Scriabin: Symphony 3/ Poem of Ecstasy
On this CD:
1. Symphony No. 3 in C minor ("Divine Poem"), Op. 43
Composed by Alexander Nikolayevich Skryabin
Performed by Moscow State Symphony Orchestra
Conducted by Igor Golovschin
2. Symphony No. 4 in C major ("Poem of Ecstasy"), Op. 54
Composed by Alexander Nikolayevich Skryabin
Performed by Moscow State Symphony Orchestra
Conducted by Igor Golovschin
Scriabin: Symphony 3/ Poem of Ecstasy, Music, Alexander Scriabin, Igor Golovschin, Moscow State Symphony Orchestra, 20th/21st Century Symphony, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral & Symphonic, Symphonic
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- Stokowski in Phase 4 land, Vol. 1
- Stupendous Stokowski
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Decca Recordings, 1965-1972 (Limited Edition)
Manufacturer: Decca
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- Original Masters: Leopold Stokowski: Decca Recordings 1964-1975 [BOX SET]
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ASIN: B0000B0A0P
Release Date: 2003-11-25 |
Customer Reviews:
Stokowski in Phase 4 land, Vol. 1.......2006-09-22
Decca has pulled a lot of Stokowski's gaudy Phase 4 recordings off the market so that they can reappear in this box set, but the company had already licensed many out to another label, Cala, that specializes in all things Stokowski. So if you pick and choose, you can buy your favorites recordings individually with a little effort. Of the two volumes in the Original Masters series, this one is the more interesting musically.
For one thing, it features two of the conductor's great strengths: his incomparable Bach transcriptions (no one else performs them with the same total commitment) and his Debussy and Ravel. Admittedly, this La Mer and Daphnis and Chloes have been multi-miked within an inch of their lives, and neither represents Stokowski as wonderuflly as his EMI Debussy collection, but if you love the old magician, you'll love these readings.
Aslo very appealing are the Enigma Variations, which Stokowski recorded only once, and the Franck D minor Sym., though don't expect world-class execution in either case. Stokowski championed early Messiaen in l'Ascension, and here is his last version, along with a swooning and seductive Scriabin Poeme d'Extase.
You have to adore recorded excess to swallow this Symphonie fantastique and Firebird, both gorgeous in a kind of Las Vegas neon billboard sort of way. But for geneations of listeners, that's what Stokowski is all about. What he's not about, sadly, is the wretchedly eccentric and nearly unlistenable Tchaikovsky Fifth Sym., the only performance in this whole set that made me hold my nose.
In all, thee are enough goodie here to justify buying the whole box, unless you want to pick and choose, in which case turn to Cala's excellent reissues.
Stupendous Stokowski.......2004-03-30
This five disc box set featuring the Decca Recordings (1965-72) of conductor Leopold Stokowski is among the latest batch of releases in the limited edition "Original Masters" series. While parts of this particular collection have been available on CD in the past (in the old "Phase 4" and "Weekend Classics" series), some of this material is being made available for the first time internationally. Those performances include Franck's Symphony (Hilversium RPO, 1970), Elgar's Enigma Variations (Czech PO, 1972), Ravel's "Fanfare" (Hilversium, 1970) and Messiaen's "L'Ascension" (London SO, 1970). Other highlights include an entire disc (CD1) of Stokowski's Transcriptions, and a delightful reading of Berlioz's "Symphonie Fantastique" with the New Philharmonia Orchestra from 1968. In all, another great set in the "Original Masters" series.
Average customer rating:
- Fantastic Symphony No. 3
- PARTIAL REDEMPTION
- Great overall
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Scriabin: Complete Symphonies
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- Complete Piano Works of Scriabin
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ASIN: B00009OOJT
Release Date: 2003-08-12 |
Customer Reviews:
Fantastic Symphony No. 3.......2006-01-07
I have all Scriabin's symphonies, but his third is by far my favorite. It is a work of such grandeur and power. The brass section of the orchestra is truly put to the test and pushed to the limits in this work. The reoccuring theme that is heard at the very beginning of the work is heard all throughout the whole symphony and remains a very prominant force in the work.
I have to say that this symphony is one of my absolute favorities and one of the finest ever written. The final movement is especially amazing, with the final bars culminating in one of the most fantastic codas to anything I have ever experienced in symphonic music.
