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Walton - Viola Concerto / Schnittke - Passacaglia | Melodiya MELCD1002293

Walton - Viola Concerto / Schnittke - Passacaglia

Label: Melodiya

Cat No: MELCD1002293

Barcode: 4600317122936

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 1st December 2014

This product has now been deleted. Information is for reference only.

Contents

Artists

Yuri Bashmet (viola)
Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Moscow Philharmonic Society

Conductor

Dmitri Kitayenko

Works

Schnittke, Alfred

Passacaglia for large orchestra

Walton, William

Viola Concerto

Artists

Yuri Bashmet (viola)
Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Moscow Philharmonic Society

Conductor

Dmitri Kitayenko

About

Firma Melodiya presents a live recording of works by the music classics of the 20th century, William Walton and Alfred Schnittke, made at the Grand Hall of the Moscow Conservatory.

Walton finished his viola concerto in 1929. It was performed for the first time by the outstanding German composer and violist Paul Hindemith and very soon became a popular piece, bringing the young composer world-wide fame. The concerto signifies the coming of the English composer’s artistic maturity – it was one of the first concertos that took a firm place in the viola repertoire.

Alfred Schnittke composed his Passacaglia for orchestra in 1980. It was the first time the composer had turned to a large orchestral line-up. Refracting an ancient form through the prism of his own style, and freely using a vast arsenal of composing techniques of the 20th century, Schnittke anticipated his monumental symphonic ideas of the 1980s in the Passacaglia.

The compositions by Walton and Schnittke were recorded at a concert given by Yuri Bashmet and the Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Moscow State Philharmonic Society conducted by Dmitri Kitayenko on April 6, 1982. Through his activities, Yuri Bashmet - an outstanding musician of today - favoured the extension of the viola repertoire, and he and Dmitri Kitayenko, who became the leader of one of Moscow’s best orchestras after Kirill Kondrashin left the country, were the first performers of these works in the former USSR.

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