enchantingly done, especially with the gentle wash of piano tone in the background from Ashkenazy … a delightful, excellently recorded recital of some songs which we know too little … Tchaikovsky wrote some exquisite songs; and it is splendid to have them being explored so skilfully, intelligently and sensitively” Gramophone Magazine (Tchaikovsky Songs) “brilliant … endearing … musicianly” Gramophone Magazine (Songs for Children) | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Slavonic Souls
Mussorgsky: | Kinderstube Wiegenlied des Jerjomuschka Sorochintsy Fair: Gopak | Rachmaninov: | I await you, Op.14 No. 1 How pained I am, Op. 21 No.12 In the silence of the secret night, Op. 4 No. 3 All was taken from me, Op. 26 No. 2 I await you, Op.14 No. 1 | Rimsky Korsakov: | Quietly the evening falls, Op. 4 No. 4 Not the wind blowing from the heights, Op.43, No.2 The clouds begin to scatter (Elegy), Op. 42 No. 3 Svezh i dushist tvoy roskoshniy venok (Cool and fragrant is thy garland), Op. 43 No. 4 | Tchaikovsky: | Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 Rastvoril ya okno (I opened the window), Op. 63 No. 2 To bilo ranneyu vesnoy (It happened in the early spring), Op. 38 No. 2 Moy geni, moy angel, moy drug (My genius, my angel, my friend) None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 |
Zoryana Kushpler (mezzo-soprano) & Olena Kushpler (piano) This CD explores the Russian tradition of Lieder and traces its endless refinements, helping us to get to know this centerpiece of Russian culture. These Ukrainian performers are twin sisters and together they have performed many lieder recitals. In August of this year they will perform at the Schleswig Holstein Festival. The Lieder are sung in Russian. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Russian Songs & Romances
Borodin: | Chto ti rano, zoren'ka (Why Art Thou So Early, Dawn?) Spyashchaya knyazhna (The Sleeping Princess) Pesnya tyomnogo lesa (Song of the Dark Forest) Morskaya tsaryevna (The Princess Of the Sea) Dlya beregov otchizni dal'noy (For the Shores of thy Far Native Land) | Dargomïzhsky: | The Sierra Nevada was Swathed in Mists The Night Zephyr Prayer What is My Name to You? Heavenly Clouds Yunosha I deva (A girl and a boy) You did not come true! In the Expanse of the Heavens I am sad ... | Glinka: | Adel’ Cradle Song Finskiy zaliv (The Gulf of Finland) Tyashka pechal'i grusten svet (Meine Ruh' ist hin; Marguerite's song from Faust) Barcarolle Tell me Why Ne poy, krasavitsa, pri mne (Do not sing to me, fair maiden) I am here, Inezilla | Mussorgsky: | Kalistratushka Videniye (The Vision) Forgotten Softly the spirit flew up to heaven Chto vam slova lyubvi? Po gribï | Tchaikovsky: | Noch' (Night), Op. 60 No. 9 Skazhi, o chom v teni vetvey (Tell me, what in the shade of the branches), Op. 57 No. 1 Lullaby in a storm, Op. 54 No. 10 None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 Zabït tak skoro (So soon forgotten) He loved me so, Op. 28, No. 4 Ni slova, o drug moy (Not a word, O my friend), Op. 6 No. 2 Nochy bezumnïye, Op. 60 No. 6 Zakatilos solntse (The sun has set), Op. 73 No. 4 Primiren'ye (Reconciliation), Op. 25 No. 1 Sérénade, Op. 65 No. 1 Do not ask, Op. 57 No. 3 Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 Den' li tsarit? (Does the day reign?), Op. 47 No. 6 |
“A marvellously rich programme recorded by Russian music's exiled royal couple. Vishnevskaya's voice is still forceful but often squally in this 1991 recording; but their intense feeling for these classic 19th-century songs is unique and moving.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2009 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Tchaikovsky - Songs
Tchaikovsky: | Last Night Op. 60 No. 1 Zabït tak skoro (So soon forgotten) The Nightingale Op. 60 No. 4 To bilo ranneyu vesnoy (It happened in the early spring), Op. 38 No. 2 Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 Strashnaya minuta (The Fearful Moment), Op. 28 No. 6 Do not believe, my friend Op. 6 No. 1 The Cuckoo, Op. 54 No. 8 Lullaby, Op. 16 No. 1 Behind the window, Op 60 No. 10 O ditya, pod okoshkom tvoim (Serenade), Op. 63 No. 6 The Canary, Op. 25 No. 4 Ni slova, o drug moy (Not a word, O my friend), Op. 6 No. 2 Lullaby in a storm, Op. 54 No. 10 Spring, Op 54 No. 9 Why did I dream of you?, Op. 28 No. 3 None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 Den' li tsarit? (Does the day reign?), Op. 47 No. 6 If only I had known, Op.47, No.1 Otchevo? (Why?), Op. 6 No. 5 |