I highly recommend this recording. If you are unfamiliar to Scriabin, do yourself a favor and get acquainted. You'll find his music and this symphony some of the most moving music you'll ever have the pleasure of hearing.
PARTIAL REDEMPTION.......2005-12-05
If Scriabin is an acquired taste, it's a taste that I acquired very easily. Like certain composers (e.g. Schoenberg) and unlike certain others (e.g. Rachmaninov) whose careers cover the late 19th and early 20th centuries, his idiom changed fairly drastically in the process. In Scriabin's case this change did not amount to a complete abjuration of the late romantic idiom, but well before his untimely death he had ceased to ascribe 'keys' to his works and had also stopped dividing them into separate movements in the traditional way, something Schoenberg always clung to. He took himself quite unbelievably seriously, developing a mission to redeem mankind through art. That sort of thing, like the similar aspirations of Shelley and Coleridge, seems hokum to me, but hokum whose results I happen to enjoy. I also sympathise entirely with his yearning, expressed in connexion with the 3rd symphony, for '...the evolution of the human spirit...torn from an entire past of beliefs and mysteries which it surmounts and overcomes...' Progress in this respect still seems deplorably slow and prone to relapse, and I sense that creative artists have lowered their sights to some extent in terms of what they think they can achieve along these lines.
The title of this set 'Complete Symphonies' seems to me a good one. Of the five main works here the first three bear the name of 'symphony', and the Poeme de l'Extase was conceived under the same title and intended at first to be in four movements, but by now Scriabin's imagination was taking leave of terra firma. When the work appeared in 1907 it was heralded by a 'philosophical programme' in verse, and its title is of course 'Poem'. If it is a symphony in some sense, then so is the final Prometheus - the Poem of Fire. This not only abandons the standard symphonic division into movements but envisages a wordless chorus, an obbligato piano part and even some kind of magic lantern that he wanted to project specified colours into the audience. The first performance of the work, in Moscow in 1911, lacked this colourful feature, a lack rectified at a performance in New York in 1915, the year of Scriabin's death. As for the harmony, it is roughly as radical as that of Delius.
In addition to the symphonies this set provides two earlier works, the piano concerto and a short Reverie. These, and the first symphony, are very traditional in idiom, and none the worse for that I'd say. The second symphony is a little bolder, but the real adult Scriabin first appears in the third symphony which is on the third disc of the set. The recording dates from several years earlier than the other two discs, but it seems to me much more satisfactory. The earlier discs are not badly recorded to be sure, but the sound lacks presence and vividness. The volume level is on the low side, but while turning it up improves matters a little it doesn't solve the basic problem - after a point it is just too loud and the sound is still not what Scriabin quite needs. I compared my vinyl set of the two Poems from Ormandy, and the difference in sound-quality in the Poeme du Feu on disc 1 is startling. There is still a difference when it comes to the Poeme de l'Extase on disc 3, but it is not so great, and it is less attributable to the recording. It points up, I think, some characteristics of the conductor.
As well as the two Poems, my collection of Scriabin contains quite a fair selection of his solo piano works, played by Horowitz, Richter, Ogdon, Gould - and Ashkenazy. Of these performances I like Ashkenazy's the least by quite a long way, because I have always found too much of his playing to be just a bit ordinary. When it came to listening to him in his latter-day incarnation as a conductor, I admit I underwent the process with some suspicions. These were founded on my previous experience of him as an interpreter even in his prime, but also caused by some scepticism regarding retired soloists finding a new career as conductors. Beecham, Toscanini and Karajan had a mission from the outset to be conductors. They went into the business when young, and they knew not to underestimate what it required. Elderly gentlemen taking the baton up as a sunset career will be treated doubtless with the respect due to their erstwhile eminence, but I wouldn't expect great things from them, nor do I find great things here. The difference from Ormandy shows markedly even in the Poeme de l'Extase. There is simply far more refinement, subtlety and sheer quality in Ormandy's account, and the recording, from sometime in the 70's, is actually better too, even on vinyl. The gap is even greater in Prometheus, affecting in particular the piano part from Peter Jablonski, given a recorded sound that is too discreet by half or more than half. This young player gets a fairer opportunity in the concerto, an attractive early work which he performs with aplomb and distinction. The first two symphonies and the Reverie are attractive too, and having nothing to compare them with I was consequently less critical.
