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Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works, Vol. 8 - Double Concerto; Dances Preludes; Chain I
Witold Lutoslawski, Antoni Wit, Polish Radio and Television National Symphony Orchestra
Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works, Vol. 8 - Double Concerto; Dances Preludes; Chain I
Genres: Pop, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #1


     
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All Artists: Witold Lutoslawski, Antoni Wit, Polish Radio and Television National Symphony Orchestra, Urszula Kryger
Title: Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works, Vol. 8 - Double Concerto; Dances Preludes; Chain I
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Naxos
Original Release Date: 1/1/2003
Re-Release Date: 9/23/2003
Genres: Pop, Classical
Styles: Vocal Pop, Chamber Music, Forms & Genres, Concertos, Instruments, Reeds & Winds, Strings, Symphonies
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 747313576326
 

CD Reviews

Appealing Music in Both of Lutoslawski's Styles
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 11/14/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The title refers to Witold Lutoslawski's differing styles contained on the CD. He started as a fairly conservative composer--e.g. his Concerto for Orchestra, Paganini Variations for Two Pianos--but then became more and more radical as time went on. What is amazing is that no matter the style Lutoslawski (1913-1994) always sounds like Lutoslawski. There is an impeccable craft--even in those pieces where there is an aleatoric element--and, underlying all, a sort of wittiness that I've always found attractive.The first piece, 'Dance Preludes for Clarinet and Orchestra,' was originally for clarinet and piano, but he reworked it a few years later for clarinet and orchestra. There is a third version for wind quintet and solo strings. It's the clarinet and orchestra version recorded here, a little suite of five folk-derived movements totaling less than ten minutes. Soloist Zbigniew Kaleta does a terrific job of underlining the folkdance element, and indeed he keeps the whole thing dancing. The 'Double Concerto for Oboe, Harp, and Orchestra' was commissioned by Paul Sacher, that wealthy Swiss conductor who was a veritable Maecenas of new works. It was written for the master of 'the cranky oboe' (Andrew Adler's phrase), Heinz Holliger, and his wife, harpist Ursula Holliger. This is not a concerto for equals; the harp part is clearly an obbligato instrument here, a Sancho Panza to the oboe's Quixote--it's really the oboist's show. Full of incident--and of extended technique for the oboist who occasionally uses, among other things, bent tones and multiphonics--the three movements have headlong forward movement, even in the 'dolente' middle movement which leads directly into the third, a march for oboe and xylophone that then recalls the opening buzzing of the strings heard in the first movement. The rhythmic and harmonic variety, mostly of a witty, even ironic, type, makes this concerto a jeu d'esprit. Oboist Arkadiusz Krupa and harpist Nicolas Tulliez do a fine job, only a little less effective than the Holligers in their recording with Lutoslawski himself conducting the Bavarian Radio Symphony still available on a 2 CD set from Polygram.'Grave' for cello and string orchestra, played eloquently here by cellist Rafal Kwiatkowski, is a somber six-minute tribute, a set of variations, to his late friend, musicologist Stefan Jarocinski, whose intimate knowledge of the music of Debussy led Lutoslawski to quote 'Pelléas et Mélisande' in the opening bars of the work.'Chain I' is the first of a series of three works named 'Chain' whose structure involves the overlapping of the musical ideas (links in a chain) so that it is difficult to tell where one leaves off and the next begins. Chain I was undertaken right after the composition of what is perhaps Lutoslawski's most famous late work, the wondrous Symphony No. 3 which, in some compositional respects, it resembles. For fourteen players (bassoon, clarinet In Bb, flute [doubling piccolo and alto flute], harpsichord, horn in F, oboe [doubling cor anglais], percussion, strings [1.1.1.1.1.], trombone, trumpet in C), it is in three somewhat indistinct sections. There are some aleatoric elements which are, nonetheless, fairly strictly prescribed by the composer. It is played with élan by principals from the Polish National Radio Orchestra under Antoni Wit, who conducts all the pieces here with deep familiarity and style.The disc concludes with eight children's songs, from two different sets--'Two Children's Songs' and 'Six Children's Songs'--with words by Poland's master of children's verse, Julian Tuwim. They are from early in Lutoslawski's career and represent his 'easy' style in their simplicity and diatonic harmonies. They are performed nicely by soprano Urszula Kryger. Unfortunately the texts are not provided in the booklet.This is the eighth of Naxos's series of recordings of Lutoslawski's complete orchestral works. Isn't it amazing what Naxos is doing for our expanding awareness of some hidden corners of the modern classical music literature? Huzzah, I say, huzzah!Recommended.TT=57:34Scott Morrison"
More fine music from Naxos
Personne | Rocky Mountain West | 12/27/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Naxos continues to impress me with this fine CD. As with the others in the series, the CD contains pieces from across Lutoslawski's life. The so-called 'folk-music' period is represented by a fine reading of Dance Preludes (certainly not under-represented on CD--I have at least three recordings) as well as two cycles of songs for children. Lutoslawski's sureness of line and illustrative orchestration are well in evidence here. Sadly, works of this vintage are often the only work of this composer that many people know. It's a sound-world not much different from Martinu or early Bartok. It's a world that Lutoslawski forcefully abandonded by midlife.



"Chain 1" is the first of the Chain series where Lutoslawski began working with interwoven melodies. It's a curious fish that points (let's mix metaphors here) both forward and back. For the most part, it has a clarity that was not always obvious in work of the preceding decade. At the same time, there's a "climax by accumulation", which was a key aspect of mid-period works like "Livres". It's not entirely convincing, but is seldom repeated in works to follow.



"Grave" combines solo cello and string orchestra in an intensely lyrical six minutes. Few composers in recent memory could write so effectively for strings.



But the keystone of the CD is the "Double Concerto" for Oboe, Harp and Chamber Orchestra. This is among the most accessible of Lutoslawski's mature works. This performance is one of several available recordings, and acquits itself well. The brief first movement begins with an aleatoric swarm of strings, an effect that repeats a few times with diminishing intensity. Such writing had been an important aspect of Lutoslawki's middle period, and was almost completely abandonded in the works that followed the Double Concerto. In many ways, you can hear the composer discarding the technique as the movement proceeds The middle movement is singing and lyrical, demanding sureness of intonation and command of the highest register of the oboe. The oboist, Arkadiusz Krupa, is admirably up to these demands. The final movement is a comic masterpiece. It has a quirky little march, with the lightest of strings and percussion. It features a domestic argument of sorts, with lovely harp writing continually shouted down by screeching oboe multiphonics (the original performers were Heinz and Ursula Holliger--husband and wife). The piece wraps up with a reprise of the march over some wonderfully syncopated string harmony. To my ear, the original Holliger recording is a bit more effective in this final movement. Sill, this performance is excellent. I have many recordings of this fine piece and each one beckons for its own reasons.



It should be pointed out that these are also superb recordings from a technical point of view. They are beautifully detailed without harshness. Balances are spot-on. Antoni Wit conducts with respect for what's on the page and all the possibilities presented there. The Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra plays this music as well as any orchestra in the world."