古典
Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky: Petrushka / Le Sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring) 豆瓣
9.6 (14 个评分) Igor Stravinsky 类型: 古典
发布日期 1988年1月1日 出版发行: Columbia
作曲家于1960年亲自上阵指挥了这两部自己的作品,其中彼得鲁什卡采用了他自己1911年的原版乐谱。原汁原味的斯特拉文斯基很强调细腻的抒情,并不突出强烈的音效与节奏对比,与后来的指挥家似大多突出其戏剧性截然相反。
彼得鲁什卡1960年在好莱坞的Legion Hall录制,春之祭则是1960年录制于纽约。乐团都是CBS哥伦比亚交响乐团。
生命之歌 豆瓣
9.1 (37 个评分) Yo-Yo Ma / Kathryn Stott 类型: 古典
发布日期 2015年9月18日 出版发行: Sony Classical
大提琴家马友友,钢琴家凯瑟琳•斯托特友情合作30周年
发行新专辑《生命之歌》
索尼古典于2015年9月18日全球同步发行
享誉世界的大提琴家马友友与钢琴家凯瑟琳•斯托特(Kathryn Stott)将在2015年9月18日由索尼古典发行新专辑《生命之歌》,两位艺术家将携手创造一次独特的古典音乐之旅。时逢马友友与凯瑟琳•斯托特二人友情合作三十周年,发此专辑,以示庆贺。专辑既包括了两位艺术家经常合作但从未录制过的曲目,也有些新的合作曲目。
“我想用《生命之歌》这张专辑作为向听众的邀约,一起来聆听、感悟、想象生命的乐曲。“马友友这样给出了说明。”我和凯瑟琳这么多年来一直说要做一张专辑,收进我们挚爱的乐曲,以此诠释某个人的生命、我们的生命。童年、青年、成年、中年、老年:人生的不同阶段,听起来会是什么乐曲?“
“我喜欢专辑的名称。”斯托特如是说,“《生命之歌》,生命确实如歌,中间充满了音符。刚一有了这个概念,我们仿佛就看到了生命里一则美丽的故事,一段丰盈的旅程。由于每个人的生命旅程都会不同,我们花了很长时间、反复推敲:创造一种什么样的生命旅程呢?“
《生命之歌》专辑第一首与最后一首曲目都是乐迷挚爱的经典作品《圣母颂》,开头那首是巴赫/古诺版高昂、灿烂的改编版本,象征生命的起源,而结尾一首是舒伯特更加宁静、深沉的版本,象征生命的圆满轮回。
除了首尾曲目之外,《生命之歌》专辑中间曲目也都是乐迷耳熟能详的经典之作:如勃拉姆斯经久不衰的《摇篮曲》、德沃夏克《母亲教我的歌》、埃尔加《爱的礼赞》、盖德《妒火探戈》、圣-桑《天鹅湖》,以及德彪西、戴留斯、克莱斯特、梅西安、舒曼、西贝柳斯、柴可夫斯基的经典作品。此外,值得一提的是,大提琴家马友友与钢琴家凯瑟琳•斯托特还把他们的好朋友、当代作曲家乔瓦尼•索利马(Giovanni Sollima)的一首现代作品收录其中。
《生命之歌》这张专辑的原委,一来是开启钢琴家凯瑟琳•斯托特与大提琴家马友友合作第四个十年的序幕,二来初衷也是马友友六十岁生日要来临了“我今年就要六十岁了,我觉得这真的很有意思,因这不仅让我想象耳顺之年将会是个什么样子,而且让我思索起从前所发生的一切。”马友友说:“我们二人可谓是旧相识了。我们经年同台演奏,二人之间愉快的对话与共同的经历难以尽数,所有这些,我们愿意用这张专辑《生命之歌》,与你们分享。”
Longtime friends, cellist Yo-Yo Ma and pianist Kathryn Stott, create a unique classical music experience with their new recording, Song s from the Arc of Life. The album includes pieces they have frequently performed but never recorded, as well as a handful of discoveries. Songs from the Arc of Life begins and ends with two, much-beloved settings of the traditional "Ave Maria," opening with the soaring, radiant Bach/Gounod arrangement and closing with Schubert's more serene, contemplative version. In between is a remarkable spectrum of music that includes such enduring favorites as Brahms' "Lullaby," Dvorák's "Songs My Mother Taught Me," Elgar's "Salut d'amour," Gade's "Jalousie" and Saint-Saëns' "The Swan," as well as richly evocative works by Debussy, Delius, Fauré, Gershwin, Grieg, Kriesler, Messaien, Schumann, Sibelius and Tchaikovsky. Ma and Stott also include a haunting piece by the contemporary composer Giovanni Sollima, a friend and colleague of both artists.