In fact you will get very fair performances of Scriabin in general here, just not 5-star ones. The production is admirable in many ways, with the pieces sequenced with some imagination rather than in strict order of composition. The liner-note takes them in that order, and sensibly so, and it is a very sound and helpful production from Andrew Huth. I have no regrets at all about purchasing this interesting set, and I have given honesty and balance my best shot in the foregoing opinions.
Great overall.......2005-08-29
The Sym #3 in this set is awesome. The sound quality is excellent and the performance brings out so many details in this huge over-the-top work.
The other syms are well done too, but #3 is Scriabin's masterpiece so what really matters, in my view...
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Scriabin - Symphonies Nos.1-3 · Le Poème de l'extase · Promethée, le poème du feu / Stefania Toczyska · Michael Myers · Dmitri Alexeev · Riccardo Muti
Alexander Scriabin , Riccardo Muti , and The Choral Arts Society of Philadelphia The Philadelphia Orchestra
Manufacturer: Angel Records
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Similar Items:
- The Complete Preludes of Alexander Scriabin
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ASIN: B00005MIZO
Release Date: 2002-11-05 |
Tracks:
- Sym No.1 in E, Op.26: I. Lento
- Sym No.1 in E, Op.26: II. Allegro Drammatico
- Sym No.1 in E, Op.26: III. Lento
- Sym No.1 in E, Op.26: IV. Vivace
- Sym No.1 in E, Op.26: V. Allegro
- Sym No.1 in E, Op.26: VI. Andante - Stefania Toczyska/Michael Myers/The Westminster Chor/Joseph Flummerfelt
Tracks:
- Sym No.2 in c, Op.29: I. Andante -
- Sym No.2 in c, Op.29: II. Allegro
- Sym No.2 in c, Op.29: III. Andante
- Sym No.2 in c, Op.29: IV. Tempestuoso
- Sym No.2 in c, Op.29: V. Maestoso
- Le Poeme De L'Extase, Op.54 - Frank Kaderabek
Tracks:
- Sym No.3 in c, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': I. Intro: Lento: Divin, Grandiose - Luttes: Allegro...
- Sym No.3 in c, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': II. Voluptes: Lento: Sublime - Vivo: Divin Essai
- Sym No.3 in c, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': III. Jeu Divin: Allegro: Avec Une Joie Eclatante
- Promethee, Le Poeme Du Feu, Op.60 - Dmitri Alexeev/The Choral Arts Society Of Philadelphia/Sean Deibler
Customer Reviews:
I like Ashkenazy better!.......2005-01-11
Muti is great with his Philadelphia Orchestra. The recordings are high quality, but at times can get digitally distorted in the climaxes. The interpratations have a strength and expansiveness. But I still give Ashkenazy my top recommendation on the wonderfully bargin priced Trio label. He tops Muti threefold in his power, profundity, and energy! Plus the digital sound beats is clearer and more realistic than on Muti's set.
Scriabin was a Theosophist, who studied the works of Madamme Blavatsky (great female mystic). His works come from a place of spirituality and mysticism. His are inspired by the worlds religions from a esoteric approach. I can only compare his musical sound world to Franz Schmidt or Cyril Scott. Scriabin's music is on the verge of atonality, very modern sounding for the early 1900's. He took on the philosophical views of Wagner and expanded upon them, trying to create a new artform, which he didn't fulfill due to his untimely death. Look for the recording of Scriabin's "Preparation for the Final Mystery" on Decca also conducted by Ashkenazy.
Scriabin's 5 symphonies open the door to much inspiration on Nature and the Divine. There is no doubt that you can only gain by listening to Scriabin. Muti is a great start, but Ashkenazy totally understands Scriabin!