‘I find this British singer’s identification with Tchaikovsky almost uncanny. Having heard countless performances … in my native Russia, I was totally overcome by Rodgers’ unaffectedness and sincerity … her intonation is faultless, her Russian excellent. A rare treat indeed’ (Vladimir Ashkenazy) “A lovely record” Sunday Times | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Tchaikovsky - Romances
Tchaikovsky: | Sred' shumnogo bala (Amid the din of the ball), Op. 38 No. 3 None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6 I never spoke to her, Op. 25, No. 5 Moy geni, moy angel, moy drug (My genius, my angel, my friend) Lullaby, Op. 16 No. 1 Primiren'ye (Reconciliation), Op. 25 No. 1 Zakatilos solntse (The sun has set), Op. 73 No. 4 Strashnaya minuta (The Fearful Moment), Op. 28 No. 6 The mild stars shone for us, Op. 60 No. 12 If only I had known, Op.47, No.1 The lights were being dimmed, Op. 63, No. 5 Ni slova, o drug moy (Not a word, O my friend), Op. 6 No. 2 Otchevo? (Why?), Op. 6 No. 5 Was I not a blade of grass?, Op. 47 No. 7 The gypsy song, Op. 60, No. 7 Do not believe, my friend Op. 6 No. 1 To bilo ranneyu vesnoy (It happened in the early spring), Op. 38 No. 2 The Cuckoo, Op. 54 No. 8 Den' li tsarit? (Does the day reign?), Op. 47 No. 6 Solitude ('Again, as before, alone'), Op. 73 No. 6 |
Third release on ONYX from young Dutch mezzo and rising star Christianne Stotijn Beautiful collection of 20 Tchaikovsky songs representing the whole range of his creative life from his first performed composition “My Genius, My angel, my friend,” written when we was 16, through to the last published song from the year of his death “Again, as before, alone”. Includes favourites such as “None but the Lonely Heart” and “Why?” but also rarely heard songs such as “Mild Stars Looked down”, “The Cuckoo” and “The Gypsy Song” Christianne learnt Russian especially for this recording and toured it widely before recording it with her superb pianist Julius Drake. This recording should do much to re-evaluate Tchaikovsky as one of the greatest composers of song and not just a writer of pretty tunes. “The two best-known songs open proceedings: "At the Ball", with its reminiscence of unrequited passion to the lilt of a sad waltz, and then "None but the lonely heart". Everyone conceivable from Rosa Ponselle to Frank Sinatra has recorded this, but Stotijn loses nothing in comparison with ghosts from the past. Her voice is a full-blooded mezzo but steady and true, without a hint of that vibrato that can often disturb the line in Slavonic singers... The piano parts are superbly done: in every sense these songs are duets. Tchaikovsky's songs are not nearly well enough known and this superb recital should encourage more interest in them.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2009 “…Christianne Stotijn is that artist in a thousand whose personality shines through everything she does. Her Russian characterisations and folk inflections seem spot-on in the vivid narratives of 'Had I known', 'The Bride's Lament' and 'The Cuckoo'. Here, too, as in their often wonderful Mahler recital together, Julius Drake's focused narratives make us want to hear even more from him... But Stotijn's charisma and her beautifully recorded altoish depth of tone is enough to hold me spellbound.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2009 ***** “For the most part these are angst-ridden stories of death and lost love. The two best-known songs open proceedings: 'At the Ball', with its reminiscence of unrequited passion to the lilt of a sad waltz, and then 'None but the lonely heart'. Everyone conceivable from Rosa Ponselle to Frank Sinatra has recorded this, but Stotijn loses nothing in comparison with ghosts from the past. Her voice is a full-blooded mezzo but steady and true, without a hint of that vibrato that can often disturb the line in Slavonic singers (Stotijn is from The Netherlands). The emotional climax of the selection comes with 'The Bride's Lament'. This outpouring of grief can seem over melodramatic but Stotijn and Drake find exactly the right mood. The piano parts are superbly done: in every sense these songs are duets. There are a couple of other light moments – 'Cuckoo', one of 16 children's songs composed in the 1880s, and a 'Gypsy Song' from around the same time. Tchaikovsky's songs are not nearly well enough known and this superb recital should encourage more interest in them. Highly recommended.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Gerald Finley & Julius Drake
