On this CD:
1. Symphony No. 6 in E flat minor, Op. 111
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
2. Waltz Suite, for orchestra, Op. 110 Since we Met from War and Peace
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
3. Waltz Suite, for orchestra, Op. 110 Cinderella in the Palace
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
4. Waltz Suite, for orchestra, Op. 110 Mephisto Waltz from Lermontov
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
5. Waltz Suite, for orchestra, Op. 110 End of the Fairy Tale from Cinderella
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
6. Waltz Suite, for orchestra, Op. 110 New Year's Eve Ball
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
7. Waltz Suite, for orchestra, Op. 110 Happiness (Cinderella)
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
Conducted by Theodore Kuchar
Prokofiev: Symphony No. 6, Op. 111; Waltzes, Op. 110, Music, Sergey Prokofiev, Theodore Kuchar, National Symphony Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine, 20th/21st Century Symphony, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral, Symphonic, Waltz for Orchestra
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Prokofiev: The Complete Symphonies and Concertos
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001FYR0S Release Date: 2004-05-18 |
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Album Description
The White Box is Naxos' flagship boxed set series, dedicated to exploring complete areas of a composer's work. All releases in the White Box series are presented in durable and attractive packaging with the discs enclosed in individual sleeves. From the beginning, Naxos has sought to let these masterpieces speak for themselves and in designing these boxes, the music is presented with minimal fuss. Such minimalism does not apply to the generously sized booklets, which offer full essays on each work plus a biography of the composer and artists. The booklets also contain a specially created chronology for this series, which sets events in the composer's own life into a wider musical and overall historical context.Customer Reviews:
Great price, but out of tune Ukrainian brass.......2006-10-04
A Super-Bargain But Variable Performances.......2004-06-05
Taking them category by category and with some attention to individual performances, I would start by saying that the five piano concerti, as well-played as they are here, are simply swamped by Vladimir Ashkenazy's set with André. Further, the Naxos performances (with the excellent Korean pianist, Kun Woo Paik, with Antoni Wit and the Polish Radio Symphony) are in somewhat glassy sound; their more recent provenance does not give them improved sound over the Ashkenazy set. I did like the verve of the D Flat Concerto (No. 1) in particular, however.
The Violin Concertos fare better, both in terms of performance and particularly in sonics. Tedi Papavrami is a young Albanian violinst, erstwhile pupil of Pierre Amoyal. The first thing to say is that he does not seem be copying any of his violinistic predecessors in these concerti. Notice in particular how well he projects the top line in the double-stop passages and his affinity for the lyrical aspects of the music. He has technique to spare, generally spot-on intonation, and real musical feeling. The only competition on a single disc is that of Gil Shaham who plays these concerti with real flair. Neither of them plays the Second Concerto with the laser-like intensity of Heifetz, however. And in the First there is the still-paramount Oistrakh. Still, these are creditable performances and I'm glad I have them. The Solo Violin Sonata is given a nicely judged performance and has very little competition on CD.
The Cello Concerto is given in the revised version, now more commonly called the Symphony-Concerto, Op. 125; Prokofiev had written it in the 1930s but when Rostropovich came to the fore in the late 1940s he worked with Prokofiev to revise it into the present form. For a time it was called the Sinfonia Concertante, and then, when revised further, the Symphony-Concerto. And of course Rostropovich owns the work, having championed it around the world. He recorded it in both of the revised forms, but those performances are a bit hard to find now. A pity. Still, the present recording is quite good. It features a cellist I'd not known of before, the 40ish Russian Alexander Ruben. Both the soloist and orchestra (the Polish National Radio Symphony under Antoni Wit, who accompany all the concerti in this set) are top-notch here. The same can be said for the Cello Concertino, Op. 132, which was unfinished at Prokofiev's death in 1953, but completed by Rostropovich and Dimitri Kabalevsky. This ravishing but rarely-heard work is given an outstanding performance. And the disc is filled out by the two delectable Pushkin Waltzes, Op. 120, which are Prokofiev in his most lovably ironic manner.
We come now to the seven symphonies. This is a very uneven set. They are all played by the National Symphony of Ukraine under their regular conductor, the American Theodore Kuchar. When I put on the First Symphony (the 'Classical') my heart fell; this is a dolorous account, taken at very slow tempi until, finally, in the last movement things start moving at a faster clip. The playing is OK, but the interpretation simply won't do. The Second is better but there are some balance problems; it sounds as if half the string section didn't show up the day it was recorded. The brutalist Third Symphony (developed from music taken from his opera 'The Fiery Angel') is given a decent performance. There are better single performances out there, though, including the one, surprisingly, by Ozawa (which is also included in his budget-priced but also variable complete set of symphonies). Symphony No. 4 is coupled with the music that spawned it, the ballet music for 'The Prodigal Son.' It is nice to hear the two pieces side by side; one can hear that Prokofiev took themes from the ballet and subjected them to symphonic development. Both performances here are quite nice. Symphony No. 5 is soft-edged and sounds as if it were recorded in a cathedral-like acoustic. That, coupled with the slight mushiness of the strings, makes this a gentle but not competitive performance. One misses the bite one hears in better performances. I happen to like a no-longer-available performance by the St. Louis SO under Slatkin, but there are others out there who feel the Järvi or the Previn are better than that one. The Fifth is coupled with 'The Year 1941' symphonic suite; this is simply not top-drawer Prokofiev although it has a few creepily effective moments. Symphony No. 6 is given a generally quite good performance. It begins with a scarily peremptory brass introduction (one imagines the NKVD at the door) before the ironically tender violin theme comes in. Nicely done. The Largo is ominously effective. But in the last movement, marked Vivace and taken a little too slowly for my taste, there is a weird drop-off in aural presence that I take to be a problem with either sound engineering or the pressing. However, the filler here, the Waltz Suite, surely one of Prokofiev's happiest collections (waltzes taken from 'Cinderella,' 'War and Peace,' and from a movie score) is possibly the best thing in the whole set. Or maybe it's just that I love these waltzes inordinately no matter how they're played! To complete the set, Symphony No. 7 (which is coupled with No. 3 on CD 2), written in Prokofiev's last year, returns to the simplicity of the Classical Symphony and is one of his most tuneful and least troubled. And it is given a very nicely judged performance here, relaxed and genial.
Scott Morrison
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Prokofiev: Symphony No. 6, Op. 111; Waltzes, Op. 110
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000143T Release Date: 1995-09-19 |
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Customer Reviews:
The Finest.......2006-03-09
Good Prokofiev waltzes.......2005-08-09
I would not call this performance poor.......2004-06-21
Save your hard earned cash........2003-10-22
Music Review:
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