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Scriabin: Le divin poème: Le poème de l'extase; Rêverie
Manufacturer: Polygram Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Scriabin, Alexander
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ASIN: B00000E4OT
Release Date: 1991-10-11 |
Average customer rating:
- The 2nd Symphony is the star here
- A so-so 2nd is made to shine
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Scriabin: Symphonies 2, 3 and 4 (Poem of Ecstasy)
Manufacturer: Chandos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Scriabin, Alexander
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ASIN: B00000IM6S
Release Date: 1999-04-13 |
Tracks:
- The Poem Of Ecstasy, Op.54 - Adolph Herseth
- I. Andante-
- II. Allegro
- III. Andante
- IV. Tempestoso-
- V. Maestoso
Tracks:
- Lento-
- Luttes: Allegro-
- Voluptes: Lento-
- Jeu Divin: Allegro
- Reverie, Op.24
Amazon.com
Never one lacking a big vision, Alexander Scriabin also never lacked a big ear for big sound. His orchestral works are massive, both in structural scope--where their rhythms almost burst the bubble frequently--and instrumental size. This collection of the Second and Third Symphonies is a wonderful restorative work, showing with blazing heat (on the Second) how well Scriabin could command an orchestra. The clashes are big, the crescendos bigger, and the whole affair is like a harmonious thunderclap that keeps happening. The Poem of Ecstasy and Reverie that open and close the book on this two-CD set are heavily motivic, the first presenting lots of smaller fragments that recur in their construction of the whole piece, and the second a brief and restrained miniature. What one hears across these pieces is the composer's climbing vision, which investigates a more measured set of contrasts in the Third Symphony but never gives an inch on the big idea behind the music, which in short mixed the existentialism of the late 19th century with the mysticism of Madame Blavatsky and others. Sure, it's a mouthful as philosophy, but as music, it's an even bigger, funner earful. --Andrew Bartlett
Customer Reviews:
The 2nd Symphony is the star here.......2007-06-13
If you like your Scriabin unfussy, Jarvi's your man. Let's start right out by saying that the Symphony #3 (Divine Poem) and #4 (Poem of Ecstasy) are well-done. But you can get many other commendable readings of these works. No, the real stunner here is the 2nd Symphony. Scriabin himself professed a dislike of this work because he claimed too much of his inner thinking was revealed in the score (I guess he preferred to be inscrutible). In most performances, the piece does come off as rather perfunctory and even uninspired. Not here. The conductor builds the tension and the momentum throughout each section of the score, culminating in a truly shattering Scherzo that then segues into the last movement. In the hands of many conductors, the final movement comes across as empty rhetoric, but Jarvi turns it into an absolute triumph. The Scottish National Orchestra delivers an extraordinary reading that's extremely polished while at the same time being viscerally exciting. Jarvi's is most definitely the version to have of this symphony -- you can pass over Muti, Semkow, Svetlanov, Inbal, Ashkenazy and any number of others who are just also-rans in this repertoire.
A so-so 2nd is made to shine.......2001-02-25
I haven't heard this entire album. But recently, I heard its 2nd Symphony played on the radio, so my comments apply to the 2nd Symphony only. Bear that in mind. I'm a fan of Scriabin's piano music. I've heard his 2nd Symphony a couple of times over the past two decades, but it never stuck in my mind. I thought his first two symphonies didn't have much to offer. But this performance of the 2nd puts me on notice that Scriabin had progressed significantly since his 1st. It took Järvi's powerful rendition of this symphony to make me realize that it's a truly worthwhile work. I can still tell that the symphony is far from a great work. It's just O. K. But Järvi and his old band the SNO are so very adept at bringing out the best of what the 2nd has to offer that I couldn't help being impressed by Scriabin. I now see how much he had progressed since his routine and uninspired 1st Symphony. Scriabin had matured as a symphonist. But it took Järvi to make me realize it. This interpretation is in a solidly romantic vein, which feels appropriate. But occasionally, we sense Scriabin's growth toward his unique, advanced harmonics which came later. This is a work that deserves to be heard more often, but only a performance like Järvi and the SNO give here can make the work truly effective and appreciated. It reminds me again how fortunate we are in southeast Michigan to have Järvi in Detroit.
Average customer rating:
- The greatest but......
- Definitive Performances Of Scriabin's Orchestral Music
- Magnificent!
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Scriabin: 3 Symphonies & Le Poème de l'extase/ Ashkenazy
Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin , Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra , Vladimir Ashkenazy , Brigitte Balleys , and Sergej Larin
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Horowitz Plays Scriabin
ASIN: B000040OX4
Release Date: 2000-02-08 |
Tracks:
- Le Poeme de l'extase, Op. 54
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: Andante
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: Allegro
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: Andante
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: Tempestoso
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: Maestoso
- Symphony No. 1 In E Major, Op. 26: Lento
- Symphony No. 1 In E Major, Op. 26: Allegro dramatico
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 1 In E Major, Op. 26: Lento - Rundfunkchor Berlin
- Symphony No. 1 In E Major, Op. 26: Vivace - Rundfunkchor Berlin
- Symphony No. 1 In E Major, Op. 26: Allegro - Rundfunkchor Berlin
- Symphony No. 1 In E Major, Op. 26: Andante - Rundfunkchor Berlin
- Symphony No. 3, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': Introduction
- Symphony No. 3, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': Luttes
- Symphony No. 3, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': Voluptes
- Symphony No. 3, Op.43 'Le Divin Poeme': Jeu divin
Customer Reviews:
The greatest but.............2003-10-17
This set is amazing in every way, but get the new Ashkenazy 3-CD set released from Decca's TRIO label. It contains the 3 symphonies, the poem of exctasy, prometheus, the piano concerto, and the reverie! I bought it new from my local HMV for $11.99!!!