The Deluxe Edition includes three bonus audio tracks plus an extended booklet.
Mozart: Concertos for Clarinet, Flute & Bassoon / Karl Böhm 豆瓣
8.0 (5 个评分) Dietmar Zeman / Alfred Prinz 类型: 古典
发布日期 1998年2月10日 出版发行: Deutsche Grammophon
01 Clarinet Concerto in A, K.622 - 1. Allegro
02 Clarinet Concerto in A, K.622 - 2. Adagio
03 Clarinet Concerto in A, K.622 - 3. Rondo (Allegro)
04 Flute Concerto No.1 in G, K.313 - 1. Allegro maestoso
05 Flute Concerto No.1 in G, K.313 - 2. Adagio non troppo
06 Flute Concerto No.1 in G, K.313 - 3. Rondo (Tempo di Menuetto)
07 Bassoon Concerto in B flat, K.191 - 1. Allegro
08 Bassoon Concerto in B flat, K.191 - 2. Andante ma adagio - Cadenza: Dietmar Zeman
09 Bassoon Concerto in B flat, K.191 - 3. Rondo (Tempo di menuetto)
柴可夫斯基第6交响曲“悲怆” 豆瓣
圣彼得堡(列宁格勒)爱乐乐团 Saint Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra 类型: 古典
发布日期 1960年1月1日 出版发行: 德意志留声机公司
“悲怆”是世上最伟大的十部交响曲之一,首演六天后,老柴就命归西天了。很多人就把“悲怆”当成了他的安魂曲。
不少场合是这样介绍这部交响曲的:“这首交响曲正如标题所示,强烈地表现出“悲怆”的情绪,这一点也就构成本曲的特色。柴科夫斯基音乐的特征,如旋律的优美,形式的均衡,管弦乐法的精巧等优点,都在本曲中得到深刻的印证。本交响曲旨在描写人生的恐怖、绝望、失败、灭亡等,充满了悲观的情绪,而否定了一切肯定、享受人生的乐观情绪。作者在本曲中也刻意描写了人们为生活而奔忙的情景,但他揭示了一个永恒的真理——死亡是绝对的、无可避免的,而生活中的所有欢乐都是转瞬即逝的。作者所体现出的这类情
绪,实际上反映的是在沙皇俄国末期,俄罗斯人民处于一种被压抑状况下的真实心态。”
“悲怆”就是老柴用音乐的语言,向我们分享内心对人生的看法和思考。人生不仅仅是“好莱坞”式的莺歌燕舞,皆大欢喜;也有悲凉和叹息;也有沉重和爆发。有苦难,有压力,才有思考,才有发展,民族才有希望。
1960年,由DG公司录制,穆拉文斯基指挥列宁格勒爱乐乐团演绎的这部交响曲,被认为是最地道,最优秀的录音版本。同时被世界上最权威的五大音乐杂志评为最佳的录音只有五个,它是其中之一。
Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 15 / From Jewish Folk Poetry - Bernard Haitink 豆瓣
Dmitri Shostakovich / Elisabeth Soderstrom
发布日期 2000年8月8日 出版发行: Decca
详细内容: 1. Symphony No.5 In D Minor, Op.47: I. Moderato2. Symphony No.5 In D Minor, Op.47: II. Allegretto3. Symphony No.5 In D Minor, Op.47: III. Largo4. Symphony No. 5 In D MInor, Op.47: IV. Allegro non troppo5. Symphony No.9 In E-Flat Major, Op.70: Allegro6. Symphony No.9 In E-Flat Major, Op.70: Moderato7. Symphony No.9 In E-Flat Major, Op.70: Presto8. Symphony No.9 In E-Flat Major, Op.70: Largo9. Symphony No.9 In E-Flat Major, Op.70: Allegretto - Allegro广告语: 肖斯塔科维奇《第15交响曲》/肖斯塔科维奇被认为是20世纪世界上举足轻重的作曲家之一,他的15首交响曲,继马勒之后在音乐历史上建立了又一座丰碑。海汀克在DECCA的全套录音,管弦乐色彩和录音效果都相当出色,是企鹅指南三星级评论名演
Bach: Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin 豆瓣
9.4 (30 个评分) Nathan Milstein 类型: 古典
发布日期 1998年2月10日 出版发行: Deutsche Grammophon
Bar code:
STEREO 289 457 701-2
0 28945 77012 3

