Shostakovich Symphony No.5; Four Romances on Poems by Pushkin

Shostakovich Symphony No.5; Four Romances on Poems by Pushkin

£12.99

Elder’s acclaimed Shostakovich interpretations continue with this live concert recording of one of the composer’s most popular symphonies, coupled with a work which reveals one of its most enigmatic secrets.

  • Live recording from Bridgewater Hall performance, January 2018, engineered by award winning producer Steve Portnoi
  • Described as being “one his most important utterances” (Shostakovich expert Stephen Johnson in the formative booklet note which accompanies this release), Symphony No.5 was written as a response to the sinister unsigned article which appeared in Pravda, the state newspaper, in January 1936, denouncing the composer and implying the ultimate threat, during the time of Stalin’s ‘Great Terror’.
  • Whilst the messages of the Symphony have been subject to a variety of often conflicting interpretations, the music and vivid orchestral writing, to which the Hallé’s live performance fully attest, have earned it a leading place in the composer’s legacy.
  • In coupling the Symphony with the Four Romances which immediately pre-date it, Elder sheds light on his interpretation of the meaning of the Symphony. The latter work quotes thematic material used in the first of the Pushkin settings in which faith is expressed that art can survive even the most brutal oppression and desecration, perhaps revealing an element of pride that the composer had been true to his art in the face of state threats.
  • James Platt is one of the leading British singers of his generation who frequently appears in the major opera houses across Europe and in concert performances with leading international ensembles and conductors.
  • Previous Shostakovich releases have been met with great acclaim, with significant praise for Elder’s insightful interpretation of the works:
    Of Symphony No.7 (CD HLL 7537) Richard Morrison writing in the Times said “This magnificent performance is so much more than the way the symphony is usually played – as a simplistic story of brutalism repelled by stoic courage. Mark Elder and the Hallé uncover the sense of despair and surreal absurdity even in the ‘triumph’ of the finale”

Conductor
Sir Mark Elder

Bass
James Platt

Catalogue number CD HLL 7550



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