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Audio CD review:
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| Peter Maxwell Davies, Peter Maxwell Davies, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Scottish National Orchestra, John Wallace - Peter Maxwell Davies: Trumpet Concerto; Symphony No. 4 |
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Band: Peter Maxwell Davies, Peter Maxwell Davies, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Scottish National Orchestra, John Wallace Title: Peter Maxwell Davies: Trumpet Concerto; Symphony No. 4 Rating: Release Date: 24 August, 1993 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: Tpt Con: (Adagio-Allegro) 2: Tpt Con: (Adagio Molto) 3: Tpt Con: (Presto) 4: Sym No.4: I. Moderato 5: Sym No.4: II. Allegro 6: Sym No.4: III. Adagio 7: Sym No.4: IV. Andante-Allegro |
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Customer Reviews Symphony #4 the gem The first is a trumpet concerto for trumpet and orchestra. This compact disc contains two works by composer Peter Maxwell Davies. While Davies always manages to deliver a soundscape of incredible integrity whilst making provision for a solution to temporal structure problems in compositions such as the two on this recording, the production values for the trumpet concerto left a bit to be desired. As in this case of many concerto recordings, the soloist is placed with to much presence in the recording, the usually vast spaces of the concert hall, which provide a sonic shaping of brass timbre, is absent in the soloists microphone placement view. Nevertheless, Collins Classics are to be commended for fortitude and vision in recording this essential contemporary music series. All five of the davies symphony recordings are exquisite with outstanding production values. Highly recommended for the 20th century musicologist.
some notes on Symphony No. 4 The Symphony No. 4 is cast in four movements, performed without interruption and structured according to Davies' characteristically playful subversions of formal traditions. The first, Moderato, broods throughout, and seems to wind down towards a slower second section; but this is only a ruse. The second movement Scherzo appears instead, which, coupled with the third movement's Adagio, seems to set up a scherzo-trio form. The former material fails to return, however, and the fourth movement begins right away, opening with an Adagio and then moving into a concluding Allegro. -- J. Neal.
some notes on Trumpet Concerto (only recording of this work) Just such a climactic figure -- a series of rapid sequential descents in the trumpet abstractly sketched over by the percussionist -- precedes the point of exhaustion and recess from which the subsequent Adagio molto (functioning as a middle concerto movement) proceeds. It begins with the trepidation of the opening, but follows the steadier and more discernible pace of short repeated chords in the strings. The soloist's material is much more reserved and uncomplicated, while the accompaniment becomes increasingly turbulent -- first in the nervous string tremolos, then in the clarinet's quiet chromatic waves and the trombones' dark counterpoint. Finally an ostinato in the marimba initiates an exponential swell of ominous noise that tests the bounds of the bearable before subsiding into an eerily hushed, orchestra-wide canon of southbound glissandi. A stark dialogue between the horn and soloist closes this section. The Presto finale begins quietly, but with a heretofore absent rhythmic energy maintained by pointed accompanimental gestures and driving percussion, as well as the double-note runs exchanged between the solo trumpet and marimba. This energy is spent fairly quickly, however, as the orchestra cedes to the trumpet's obligatory closing cadenza. Here Davies plays his cleverest trick of all, however: after an initially flashy extemporization, the trumpet actually steps out of the spotlight, allowing virtually all the other instruments to finish off the work with a dizzyingly complex orchestral cadenza. -- J. Neal (from the All Classical Guide).
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