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Respighi: Vetrate di chiesa, Il tramonto & Trittico botticelliano / Neschling, Liege Royal Philharmonic

Also available from John Neschling and the Orchestre Philharmonique Royal de Liège ijn their Respighi series on BIS: Sinfonia Drammatica & Belfagor Overture; Metamorphoseon; Impressioni brasiliane & La boutique fantasque.
This is a wonderful program, both for the performances and for the intelligent overview it gives of Respighiâs art generally. It begins with a piece for chamber orchestra, continues with an intimate work for voice and string quartet, and concludes with one of the composerâs splashiest orchestral blockbusters. The progression is logical, and makes an excellent hour-plus of pleasurable listening. Itâs also sensationally well engineered.
In the Botticelli pictures, Neschling adopts leisurely (but never droopy) tempos that allow every detail of Respighiâs imaginative scoring to register. In The Birth of Venus, you can easily imagine how the violinsâ ostinato figures actually trace the delicate peaks of the waves in Botticelliâs painting. Itâs lovely and consistently ear-catching. Il Tramonto (The Sunset), after a poem by Shelley, showcases the art of Anna Caterina Antonacci. Best known for her Monteverdi recordings, sheâs a fine singing actress. Although voice tends to spread under pressure, her diction and way with the text is absolutely riveting, and Neschling paces the piece perfectly (about sixteen and a half minutes).
All of which brings us to Church Windows, still something of a rarityâin concert at least. If this performance doesnât quite match the classic Ormandy/Philadelphia version in the blazing second movement (Saint Michael Archangel), it comes close enough as makes no difference, and itâs magnificently sustained and really powerfully recorded. The organ/orchestra balances in the last movement are just about perfect, while the bass frequencies in the closing pages are crushing. In sum, if youâre into this wonderfully colorful and entertaining music, donât hesitate for a minute.
â ClassicsToday (David Hurwitz)

Also available from John Neschling and the Orchestre Philharmonique Royal de Liège ijn their Respighi series on BIS: Sinfonia Drammatica & Belfagor Overture; Metamorphoseon; Impressioni brasiliane & La boutique fantasque.
This is a wonderful program, both for the performances and for the intelligent overview it gives of Respighiâs art generally. It begins with a piece for chamber orchestra, continues with an intimate work for voice and string quartet, and concludes with one of the composerâs splashiest orchestral blockbusters. The progression is logical, and makes an excellent hour-plus of pleasurable listening. Itâs also sensationally well engineered.
In the Botticelli pictures, Neschling adopts leisurely (but never droopy) tempos that allow every detail of Respighiâs imaginative scoring to register. In The Birth of Venus, you can easily imagine how the violinsâ ostinato figures actually trace the delicate peaks of the waves in Botticelliâs painting. Itâs lovely and consistently ear-catching. Il Tramonto (The Sunset), after a poem by Shelley, showcases the art of Anna Caterina Antonacci. Best known for her Monteverdi recordings, sheâs a fine singing actress. Although voice tends to spread under pressure, her diction and way with the text is absolutely riveting, and Neschling paces the piece perfectly (about sixteen and a half minutes).
All of which brings us to Church Windows, still something of a rarityâin concert at least. If this performance doesnât quite match the classic Ormandy/Philadelphia version in the blazing second movement (Saint Michael Archangel), it comes close enough as makes no difference, and itâs magnificently sustained and really powerfully recorded. The organ/orchestra balances in the last movement are just about perfect, while the bass frequencies in the closing pages are crushing. In sum, if youâre into this wonderfully colorful and entertaining music, donât hesitate for a minute.
â ClassicsToday (David Hurwitz)
$21.99
Respighi: Vetrate di chiesa, Il tramonto & Trittico botticelliano / Neschling, Liege Royal Philharmonicâ
$21.99
Description

Also available from John Neschling and the Orchestre Philharmonique Royal de Liège ijn their Respighi series on BIS: Sinfonia Drammatica & Belfagor Overture; Metamorphoseon; Impressioni brasiliane & La boutique fantasque.
This is a wonderful program, both for the performances and for the intelligent overview it gives of Respighiâs art generally. It begins with a piece for chamber orchestra, continues with an intimate work for voice and string quartet, and concludes with one of the composerâs splashiest orchestral blockbusters. The progression is logical, and makes an excellent hour-plus of pleasurable listening. Itâs also sensationally well engineered.
In the Botticelli pictures, Neschling adopts leisurely (but never droopy) tempos that allow every detail of Respighiâs imaginative scoring to register. In The Birth of Venus, you can easily imagine how the violinsâ ostinato figures actually trace the delicate peaks of the waves in Botticelliâs painting. Itâs lovely and consistently ear-catching. Il Tramonto (The Sunset), after a poem by Shelley, showcases the art of Anna Caterina Antonacci. Best known for her Monteverdi recordings, sheâs a fine singing actress. Although voice tends to spread under pressure, her diction and way with the text is absolutely riveting, and Neschling paces the piece perfectly (about sixteen and a half minutes).
All of which brings us to Church Windows, still something of a rarityâin concert at least. If this performance doesnât quite match the classic Ormandy/Philadelphia version in the blazing second movement (Saint Michael Archangel), it comes close enough as makes no difference, and itâs magnificently sustained and really powerfully recorded. The organ/orchestra balances in the last movement are just about perfect, while the bass frequencies in the closing pages are crushing. In sum, if youâre into this wonderfully colorful and entertaining music, donât hesitate for a minute.
â ClassicsToday (David Hurwitz)
