By far the best Scriabin I've heard besides the Muti! Ashkenazy really knows, understands and loves Scriabin's music. Plus the recorded digital sound is superlative.
Definitive Performances Of Scriabin's Orchestral Music.......2002-02-27
Vladimir Ashkenazy leads the Radio Symphony Orchestra of Berlin (recently renamed the Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin) in these revelatory performances of Scriabin's orchestral music. These are passionately warm performances, especially of the "Poem Of Ectasy". Ashkenazy steers a fine middle course between technical perfection and excessive emotion, yet leads his orchestra in one brilliant performance after another. To his credit, Ashkenazy's interpretation of the "Poem Of Ectasy" isn't as dramatically intense as a Kirov Orchestra performance conducted by Gergiev that I heard a few months ago at New York City's legendary Carnegie Hall; somehow I sensed that Gergiev was losing control of his forces, especially the Brass section. Here, Ashkenazy does a splendid job keeping his forces in check, so that the brass section doesn't overwhelm the rest. The sound quality is absolutely impeccable.
Magnificent!.......2001-03-31
The Western world has had an estranged relationship with Alexander Scriabin. During the Russian composer's life he performed throughout Europe to critical acclaim. His mystical, exotic themes and passionate symphonies swept up audiences in Germany, France and even sober-minded England. So why has the legend of Scriabin faded?
Perhaps we can look to Scriabin's work itself for answers. `Le poème de l'extase' and `The Divine Poem', in particular, best represent Scriabin's use of surreal subject matter and unusual instrumentation to illustrate his unusual vision. The selected works do not present themselves to the listener - they swim, swirl, entice and ultimately confront the listener's senses. Scriabin believed in a holistic approach to composing and listening to his symphonies was never meant to be a passive experience. Scriabin was interested in esoteric cultural themes, Eastern philosophy, Russian patriotism, Nietzschesque explorations, mysticism and the "heightening of the senses through music". While Scriabin's exhaustive list of interests and often (seemingly) conflicting influences saturated his work, he manages to orchestrate and organize these volatile themes into comprehensive, powerful symphonic offerings. Quite simply, no composer before or since has been able to mold so wide a variety of themes into a single motif - and make it work.
Criticism of Scriabin's work was never unduly harsh. The most common critique from Western audiences has always been that Scriabin's work seems "foreign" or "bizarre and surreal". Russian audiences easily embrace Scriabin and in many ways he is considered one of their best kept national secrets. After Scriabin's death his work largely faded in the eye of the Western world, perhaps because Scriabin had no heir or champion in the Western world - no musical mind to adopt and expand upon his ideas. He swept across Europe like a storm, and seemed to disappear as quickly as he came.
Within the last 25 years, the Western world has been slowly reintroduced to Alexander Scriabin. European and American audiences, perhaps because of curiosity or expanding tolerance, seem eager to dive into Scriabin's music and explore the robust and eccentric themes that fueled his work. The 3 Symphonies offered here under the leadership of Vladamir Ashkenazy and performed by the Deutsches Symphonie Orchester in Berlin, are brilliant, dazzling readings of Scriabin's work. Ashkenazy captures Scriabin in all his fury and passion and spurs the musicians onto greater and greater heights.
Scriabin's 3 Symphonies are not meant for the meek or weak of heart. Listening to Scriabin is not unlike engaging in a volatile love affair - it is physical, passionate and dizzying! Listen to Scriabin and you are listening to the triumphant buzz and hum of life itself.