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NATHAN MILSTEIN, Violine

Milstein on Recording Bach

“I just stopped making records about ten years ago. I don’t enjoy recording much; it makes me very nervous. When I play for a live audience I am nervous only until I get to the stage; once I’m on stage I feel like a fish in water. Recording does make me nervous, with the extra emphasis on perfection, but I do want to leave a record of my thoughts on the music that has meant most to me. I am not adding new material to my repertoire now; instead, I devote myself to the music I have lived with and loved for a half-century and more. I like the way my sessions are handled by Deutsche Grammophon. Where there is an error or some reason for a re-take, I won’t do a ‘surgical’ job, slipping in a note here or there: repairs must be co-ordinated so the emotional impact, the instinctive quality will be continuous, so the idea, the fire, the lyricism will not be interrupted by patches. If something has to be re-taken, I play a big part of it, for the sake of the continuity. I think the Bach Sonatas and Partitas I recorded for Deutsche Grammophon in London actually are clearly superior to the set I did in the ‘50s. There is nothing in my repertoire that I don’t play better now than I did before — simply because of the added experience I have now — and it is especially gratifying to be able to record these works under today’s technical conditions.”

The Bach solo works [...] have been Milstein specialties for years. [...] Bach, though, was something he had to discover on his own: “In Russia we didn’t have respect for Bach as a great composer. Of all his works, only a single fugue was included in our curriculum. In my Bach playing I stress the bass and the middle voices separately, with particular emphasis on the bass almost as a separate entity.” In Milstein’s definition, “virtuosity” has nothing to do with mere display, but indicates “the highest degree of professional excellence — in any sort of undertaking, not only a musical one. I think War and Peace is a virtuoso work.” He also distinguishes technique from mere dexterity: “technique is not just a matter of muscular control — technique means adjusting the medium to what I want to do.” The instrument Milstein plays is a 1716 Stradivarius he acquired in 1945, formerly known as the “ex Goldmann”. He has renamed it the “Maria Teresa”, in honor of his daughter Maria and his wife Teresa.

From a conversation with Nathan Milstein (1975)
Richard Freed

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This is marvellous violin playing... Milstein’s special virtues are those of commanding technique: never is a note out of true in pitch or in rhythm.
Gramophone (1975)

... this is a magnificent set by any standard; from a performer close on 70 it is an achievement bordering on the miraculous.
Records and Recording (1975)

