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Casella - Symphony No.2, Scarlattiana | Chandos CHAN10605

Casella - Symphony No.2, Scarlattiana

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Label: Chandos

Cat No: CHAN10605

Barcode: 0095115160527

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 1st June 2010

International Record Review Outstanding

Contents

Artists

Martin Roscoe (piano)
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Gianandrea Noseda

Works

Casella, Alfredo

Scarlattiana
Symphony no.2 in C minor, op.12

Artists

Martin Roscoe (piano)
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Gianandrea Noseda

About

As part of the Musica Italiana series, the BBC Philharmonic and Gianandrea Noseda perform two important works by Alfredo Casella, a largely forgotten Italian composer who was actually one of the most important of his generation.

Italian composers in the early years of the twentieth century were not very interested in the symphony. Casella, however, was a major exception. On the advice of Giuseppe Martucci, the thirteen-year-old Casella had been sent to the Paris Conservatoire where, alongside outstanding fellow students such as Maurice Ravel and George Enescu, he received the all-round professional training that would not have been available to him in Italy.  

He was much influenced in his early piano pieces not only by his composition teacher, Gabriel Fauré, but also by Debussy and Ravel. His next stylistic allegiance, with the Russian Nationalists, was also a product of his Parisian environment, not least by way of the formative friendship with Ravel. But in his passion for the music of Gustav Mahler he was, in French circles at least, more or less on his own. As Mahler was moved to learn when he first met Casella, in Paris in 1909, the young composer knew his symphonies ‘by heart.’

Symphony No.2 in C minor
is dedicated to George Enescu. Many examples of themes, harmonic colours, and orchestral sounds derive directly from the music of his hero figure, Mahler, but no one who knows the two composers could ever mistake one for the other. Casella has his own distinctive personality and his own agenda, and his passion turns into exhilarating frenzy.    

Drawing from as many as ninety of the hundreds of Scarlatti sonatas available to him, in the neoclassical Scarlattiana, Casella presents an abundance of melody, the work’s general light-heartedness effectively offset by such thoughtful episodes as the matching slow introductions to the opening Sinfonia and the Finale.

These two orchestral works demonstrate Casella’s fascinating tonal language. They are beautifully conducted by Gianandrea Noseda, a long-time champion of Casella’s works. 

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