Average customer rating:
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ASIN: B000085RTK
Release Date: 2003-01-14 |
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Alexander Scriabin: Complete Symphonies/Poème de l'extase, Op 54
Manufacturer: Philips
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ASIN: B0000041F7
Release Date: 1996-11-19 |
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 1 In E, Op. 26: 1. Lento
- Symphony No. 1 In E, Op. 26: 2. Allegro dramatico
- Symphony No. 1 In E, Op. 26: 3. Lento
- Symphony No. 1 In E, Op. 26: 4. Vivace
- Symphony No. 1 In E, Op. 26: 5. Allegro
- Symphony No. 1 In E, Op. 26: 6. Andante
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: 1. Andante
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: 2. Allegro
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29: 3. Andante
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29 (Cont.): 4. Tempestoso
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 29 (Cont.): 5. Maestoso
- Symphony No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 43: 1. Lento - Luttes (Allegro)
- Symphony No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 43: 2. Voluptes (Lento - Vivo)
- Symphony No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 43: 3. Jeu divin (Allegro - Vivo - Allegro)
- Po me de l'extase, Op. 54
Customer Reviews:
Pretty good.......2003-10-17
I enjoyed these performances. The recorded sound is very nice too. The interpretations are much more easy going, warm and they lack high powered energy Scriabin calls for. But I did enjoy them. My top recommendations are the Muti (unfortunatly full price), or the new 3 cd Ashkenazy set from Decca's TRIO label...(Amazing, outstanding and fantastic in all such ways!)
Average customer rating:
- Over-the-Top Scriabin
- Red hot RUSSIAN performances
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Scriabin: Symphony 3/ Poem of Ecstasy
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Similar Items:
- Scriabin: Symphony No. 2; Symphonic Poem in D minor
ASIN: B0000014E8
Release Date: 2000-10-05 |
Tracks:
- Sym No.3 'The Divine Poem' Op.43: Lento
- Sym No.3 'The Divine Poem' Op.43: Luttes (Struggles)
- Sym No.3 'The Divine Poem' Op.43: Voluptes (Delights)
- Sym No.3 'The Divine Poem' Op.43: Jeu Divin (Divine Play)
- Poem Of Ecstasy, Op.54 - Dmitri Lokalenkov
Customer Reviews:
Over-the-Top Scriabin.......2001-01-28
The critics and biographers of Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915)list his formative influences with near invariance: Chopin, of course,as attested by the early works for piano solo; Schumann; Tchaikovsky;and later Wagner, whose presence one senses strongly in the SecondSymphony (1901). Overlooked in this survey of "sources" isCésar Franck. Fifty years ago, however, in a chapter of his"Romanticism and the Twentieth Century," Wilfrid Mellers yokedFranck and Scriabin as a pair. That Franck provided Scriabin with aset of formal devices is at once obvious. Franck's Piano Quintet andhis Symphony in D-Minor both unify their three movements byreintroducing germinal motifs in each movement; Franck referred tothis as "cyclical form." Scriabin's Second Symphony is already"cyclical" in just this way; the Third Symphony, or "DivinePoem" (1903), is even more so, and in fact seems to lift the planof Franck's Quintet, or his Symphony, directly and shamelessly. But,as Mellers shows, the relation runs deeper; he goes as far as to callScriabin "an odd appendix to Franck's career." In so saying, heby no means intends to diminish Scriabin; rather, he finds inScriabin's music, as in Franck's, the projection of the composer's egoas a struggle between opposing erotic and transcendental principles.The result, in Franck, is either "eroticism curbed" or"rebellious passion that struggles to break free." The musicreflects the underlying tension. In Scriabin, however, "the bubbleof the inflated ego bursts." In the piano music, the Sixth Sonatasignalizes the incipient madness; in the orchestral music, "TheDivine Poem" provides the token. Igor Golovshin understands (asdid Nicolai Golovanov) that a Scriabin orchestral score is anall-or-nothing proposition; the conductor cannot tame but can onlyunleash it. His Naxos recording with the Moscow Symphony Orchestrabrings out the full pyrotechnic display of the gigantic FirstMovement, the "Luttes" ("Struggles"), wherein Scriabindepicts the conflict between the mundane and the celestial elementswithin the human soul. This is as much a treatment of the Nietzchean"Superman" idea as Strauss' roughly contemporary "Also SprachZarathustra." The low brass in the opening assault make aparticularly impressive showing. As has become the custom, the firstninety seconds or so get their own track, followed by the main body ofthe movement. In the Second Movement, the "Voluptés"("Delights"), Golovshin maintains the tension even while slowingdown the pace in comparison to the norm. (He is longer than most inall three movements.) In the Finale, "Jeu Divin" ("DivinePlay"), Golovshin pushes and pulls at the tempi, but convincingly,infusing the music with a feeling of life that it does not alwayshave. The coda has to be heard to be believed. The other item on theprogram is "Le poème de l'extase," sometimes catalogued asScriabin's Fourth Symphony. This too is an exercise in theunrestrained. In an essay on Scriabin, Colin Wilson once bluntlydescribed "Le poème de l'extase" as orchestral autoeroticism, ajudgment that Mellers also implies. Music for a gnostic century?Maybe so. In any case, this disc is a first-rate, inexpensive avenueinto Scriabin's weird world.
