All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Lutoslawski: Complete Symphonies
To celebrate the 100th anniversary in 2013 of the birth of influential Polish composer, Witold Lutoslawski (1913-1994), Sony Classical is teaming up with the phenomenal forces of the LA Philharmonic and its Finnish Conductor Laureate, Esa-Pekka Salonen to present the Lutoslawski Symphonies Edition. The Los Angeles Philharmonic was an orchestra with which Lutoslawski had a particularly close relationship. Authoritative liner notes are by Lutoslawski scholar, Steven Stucky. The Edition includes a brand-new recording of the First Symphony, recorded live in Dec 2012 at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in LAX together with their earlier recordings of Symphonies Two, Three and Four plus a new recording of his ‘Fanfare for Los Angeles Philharmonic’, written in 1993, a year before he passed away. In concert, Salonen will honour the Lutosławski anniversary with concerts around the globe, including a season-long project with the Philharmonia Orchestra called Woven Words: "Music Begins Where Words End" (30th Jan, 7th March; 21st March – UK dates) as well as performances with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Of Lutoslawski’s Symphonies, Salonen noted: "[They] possess the beauty of a giant organism, like a tree, or maybe a forest. We are moved by the logic of the form and the inevitability of growth. We perceive the music in shapes and lines, overall characteristics of the musical texture, and contrasts between movement and static situations". He described the art of composing as “fishing for souls”. “The inherent mobility of his idiom seems to make for a magical refreshment of standard gambits — suddenly scuttering woodwind, cutting brass, the slicing, soaring string line. At his most rhetorical, he’s never actually predictable.” Sunday Times, 10th March 2013 “Released for the first time as a set, they make the perfect tribute for this year's Lutosławski centenary. Salonen's best qualities as a conductor are exemplified here too, whether in the care with which he marshalls and balances the neoclassical textures of the First Symphony...or brings so vividly to life the immaculately crafted surfaces of the Third and Fourth.” The Guardian, 28th March 2013 **** “Salonen’s sense of shape and atmosphere are refined and timeless. The playing in all of these works is largely excellent, though the wind and brass solos stand out as particularly strong in [the Fourth]” MusicWeb International, 6th May 2013 “it is very good to have Salonen's version of the Second Symphony restored to the catalogue; he captures its elusive qualities, and the LA strings sound at their most potent here in the surging warmth of the second movement...this holds together compellingly as a cycle.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2013 **** “Salonen's Lutoslawski symphony cycle provides a refined but often exciting take on a impressive corpus of work...The performances are utterly convinced and the clear, impressively 'present' sound is ideally suited to them, though involving three separate acoustical settings.” Gramophone Magazine, June 2013 | 
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| |  | Lutoslawski: Symphony No. 3 & Concerto For Orchestra
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| |  | Lutosławski: Orchestral Works 1
Edward Gardner, the music director of English National Opera and an exclusive Chandos artist, has completed the first disc in a projected Chandos series devoted to Polish music. Also his first purely orchestral CD for Chandos, the disc presents music by one of Poland’s most important twentieth-century composers, Witold Lutosławski, including perhaps his most famous work, the Concerto for Orchestra (1950 – 54), a brilliant and highly attractive work. Also included is the Third Symphony (1981 – 83) which was given its world premiere by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Sir Georg Solti, on 29 September 1983. Many passages employ the by then well-developed technique which the composer called ‘limited aleatorism’, according to which each individual orchestral musician is asked to play a phrase or repeated fragment in his own time – rhythmically independent of the other musicians. During these passages very little synchronisation is specified: events that are coordinated include the simultaneous entrances of groups of instruments, the abrupt end of some episodes, and some transitions to new sections. By this method the composer retains control of the work’s architecture and of the realisation of the performance, while simultaneously facilitating complex and unpredictable polyphony. In later years Lutosławski developed musical forms that combine unrelated strands of music, whose short, discrete sections overlap one another like the links of a chain. Elements of this method can be found in many of his earlier works, but the first to emphasise it was Chain 1 of 1983 for fourteen instruments, written for the London Sinfonietta. Chain 2, subtitled ‘Dialogue for Violin and Orchestra’, followed in 1985. The last work to adopt this approach was Chain 3 (1986) for large orchestra. Broadly speaking, the composition’s ten-minute span falls into three sections, of which the first provides a particularly clear, readily audible example of the chain technique. After a quick opening flourish, Lutosławski presents a sequence of twelve overlapping ideas, each characterised by a particular mode of expression, and each vividly coloured by a few instruments playing as a unit. For example, chimes, violas, and flutes together form the first ‘link’; this is overlapped by a quartet of double-basses; these in turn overlap a xylophone and three violins, and so on. The last of the twelve links in this musical chain thicken into a kind of general babble among the winds, which marks the first stage in the work’s larger form. Chain 3 was written for the San Francisco Symphony which gave the first performance, conducted by the composer, on 10 December 1986 in Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco. “Their account of the concerto is lively and crisply virtuosic, but the performances of the other two, much later works on this disc are the more significant...Gardner's performance [of Symphony No. 3] is impressive – vivid, incisive and well controlled – and he does an equally good job on the slighter and more elusive Chain 3 from 1986.” The Guardian, 14th October 2010 **** “This CD offers a thrilling reminder of [Lutoslawski's] craftsmanship...Chain 3 is a small, brilliant orchestral jewel. Atmospheric, if not quite virtuosic, performances from the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Gardner, who must be encouraged to explore more of Lutoslawski’s oeuvre.” Financial Times, 16th October 2010 **** “Exciting performances of exciting music. Lutoslawski is a master of whipping up the orchestra, though in a tasteful, increasingly refined manner...A fanfare guides us through the novel form [of the Symphony], though Gardner is a persuasive guide in his own right.” Sunday Times, 24th October 2010 **** “Gardner makes the most of the taut rhythmic energy in the music...all the colours of this showpiece [the Concerto for Orchestra] are brightly painted, with a virtuosity which is never empty, but always has direction and purpose, and a sense of real enjoyment.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2010 **** “On this evidence, Edward Gardner and the BBC SO are a dream team, pressing the claims of a composer who has been neglected since his death in 1994...This performance sets a seal on a disc that leaves one eager for its successors” Gramophone Magazine, December 2010 “Gardner’s ENO-honed ability to choose and hold a tempo and set a tangible mood from the off serves him well in each movement: there’s tautness and weight in the Intrada’s production line of pounding rhythms, a fine sense of pace to the slow-burn Passacaglia and impressive lightness in the piquant woodwind flutterings” Andrew Mellor, bbc.co.uk, 2nd November 2010 “Gardner pulls no punches in the 'Intrada'...few have equalled this for long-term conviction, in which the playing of the BBC forces leaves little to be desired...Gardner's interpretations are much more 'inside' the idiom than Daniel Barenboim's rather dutiful readings...this disc can be warmly recommended, not least if it hastens the return of Lutoslawski's music to its former eminence.” International Record Review, December 2010 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. 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| |  | Lutoslawski: Symphonies Nos. 3 & 4
Silesian Philharmonic Orchestra, Miroslaw Jacek Blaszczyk | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Leaving Home - Orchestral Music in the 20th CenturyA Conducted Tour by Sir Simon Rattle. Volume 4 - Three Journeys Through Dark Landscapes
| | Excerpts from: | Bartók: | Bluebeard's Castle, Sz. 48, Op. 11 Music for Strings, Percussion & Celesta, BB 114, Sz. 106 Concerto for Orchestra, BB 123, Sz.116 | Lutoslawski: | Concerto for Orchestra Jeux vénitiens Symphony No. 3 | Shostakovich: | Symphony No. 4 in C minor, Op. 43 Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47 Symphony No. 14 in G minor, Op. 135 |
Recording Date: 1996
Running Time: 50 min
Picture Format: 4:3
Sound Format: PCM Stereo
Language: D, GB
Menu Languages NTSC: D, F, GB
Subtitle Languages NTSC: F, I, JP, SP
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| | | |  | The Essential Lutoslawskia compilation of over 40 years of the composer's career including some of his most significant works
Martha Argerich (piano), Heinrich Schiff (cello), Heinz Holliger (oboe), Nelson Freire (piano) Berlin Philharmonic and Warsaw National Philharmonic, Witold Lutoslawski and Witold Rowicki | | (Sorry, download not available in your country) | |
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“A series that is setting high standards in budget-price contemporary music....Wit conjures a fantastic range of tone colour from his well-drilled Polish orchestra ...the third symphony has never sounded more convincing.” Classic CD | | | (also available to download from $5.75) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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