...this must surely rank as the seventy-year-old Odessa-born violinist’s crowning achievement. His interpretation, immaculately recorded by DG in a penetratingly clear yet warm ambiance, is so extraordinary that this three-disc album not only must be rated as one of this year’s finest releases but deserves to take its place among the greatest Bach recordings ever made. First, Milstein playing is impressive on purely technical grounds. So often these works tend to sound as though the performer is just barely going to make it through, especially in the contrapuntal convolutions of the sonatas’ three fugues; even at best, the rapid arpeggiation necessary to sustain three or four melodic lines all at once frequently results in an unpleasant scratchiness [...].
Technique aside, Milstein renditions have an unusually human quality. I find these to be warmly expressive readings in which the music is allowed to flow forward sensibly and the rhythms evoke all their dance origins. Slow movements, too, are handled in a wonderfully graceful manner. Finally, there is Milstein sense of pacing, which is something quite apart from his judicious choice of tempos. Rather it is revealed in a subtle rhetoric that causes a movement such as the Chaconne to build and grow from one climax to another. The pulse is always strong, the architecture always apparent, and the rubato-like inflections clarify the sentence structure of Bach’s phrases. Tonally, Milstein’s playing is quite beautiful.
Stereo Review (1976)

Every Phrase is shaped with meaning, every line is musically alive and in matters of technique there are no question marks either.
Gramophone (1976)

The Milstein set is the finest to have appeared in recent years. Every phrase is beautifully shaped and keenly alive; there is a highly developed feeling for line, and no want of virtuosity. ... Milstein is excellently served by the DG engineers, and the sound is natural and lifelike.
Penguin Guide (1977)

Milstein’s performances achieve both authority and spontaneity: the phrasing is supple, and the playing deeply felt without any suggestion of romantic indulgence. This is wholly admirable and can be recommended without reservation of any kind.
Gramophone (1977)

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MILSTEIN PLAYS BACH

To understand the fascination that the solo Sonatas and Partitas of Bach had for Nathan Milstein, we first have to consider the works themselves. They were written in 1720, at a time when the composer was concentrating on instrumental music in his role as Kapellmeister to the court of Cöthen. As in so many other spheres, Bach did not invent a genre but improved immeasurably on the solo violin music written by some of his German contemporaries and predecessors. He was a good player of the violin and viola himself and in his Sonatas and Partitas he created abstract shapes and forms in which the player could seem almost to be communing with himself, yet still dazzle the audience. This is music in which the spiritual and virtuosic elements of the performance are so finely balanced that it is difficult to say where one ends and the other begins. Bach is not satisfied with a single line of music but throws in chords and even counterpoint, in which the harmonic drift of the music implies extra voices which are not actually present. The most amazing displays of this counterpoint come in the great fugues of the three Sonatas. The Partitas are at first glance simply suites of dances. Yet they demand many techniques which express the very soul of the violin — the exciting bariolage in the ebullient opening Preludio of the E major Partita, for instance; and the D minor Partita culminates in a Chaconne, a basically slow dance built on a repeated bass, which is perhaps the mightiest single movement the composer ever created. Here, using one small violin, Bach traces out one of his most amazing edifices in sound.

The 19th century did not really comprehend this music, and various attempts were made to fit piano accompaniments to the Sonatas and Partitas. Only with the emergence of Joseph Joachim did a major virtuoso grapple with the vast possibilities of these works; and by then problems had arisen through the steady evolution of the violin and the bow. Bach used a bow with a convex stick and his violin was strung across a flatter, shallower bridge, with tar less tension, because the neck of the violin was shorter and less angled. In the search for more volume, most of the old violins were modified to take a higher tension. The bow evolved into using a concave stick, which again allowed for greater tension. These factors made it harder to play Bach’s chords and most violinists of the early 20th century worked out compromises between Bach’s demands and their own capabilities. There were aberrations such as the Vega bow, a contraption by which the player could sound every note of a chord, even on a modern violin; but until the rise of the period instrument movement, playing Bach on the violin was a struggle. It is one of the imponderable paradoxes of music that although a number of “authentic” violinists have tackled the Sonatas and Partitas in recent years, their best efforts have not so far eclipsed the finest “compromise” players. Among the latter Nathan Milstein (1904-1992) held an honoured place. He brought to Bach the same instincts for style and taste that made him an outstanding interpreter of Mozart and Beethoven. In addition he had a technical facility and fluency second to none.

