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Britten - War Requiem, Spring Symphony, Young Person’s Guide | Supraphon SU41352

Britten - War Requiem, Spring Symphony, Young Person’s Guide

£11.78

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Label: Supraphon

Cat No: SU41352

Barcode: 0099925413521

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Release Date: 24th June 2013

Contents

Artists

Nadezda Kniplova (soprano)
Gerald English (tenor)
John Cameron (baritone)
Milada Subrtova (soprano)
Vera Soukupova (alto)
Beno Blachut (tenor)
Prague Philharmonic Choir
Kuhn Children’s Chorus
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Karel Ancerl

Works

Britten, Benjamin

Spring Symphony, op.44
The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, op.34
War Requiem, op.66

Artists

Nadezda Kniplova (soprano)
Gerald English (tenor)
John Cameron (baritone)
Milada Subrtova (soprano)
Vera Soukupova (alto)
Beno Blachut (tenor)
Prague Philharmonic Choir
Kuhn Children’s Chorus
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Karel Ancerl

About

Britten conducted by Karel Ančerl – previously unreleased unique recordings from the Prague Radio archives.

Benjamin Britten’s music formed one of the pillars of the Czech Philharmonic’s concert programmes under its chief conductor Karel Ančerl. The famous Variations on a Theme of Purcell was in all likelihood the most frequently performed work (in 1962 also in England), and this CD contains the previously unreleased 1958 recording in the original version without narration.

The enchanting and joyous Spring Symphony, commissioned by Serge Koussevitzky, was presented in Czech in Prague by Ančerl, the Czech Philharmonic and the finest soloists of the time.

Forming a stark contrast to these two works is the War Requiem, a grand piece commemorating the victims of the most gruesome armed conflict in human history. Britten dedicated it to the memory of four friends of his who died in WWII while serving in the British navy or army. The work’s Czech premiere, with the participation of superlative foreign soloists (Gerald English, John Cameron), took place less than four years after its world premiere.

So enthused was he by the work that in November 1969, following his emigration to Canada, Ančerl included the War Requiem in one of his first concerts in Toronto. The conductor’s personal profound experience of the senseless barbarity of the war imbued his conception of the work with a chilling authenticity. Both of the two previously unreleased concert recordings were made by the former Czechoslovak Radio.

Recorded at the Dvořák Hall of the Rudolfinum, Prague, on January 13, 1966 (War Requiem), May 3, 1958 (Young Person's Guide) and January 17, 1964 (Spring Symphony).

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