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Markevitch: Rimsky-Korsakov – Capriccio Espagnol, Scheherazade (FLAC)

Markevitch: Rimsky-Korsakov - Capriccio Espagnol, Scheherazade (FLAC)
Markevitch: Rimsky-Korsakov – Capriccio Espagnol, Scheherazade (FLAC)

Composer: Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov
Performer: Erich Gruenberg
Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Igor Markevitch
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Philips
Catalogue: 4842767
Release: 2021
Size: 265 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Capriccio espagnol, Op. 34
01. 1. Alborada
02. 2. Variazioni
03. 3. Alborada
04. 4. Scena e canto gitano
05. 5. Fandango asturiano

Scheherazade, Op. 35
06. 1. The Sea and Sinbad’s Ship
07. 2. The Story of the Calender Prince
08. 3. The Young Prince and the Young Princess
09. 4. Festival at Bagdad – The Sea – The Shipwreck

In 1936, the English composer and writer, Constant Lambert, described Igor Markevitch as ‘the leading figure of the Franco-Russian school’. As a composer he had been commissioned by Diaghilev and performed by the likes of Alfred Cortot and Roger Désormière but his posthumous reputation largely rests on his prowess as a conductor, a profession he took up in the 1930s after study with Pierre Monteux.
As an interpreter, Markevitch combined a volatile personality with meticulous attention to the composer’s instructions, very much in the mould of Monteux. He was ideally suited in this regard to the Russian repertoire from Tchaikovsky to Stravinsky. Central both to this history and to his repertoire, was the music of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov with its sinuous melodies and ever-astonishingly original orchestral colours.
Made by Philips engineers in London in October 1962, this album of the composer’s best-loved orchestral works complements Markevitch’s cycle of the Tchaikovsky symphonies also recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra during the mid-1960s. They share many of the same qualities: super-charged tension, precise definition (in both performance and engineering) and refreshingly unusual articulation in repertoire that has often become stale by familiarity and lazy execution. Markevitch never made a lazy or conventional recording in his life and he attended to the sweeping narrative of ‘Scheherazade’ with the kind of detail that distinguishes his electrifying accounts of ‘The Rite of Spring’.

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