All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Pierre Boulez conducts Webern, Stravinsky & Mahler
The LUCERNE FESTIVAL ACADEMY was founded in 2004 by Pierre Boulez in conjunction with the Festival’s executive director Michael Haefliger. Since then, some 130 highly gifted young musicians from all corners of the globe have gathered together every summer in Lucerne. Working together in daily rehearsals, workshops, and lessons, the participants are trained in basic skills for performing contemporary music. The teaching staff is made up of members of the Parisian Ensemble intercontemporain, one of the most celebrated ensembles in the field of modern music. The 2010 Academy repertoire was recorded live during rehearsals and concerts of the Academy in summer 2010. The double CD is the only audio recording of the LUCERNE FESTIVAL ACADEMY Orchestra under the baton of renowned maestro Pierre Boulez – available worldwide. In the sense of the LUCERNE FESTIVAL ACADEMY’s tradition to study contemporary scores and modern masterpieces of the early 20th century this audio recording offers Anton Webern’s Passacaglia for Orchestra, Op. 1 and Variations for Orchestra, Op. 30, Igor Stravinsky’s Le Chant du Rossignol and is rounded off by Gustav Mahler’s Sixth Symphony in A minor. “[The Mahler] all starts trenchantly enough, allowing the nightmare of the first movement development and its gracious idyll [to] take wing..The first disc is gorgeously brilliantly programmed and gorgeously played” BBC Music Magazine, September 2011 ***** “Holding these divergent works together is Boulez's crystalline clarity of line, seasoned with masterful timbres that let each piece blossom of its own accord...the young musicians of the Academy Orchestra do consistently rise to the occasion, with a palpable sense of discovery in their playing” Gramophone Magazine, Awards Issue 2011 “Tender and affectionate, with wonderful gradations of truly soft playing leading to a genuinely moving climax that never becomes overwrought, this manifests a glowing tribute to the subtlety and concentration of these gifted musicians. Much more needs to be heard from them, especially given the superb recording.” International Record Review, July/August 2011 “The Nightingale (wrongly titled in the sleeve notes) receives a glittering account – not sumptuous exactly, but dashingly dramatic and vividly coloured.” The Guardian, 16th June 2011 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
|
|
| |  | Kate Royal – Midsummer Night
Kate Royal’s second recording for EMI Classics is Midsummer Night, an atmospheric recital collection focusing on female characters in 20th century opera and operetta, reflecting their pain and ecstasy in love. The programme ranges from well known turn-of-the-century works by Dvorák (Song to the Moon from Rusalka) and Lehár (Vilja from The Merry Widow) to Midsummer Night, from the English composer William Alwyn’s opera Miss Julie. Edward Gardner conducts the English National Opera Orchestra with guest appearances by Thomas Allen, Andrew Staples and the Crouch End Festival Chorus. "[My] Inspiration for this album began with Benjamin Britten's The Turn of the Screw and the Governess - my first major role in a 20th century opera,” said Kate Royal. “The music got under my skin in a way I had not experienced before. Britten's vocal writing is immediate and naturally dramatic. His harmonic world seeps into the subconscious underpinning the character as a fully formed human being rather than a romantic stereotype. So, with the Governess’s Tower Scene as a starting point, I went in search of other arias that shared this combination of intensity and abandon. These are worlds in which the heroines are laid bare, vulnerable in their journey towards emotional fulfilment … women lost in love [or] trapped in a deeper trance-like state as they wrestle with their unsated desires. … Alongside some of the century's seminal works I [was] also delighted to discover what I believe to be some hidden gems for the soprano voice." Stephen Johns, Vice President of A&R, EMI Classics, has also commented on the choice of repertoire, "The selection of songs for this recital is illuminated by their composers’ reactions to the changing musical scenes of the 20th century. All the arias were written after 1900, but each composer has found a different and unique way of coping with the transition into the century. Some are still firmly rooted in the lush harmonies of the 19th century like Dvorák and Korngold; some even clinging onto the innocence of the past world, such as Léhar. Others are experimenting with newer harmonies - the exoticism of early Stravinsky, and the aching beauty of Walton and Alwyn's music. Still others find new life in the old harmonic structures - Britten and Floyd. What binds them together, in a programme that coincidentally emphasises the nocturnal, the close of the day, is a desire to allow the soprano voice fully to express beauty in melody ….” Among the lesser known arias on Kate Royal’s CD are those from operas by the English composer William Alwyn and American composers Bernard Herrmann and Carlisle Floyd: William Alwyn (1905-1985) based his only major opera, Miss Julie, on August Strindberg’s tense and intimate drama of class and sexual relations from 1888. Composed between 1973 and 1976, Miss Julie was premiered on BBC Radio in 1977, but has had only one semi-professional stage production, in Copenhagen in 1991; Bernard Herrmann’s many film scores, notably his collaborations with Orson Welles (Citizen Kane), Alfred Hitchcock (Psycho) and Martin Scorsese (Taxi Driver), have diverted attention from his other musical achievements. He was particularly proud of Wuthering Heights, his major opera