SERGE
KOUSSEVITZKY CONDUCTS TCHAIKOVSKY SYMPHONIES
CD-1138(2)
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NOT FOR SALE IN THE U.S.A.
Koussevitzky's early biographer Lourie reports that in his
salad days Koussevitzky--like his
mentor Arthur Nikisch--"based his performances of Tchaikovsky on the emotional
side of the music... (but in later years) after undergoing a great and serious
evolution... [Koussevitzky] adopted a correct and entirely new method of
treating this composer". While that new method may have emphasized the music's
symphonic structure and Beethovenian dynamism, Koussevitzky never slighted
the seething emotions that permeate this composer's
scores. Ever the showman, Koussevitzky deftly portrays the composer's shifting
moods, from the ink-black darkness and devastation of the Pathetique to
the incredible resilience of the human spirit captured in the closing moments
of the Fourth Symphony, immediately following the last and most disturbing
appearance of the fate motif. The playing of the Boston Symphony in this
set is utterly fearless, no matter how fast the tempo or intricate the writing.
Just listen to the snap of the pizzicato strings in the Fourth Symphony's
scherzo or the boundless enthusiasm of the brass in finale from the Fifth.
CD-1138(2) SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY CONDUCTS TCHAIKOVSKY SYMPHONIES.
Symphony No 4 in F Minor, Op. 36 rec: Centennial Symphony Orchestra, March
11, 1949; Symphony Hall, Boston; Symphony No 5 in E Minor, Op. 64 rec: Centennial
Symphony Orchestra, November 6, 1943; Symphony Hall, Boston; Symphony No
6 in B Minor, Op. 74 "Pathetique" rec: Centennial Symphony Orchestra, February
9, 1946; Symphony Hall, Boston. Previously unissued live performances.
CD 1 = 68:26. CD 2 = 63:47. Technical reconstruction (2004): Aaron Z. Snyder; notes by American Record Guide contributor Tom Godell. (AAD) UPC#17685-1138-2. Not available in the USA for copyright reasons.
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©2004 Music & Arts Programs of America. All rights reserved.