
Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra; Music for Strings, Percussion & Celesta / Alsop, Baltimore Symphony
BĆ©la Bartókās Concerto for Orchestra, one of his greatest works, was written in the United States after the composer was forced to flee Hungary during World War II. It is not only a brilliant display vehicle for each instrumental section but a work of considerable structural ingenuity that unites classical forms and sonorities with the pungency of folk rhythms and harmonies. Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta explores darker moods through a score of marvellously poised symmetry. This release follows Marin Alsopās ārivetingā (Gramophone) Baltimore Symphony recordings of DvorĆ”kās symphonies.
REVIEW:
Marin Alsop leads a splendid performance of the oft-recorded Concerto for Orchestra, full of character, whether in the jocular āgames of pairsā second movement, the ensuing spooky elegy, or the finale that begins (seemingly) a touch reserved but takes off like a shot in the coda. Itās a memorable and wholly successful effort, excellently engineered to boot.
ā ClassicsToday.com (D. Hurwitz)
BĆ©la Bartókās Concerto for Orchestra, one of his greatest works, was written in the United States after the composer was forced to flee Hungary during World War II. It is not only a brilliant display vehicle for each instrumental section but a work of considerable structural ingenuity that unites classical forms and sonorities with the pungency of folk rhythms and harmonies. Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta explores darker moods through a score of marvellously poised symmetry. This release follows Marin Alsopās ārivetingā (Gramophone) Baltimore Symphony recordings of DvorĆ”kās symphonies.
REVIEW:
Marin Alsop leads a splendid performance of the oft-recorded Concerto for Orchestra, full of character, whether in the jocular āgames of pairsā second movement, the ensuing spooky elegy, or the finale that begins (seemingly) a touch reserved but takes off like a shot in the coda. Itās a memorable and wholly successful effort, excellently engineered to boot.
ā ClassicsToday.com (D. Hurwitz)
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BĆ©la Bartókās Concerto for Orchestra, one of his greatest works, was written in the United States after the composer was forced to flee Hungary during World War II. It is not only a brilliant display vehicle for each instrumental section but a work of considerable structural ingenuity that unites classical forms and sonorities with the pungency of folk rhythms and harmonies. Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta explores darker moods through a score of marvellously poised symmetry. This release follows Marin Alsopās ārivetingā (Gramophone) Baltimore Symphony recordings of DvorĆ”kās symphonies.
REVIEW:
Marin Alsop leads a splendid performance of the oft-recorded Concerto for Orchestra, full of character, whether in the jocular āgames of pairsā second movement, the ensuing spooky elegy, or the finale that begins (seemingly) a touch reserved but takes off like a shot in the coda. Itās a memorable and wholly successful effort, excellently engineered to boot.
ā ClassicsToday.com (D. Hurwitz)
