to a libretto by Lucille Fletcher (his first wife), based on Emily Brontë’s novel. Herrmann (1911-1975) composed it between 1943 and 1951, but the opera was not staged until 1982, seven years after his death; The American composer Carlisle Floyd (b 1926), whose own version of Wuthering Heights was premiered in 1958, has produced a steady stream of operas over a period of fifty years, a couple of which have become staples of the American repertoire. His greatest success has been Susannah, based on the story in the Apocrypha of Susannah and the Elders translated to a contemporary Bible-belt setting. First staged at Florida University in 1955, the opera has been performed predominantly by American companies, notably the Metropolitan Opera in 1999. "She is a natural communicator, has all the ingredients for an important career – musicality, a lyric soprano of rare loveliness, a poised and dignified manner and looks gorgeous too" The Sunday Times “…Kate Royal's lustrous soprano has invited comparisons with that of Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, and so it does in this imaginative programme, conducted by fellow wunderkind Edward Gardner.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2009 **** “Dramatically, she and the orchestra capture the early evening atmosphere with its unsettling undercurrents. Vocally, her voice is so lusciously rich there is a mezzo quality to it; her diction is crystal clear, and her top register effortless, pure and true...Royal seems to have a particular gift for getting to the heart of any text, becoming the character and making it her own.” Charlotte Gardner, bbc.co.uk, 4th June 2009 “Listening to Royal is like being thrown back to a bygone age when singers didn't merely perform roles, they became indivisible from them.” Classic FM Magazine, April 2011 **** “All the extracts from English and American works go extremely well; the aria that gives the disc its title, "Midsummer Night" from William Alwyn's Miss Julie, is a rarity. The Tower scene from the Turn of the Screw, with its spooky woodwind and harp accompaniment, is as good as the Grimes scene - Royal comes into her own in the Britten roles.” Gramophone Magazine, July 2009 “Solos from Britten’s Paul Bunyan, Peter Grimes and The Turn of the Screw are dotted among extracts from Alwyn’s Miss Julie, Carlisle Floyd’s Susannah, Walton’s Troilus and Bernard Herrmann’s Wuthering Heights. If Royal’s voice sounds squeezed at the top of her range, she revels in this lush music.” Sunday Times, 24th May 2009 *** “Much of the music is pensive, decorated with birdlike flutes and piccolos or the plink of a refined harp — details brightly supplied by the Orchestra of English National Opera and their conductor Edward Gardner. But Royal’s voice is the best instrument of all: a voice of strong, liquid beauty, unfaltering in any register, never more thrilling than when pealing or gliding in long breaths.” The Times, 1st May 2009 **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
|
|
| |  | The Very Best of Stravinsky
| | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
|
|
| |  | Natalie Dessay - The Miracle of the Voice
“Our finest coloratura soprano: she combines dazzling accuracy and luminous musicality” The Times | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
|
|
| |  | Ravel: Le Chant du Rossignol & L'heure Espagnole
“The singing is delightful: neoclassical crispness of articulation goes with refined textures that convey the ripe humour of the one piece, the tender poetry of the other.The inclusion of [the Rimsky Korsakov and Stravinsky], two classics of the gramophone, makes this reissue more desirable than ever.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
|
|
| |  | Stravinsky: Le Sacre du printemps & Le chant du Rossignol
Brussels Philharmonic, Michel Tabachnik As the former orchestra of the Belgian, and later the Flemish radio, this orchestra managed not only to survive independently, but also to build a successful national and international career in the heart of Europe. Here they enjoy the opportunity to record Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring in this anniversary year. Their previous recordings have received some very good reviews. | 
| | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
|
|
| |  | Igor Stravinsky, Vol. 31930-1950
| 
| |
|
| |  | Stravinsky: The Firebird (Solo Piano Versions)
Lydia Jardon’s all-women label Ar-Re-Se sees her perform Stravinsky’s Firebird and The Song of the Nightingale for solo piano. A graduate of the Paris Conservatoire, she has won many prizes during her career but is perhaps best known for founding the annual chamber music festival on the Breton island of Ouessant which focuses on female composers, performed by female musicians. | 
| | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
|
|
| |  | Stravinsky, Debussy & Bartók: Orchestral Works
The Junge Deutsche Philharmonie has released a CD of 20th century works very much concerned with seduction and dance. The most talented young musicians in Germany join together to form this outstanding orchestra and work with renowned conductors. Their aim is to achieve musical goals with passion. | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
|
|
| |  | Les Ballets Russes Vol. 4
Sinfonieorchester Baden-Baden / Freiburg, Yuri Ahronovich, Ernest Bour & Hiroshi Wakasugi Continuing the highly successful Ballet Russe series. “Enjoyable if unspectacular romps through the Swan Lake suite and Stravinsky arrangements from Sleeping Beauty. Ernest Bour's account of le chant due Rossignol is among the finest on disc.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2009 **** | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
|
|
| |
|