Nikolai Myaskovsky: Symphonies No. 17 & 20 Ural Youth Symphony Orchestra & Alexander Rudin

Cover Nikolai Myaskovsky: Symphonies No. 17 & 20

Album info

Album-Release:
2023

HRA-Release:
27.10.2023

Label: Fuga Libera

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Orchestral

Artist: Ural Youth Symphony Orchestra & Alexander Rudin

Composer: Nikolai Miaskowsky (1881-1950)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881 - 1950): Symphony No. 17 in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 41:
  • 1 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 17 in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 41: I. Lento - Allegro molto agitato 14:55
  • 2 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 17 in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 41: II. Lento assai - Andantino (ma non troppo) 13:52
  • 3 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 17 in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 41: III. Allegro, poco Vivace 04:27
  • 4 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 17 in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 41: IV. Andante - Allegro molto animato 10:07
  • Symphony No. 20 in E Major, Op. 50:
  • 5 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 20 in E Major, Op. 50: I. Allegro con spirito 08:38
  • 6 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 20 in E Major, Op. 50: II. Adagio 07:07
  • 7 Myaskovsky: Symphony No. 20 in E Major, Op. 50: III. Allegro inquieto 09:36
  • Total Runtime 01:08:42

Info for Nikolai Myaskovsky: Symphonies No. 17 & 20



Alexander Rudin and the Ural Youth Symphony Orchestra here present two symphonies by Nikolai Myaskovsky — one of the most undiscovered composers of the 20th century. In his creative legacy, Myaskovsky equals his more famous contemporaries — Prokofiev and Shostakovich.

Rudin has been deeply attached to Myaskovsky’s works for a long time; “I have been playing and recording his compositions for more than thirty years… Myaskovsky hardly ever lowered his standards of sincerity, noble taste, extraordinary depth and tragedy. He is an amazing composer, whose works cannot perhaps be immediately understood by everyone. You have to enter into his music and listen to it with an open heart. There is nothing funky about it and many of its connotations are encoded; the music is introverted and thus reflects the personality of the composer. It nonetheless makes a very strong impression and can provide the answers to the questions we face today”.

Ural Youth Symphony Orchestra
Alexander Rudin, conductor



Alexander Rudin
is an internationally acclaimed cellist, conductor, pianist, harpsichordist, professor at the Moscow Conservatoire, researcher of early scores, author of orchestral versions of chamber works and the mastermind behind unique themed series. The musician’s repertoire includes cello music from four centuries – both pieces that are exceedingly well-known and others that have never been performed before. Thanks to Rudin’s attention to forgotten episodes in the history of music, music-lovers throughout the world have heard many new works for the first time. These include Mikhail Vielgorsky’s Theme and Variations for cello and orchestra, cello concerti by Antonín Kraft, Jean Balthazar Trickler, Johann Heinrich Facius and Robert Volkmann, Dvořák’s First Cello Concerto and original versions of works for cello and orchestra by Tchaikovsky – Variations on a Rococo Theme and Pezzo capriccioso. Much of Rudin’s repertoire features works by contemporary composers including Valentin Silvestrov, Vyacheslav Artyomov, Edison Denisov and Andrei Golovin.

Having received a traditional academic education, Alexander Rudin became interested in the authentic performance of early music, and in time came to a natural synthesis of moth movements. He currently combines performances on a modern cello and a viola da gamba and he performs both music by the Romantic composers and works from the baroque era and early classicism. Rudin’s activities as a pianist and conductor are developing in much a similar manner.

Since 1988 the musician has been Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of the Musica Viva Moscow chamber orchestra. Together with the ensemble, in Moscow he has presented unique concert programmes, many of which have been held during the subscription series Masterpieces and Premieres and Musical Gatherings at the Tretyakovs’ House, subscription series at the Moscow International House of Music and the Russian Gnessin Academy of Music and the Dedication festival.

The conductor has earned a reputation as a brilliant interpreter of opera scores and major works in the cantata and oratorio genre. In Moscow, he has conducted the Russian premieres of the oratorio Juditha triumphans by Vivaldi and an original version of Degtyarev’s oratorio Minin and Pozharsky, or the Liberation of Moscow. There have been performances of Haydn’s oratorios The Creation and The Seasons, Mendelssohn’s Symphony No 2 (Hymn of Praise) and concert versions of the operas Idomeneo by Mozart and Oberon by Weber.

As a guest conductor, Alexander Rudin appears with numerous acclaimed orchestras including the Academic Symphony Orchestra of the St Petersburg Philharmonic (Honoured Ensemble of Russia), the Russian National Orchestra, the Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra, the State Academic Svetlanov Symphony Orchestra of Russia and symphony and chamber orchestras in Norway, Finland and Turkey.

Alexander Rudin frequently appears on tour. As a soloist and conductor he has taken part in the international festivals Les Pianos folies (France) and La Follе Journée (France, Spain, Japan) among others. Rudin performs recitals in such countries as Germany, Finland, The Netherlands, Canada, Great Britain, Hungary, Slovenia and Turkey.

The musician’s activities as a teacher are linked with the Moscow Conservatoire (where he teaches a chamber ensemble class) and one of Turkey’s most prestigious higher education institutions – Yaşar University in Izmir. The performer gives master-classes around the world and collaborates with Youth Orchestras as a conductor.

Alexander Rudin’s discography includes over thirty discs released on leading Russian and international labels (Naxos, Olympia, Tudor, Melodiya, Cello Classics, Russian Season, Russian Disc, RCD). Particularly well received were his recordings of six suites by Bach (Naxos), cello concerti by Trickler, Myaskovsky’s Cello Concerto, a Grieg Album, works by Alexander Alyabiev and Alexander Cherepnin as well as a live recording of a concert from the Great Hall of the Conservatoire (Beethoven’s Third Symphony and Kraft’s (Cello Concerto).

In 1983 Alexander Rudin graduated from the State Gnessin Musical Education Institute (cello class of Lev Yevgrafov and piano class of Yuri Ponizovkin). In 1989 he completed his studies at the Moscow State Conservatoire (conducting class of Dmitri Kitaenko). While still a student he was a prize-winner at the prestigious Bach Competition in Leipzig (1976), the Cassado Competition in Florence (1979) and the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow (1978, 1982).

Alexander Rudin is a People’s Artist of Russia, a recipient of the State Prize of Russia and a recipient of the City of Moscow Government Prize.

Booklet for Nikolai Myaskovsky: Symphonies No. 17 & 20

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