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Jurowski: Prokofiev – The Steel Step, The Prodigal Son (FLAC)

Jurowski: Prokofiev - The Steel Step, The Prodigal Son (FLAC)
Jurowski: Prokofiev – The Steel Step, The Prodigal Son (FLAC)

Composer: Sergei Prokofiev
Orchestra: WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln
Conductor: Michail Jurowski
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: CPO
Catalogue: 9999742
Release: 2004
Size: 373 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

The Steel Step, Op. 41
01. I. Appearance of the Participants
02. II. The Train of Trading Peasants
03. III. Commissars
04. IV. Toffee and Cigarette Vendors
05. V. Orator
06. VI. Sailor with a Bracelet and the Worker Girl
07. VII. Change of the Scenery
08. VIII. Sailor’s Transformation into a Worker
09. IX. Factory
10. X. Hammers
11. XI. Closing Scene

The Prodigal Son, Op. 46
12. I. The Departure
13. II. Meeting with Friends
14. III. The Temptress
15. IV. The Dancers
16. V. The Prodigal Son and the Temptress
17. VI. Drinking Bout
18. VII. The Robbery
19. VIII. Awakening and Remorse
20. IX. Sharing the Loot
21. X. The Return

Prokofiev’s 1927 ballet Le Pas d’Acier (The Step of Steel), given here in its rarely encountered complete form, is known for its motoric character and colorful scoring. Its sketchy story concerns the industrialization of the fledgling Soviet Union. Michail Jurowski’s reading of the score is fairly straightforward and features excellent sound and fine playing by the WDR Sinfonie Orchester Köln. But occasionally the pacing is a bit deliberate and the phrasing bland, as in the opening number “Entrée des personages” and in the closing pair “Les Marteaux” (No. 10) and Finale (No. 11). The mechanistic qualities of the music — so essential to any good performance of this work — certainly come through with power in these numbers, and the epic and festive character of “Changement de décors” (No. 7) is brilliantly realized. Overall, it’s a strong, if slightly flawed effort.


The same might be said of L’enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Son), also performed complete here. The work, inspired by the Biblical story, is more simply constructed (the writing is mostly two-part) and more tuneful. Jurowski draws out a generally fine performance, with exceptional orchestral balances. But, again, some of his tempo choices and phrasing can seem a tad lackluster, as in “L’enjóleuse,” where the playing is only smooth and lively, not bouncy and spirited. Rozhdestvensky, who was a teacher of Jurowski, recorded both ballets with fine results in the mid-’80s for Melodiya. Järvi (Chandos) and Kuchar (Naxos) followed with strong recordings of The Prodigal Son. Jurowski’s CPO account features better sound than any of these three and a fairly strong reading, too, though Rozhdestvensky is interpretively a rung or two higher in both works.

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