Gerald Finley writes: “It is with great sense of pride that this disc becomes the 25th release of the Wigmore Live series, in a musical partnership I have enjoyed for many years with Julius Drake. Performing at the Wigmore is always a highlight of any career. The others in the series are distinguished performers I have admired for years and the performances are wonderful. The audiences at the Wigmore are always welcoming and knowledgeable, and this atmosphere is captured perfectly. Already a fine catalogue, I hope the Wigmore Live series continues its honour roll” Critically praised for his performances both on stage and in concert, this recital of American and Russian song by Gerald Finley offers listeners the rare opportunity to hear one of today’s most in-demand baritones within the beautiful, intimate setting of the Wigmore Hall. After a recital at Carnegie Hall in March, 2007, Finley was praised by New York Times critic Bernard Holland as having a "bass-baritone of easy luxury" and that his "sensibilities begin with the pre-eminence of words." His recording of Stanford's Songs of the Sea and Songs of the Fleet with Richard Hickox and the BBC NOW for Chandos received the Editor's Choice Award at the 2006 Classic FM Gramophone Awards. Press acclaim for Gerald Finley & Julius Drake at Wigmore Hall “Gerald Finley is one of the few baritones before the public today with whom it's virtually impossible to find fault” Music OMH “No other baritone can touch him for declamatory expressiveness” The Independent “Finley and Drake paced them all tactfully, precisely mediating between relaxed storytelling and rapt introspection. Here was very fine singing of truly great songs” The Guardian “For my money this inspired pianist is now the best in the business” New York Magazine “…a really superb recital by this accomplished Canadian bass-baritone and his celebrated accompanist, Julius Drake. In recent years Gerald Finley's voice has developed more character and cutting power, and a fine dramatic edge which suits this emphatic, sometimes shocking programme very well indeed.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2008 ***** “Gerald Finley can do no wrong at present, and this Wigmore Hall Live offering makes a cherishable keepsake of what was evidently a memorable event. …Finley lavishes wonderfully rounded treatment upon the sequence of seven Tchaikovsky songs… Not only do his top notes ring out with thrilling projection... he exhibits grace, sensitivity and intelligence that ensure that the music never topples into rampant self-pity.” Gramophone Magazine, February 2009 “Aided by scrupulous support from Julius Drake, Gerald Finley lavishes wonderfully rounded treatment upon the sequence of seven Tchaikovsky songs that open proceedings. Be it in the ardent swagger of 'Don Juan's Serenade', wistful glow of 'At the ball' or meltingly lovely 'The mild stars shone for us', Finley is not found wanting. Not only do his top notes ring out with thrilling projection (yet without a hint of hardness), he exhibits a grace, sensitivity and intelligence that ensure that the music never topples into rampant self-pity. There's a comparable authority and integrity about these artists' interpretation of Mussorgsky's Songs and Dances of Death. Finley is in complete command of his very considerable resources, distilling every ounce of pathos from the mother's desperate pleadings in the opening 'Lullaby' and conveying in full the grim implacability of 'The Field-Marshal' . Ned Rorem's similarly declamatory War Scenes is also performed with total understanding, while the last of the three encores, Wolseley Charles's wickedly amusing TheGreen-Eyed Dragon (written in 1926 for Stanley Holloway), predictably brings the house down. A genuine treat, this, and not to be missed.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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