Nagovitsyn / Slonimsky / Uspensky Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra

Cover Nagovitsyn / Slonimsky / Uspensky

Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
06.11.2020

Label: Northern Flowers

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra

Composer: Vyacheslav Nagovitsyn (1939), Sergei Slonimsky (1932), Vladislav Uspensky (1937)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Galina Ustvolskaya (1919 - 2006):
  • 1 Concerto for Piano, Strings & Timpani 13:33
  • Orest Yevlakhov (1912 - 1973):
  • 2 Poem Concerto for Violin & Orchestra 14:29
  • Vladislav Uspensky (1937 - 2004):
  • 3 Music for Violin & Orchestra 11:03
  • 4 Music for Strings, Percussion, Voice, Harp & Piano 15:46
  • Grigory Korchmar (b. 1947): Diptych Concerto for Viola, Percussion, Celesta & Harp:
  • 5 Diptych Concerto for Viola, Percussion, Celesta & Harp: I. Notturno 07:38
  • 6 Diptych Concerto for Viola, Percussion, Celesta & Harp: II. Perpetuum mobile 08:12
  • Total Runtime 01:10:41

Info for Nagovitsyn / Slonimsky / Uspensky

An exciting new series for Violin Collectors and followers of the Russian violin school, some not heard much in the West

"Most substantial here is the Violin Concerto by Vyacheslav Nagovitsyn. The influence of his teacher Shostakovich may be evident in the opening Sinfonia…but the hypnotic Ostinato and sardonic Finale hint at more individual expression…If Phantasmagoria by Vladislav Uspensky impresses more by its technical brilliance than musical substance, its cohesive progress from uneasy stasis to ethereal evanescence feels undeniable." (Gramophone Magazine)

"With this provocative collection Northern Flowers - carefully but anonymously documented - continue the process of shaking up the classical 'scene'. I keep my fingers crossed that they will at some point favour Yuri Shaporin's Symphony for chorus and orchestra, completed in 1932 and premiered in London by Albert Coates and the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Then there are Ivan Dzerzhinsky's two piano concertos of the 1920s and 1930s which may have some promise. On the other hand, we can perhaps hope for some Slonimsky symphonies which might be closer to the front of the queue." (Rob Barnett, MusicWeb International)

Marina Yashvili, violin (Nagovitsyn)
Sergey Staadler, violin (Slonimsky)
Maxim Vengerov, violin (Uspensky)
Arkady Gutnikov, violin (Uspensky)
Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra
Gintaras Rinkevicius, conductor (Nagovitsyn)
Vladimir Ponkin, conductor (Slonimsky)
Alexander Dmitriev, conductor (Uspensky)



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Booklet for Nagovitsyn / Slonimsky / Uspensky

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