Red hot RUSSIAN performances.......1999-09-05
Do you want your Scriabin red hot, glowing with intensity? Then this is for you! This is a very russian performance which includes cymbalclashes not heard in western performances and roller-coaster tempos. Since the recorded sound is basically rather low, you might be knocked out of your seat at climaxes if you adjust the level according to the more quiet sections. The poem of ecstasy is discs highlight, a truly revealing performance, where (for once) the orchestration doesn't sound heavy but almost transparent in places. Not a top-notch orchestra perhaps, but committed and with a luxuriant stringsection.
Average customer rating:
- Very good overall
- A Very Fine Performance From Pletnev And His Orchestra
- Pletnev give us Scriabin's Divine performance!
- Pletnev give us Scriabin's Divine performance!
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Alexander Scriabin: Symphony No. 3, Op. 43 "The Divine Poem" / The Poem of Ecstasy, Op. 54 - Mikhail Pletnev
Alexander Scriabin , Mikhail Pletnev , and Russian National Orchestra
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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ASIN: B00002DET9
Release Date: 1999-11-09 |
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 3, op. 43 'Le Divin Poeme': Lento - Luttes. Allegro -
- Symphony No. 3, op. 43 'Le Divin Poeme': Voluptes. Lento -
- Symphony No. 3, op. 43 'Le Divin Poeme': Jeu divin. Allegro
- Le Poeme de l'extase, Op. 54
Customer Reviews:
Very good overall.......2005-12-17
I absolutely love this symphony. Very distinctive and has so many amazing "out of this world" bits.
This is an excellent recording overall. In particular, the strings are clear, as they ought to be. The placing of the cellos is very curious -- seem to be split into two groups at the front, both left and right of the centre. But great to hear the cellos coming out, and the bass is clear, which is important for the walking pizzicato bass theme in the 1st movement.
So overall, very good. My other favourite recording is Ashkenazy/DSOB on Decca which has brilliant sound, but this is an interesting alternative.
The filler is fine, but I have always found that it has nothing on Sym 3
A Very Fine Performance From Pletnev And His Orchestra.......2002-01-06
It's hard for me to judge how well Mikhail Pletnev's interpretations of Scriabin's scores rank against others, since I've only recently been introduced to Scriabin's music. Having heard Valery Gergiev and the Kirov Orchestra perform the Poem of Ectasy at Carnegie Hall last month, Pletnev's account strikes me as somewhat subdued, and less inspiring than Gergiev's. Yet I presume it remains a fine interpretation of Scriabin's tone poem. Indeed, in a recent edition of the Grammophone Guide To Classical CDs, this CD is highly recommended for both the tone poem and symphony as among the finest recordings of either score now available. Both works are blessed by the Russian National Orchestra's warm, vibrant playing. The sound quality is also excellent, if not nearly as vibrant as the latest digital imaging recording technology used by Deutsche Grammophon.
Pletnev give us Scriabin's Divine performance!.......2000-12-09
This CD is a real pleasure for everyone who adores the mystical and iconoclastical work of Scriabin. Pletnev and the RNO come really very close to the perfect performance of the Divine Poem. The Trumpet score in the 3rd act is exhilirating and the brass make brilliant appearance in all 3 acts. The pace is magnificiant and so is the sound. The Poem D'extase is a bit paller,but still the overwhole performance is very good. I'd not skip this one in my Late-Romantic collection.
Pletnev give us Scriabin's Divine performance!.......2000-12-09
This CD is a real pleasure for everyone who adores the mystical and iconoclastical work of Scriabin. Pletnev and the RNO come really very close to the perfect performance of the Divine Poem. The Trumpet score in the 3rd act is exhilirating and the brass make brilliant appearance in all 3 acts. The pace is magnificiant and so is the sound. The Poem D'extase is a bit paller,but still the overwhole performance is very good. I'd not skip this one in my Late-Romantic collection.
Music Review:
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