The surprising thing was that Milstein emerged from a milieu, the Russian bourgeoisie, in which Bach was not appreciated. Under his famous teachers, Pyotr Stolyarsky in Odessa and Leopold Auer in St. Petersburg, he played virtually no Bach, nor was he taught to understand the style. He eventually developed his own view of Bach through playing the marvellous solo violin works of Max Reger, in which Bach’s style was seen through the prism of a modern German intellect. Once Milstein came to the West in the mid1920s, he quickly assimilated what he needed to learn from his fellow fiddlers. Pre-war recordings show that by the end of the 1930s, he was already a nonpareil Bach violinist. He came to esteem Bach, alongside Paganini, as the finest writer for the violin — not that he equated the two composers in terms of quality — and he named the Chaconne as his favourite piece of music, sometimes programming it on its own. He recorded the Sonatas and Partitas in the 1 950s but felt that in this second cycle for Deutsche Grammophon he had said his last word on the music.

Milstein’s Bach is based on a secure sense of rhythm — vital for the slow movements as much as the fast ones. The dance movements really dance but always in an aristocratic way. Milstein’s tone, although of great beauty, never draws attention to itself through the overuse of vibrato. The listener’s attention is always focused on the musical line, because the player’s feeling for line and legato is so strong and his tone is so well focused. The big fugues and the Chaconne are spaciously laid out but urgently played, with such a comprehensive intellectual grip that the interest never flags. The same intellectual grasp ensures that Bach’s counterpoint is fully realized. The quieter, more inward moments are not italicized by romantic rallentandi. Instead Milstein relies on gradations of tone and volume and the tension of the musical line. Above all, these interpretations have the “size” of a great actor’s soliloquy: using no props other than his bow and his 1716 Stradivarius, Milstein comes before his audience with complete confidence that he can hold the stage. And because he is a musician of refinement and elevated ideals, the spiritual charge that should always inhabit Bach’s greatest music is present, alongside those equally characteristic outbursts of joy and exhilaration.
Tully Potter

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ADD
Produced by Werner Mayer
Tonmeister (Balance Engineer): Klaus Hiemann
Recording Engineers: Joachim Niss/Volker Martin
® 1975 Polydor International GmbH, Hamburg
© 1998 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Hamburg Cover &Artist Photo: Siegfried Lauterwasser
Art Direction: Hartmut Pfeiffer

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THE ORIGINALS
LEGENDARY RECORDINGS FROM THE DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON CATALOGUE
Deutsche Grammophon ORIGINALS — milestone recordings from our LP catalogue, now reproduced with unprecedented fidelity on CD. This new series of critically acclaimed performances features the great names of Deutsche Grammophon’s past and present: celebrated interpreters whose recording careers flourished at 33 rpm, as well as outstanding artists of today whose early achievements were documented on black vinyl. All recordings in the series have been newly refurbished using Deutsche Grammophon’s latest technology in order to “recreate” the original sound-image of these legendary interpretations.

ORIGINAL-IMAGE BIT-PROCESSING
To reproduce the original sound-image of a recorded performance as faithfully as possible: this has been the aim of Deutsche Grammophon Gesellschaft in developing its innovative digital mixdown technology ORIGINAL-IMAGE BIT-PROCESSING.
This technology, developed in conjunction with Deutsche Grammophon’s new 4D Audio Recording system at the company’s Recording Centre in Hanover, is based on the notion that the technical medium itself should become inaudible. It is only the means to an end, that of allowing the listener to enjoy an entirely natural sound quality.
ORIGINAL-IMAGE BIT-PROCESSING now makes it possible to remix older recordings in order to “recreate” the original sound- image. This recreation employs—wherever possible — physio-acoustical principles to compensate for delay factors (such as the time required for sounds to reach the main microphone) as well as an extremely high-resolution processing of the musical signals.
Authentic Bit Imaging, the requantizing procedure developed by Deutsche Grammophon, allows the extraordinarily high quality of this mixdown to be transferred optimally to digital sound carriers.
It is Deutsche Grammophon’s philosophy that technology alone is never sufficient. Optimal sound quality can only be achieved when technology is guided by the trained ear of an experienced Tonmeister Deutsche Grammophon’s Tonmeister combine technical expertise with a solid musical education.
For the listener to these performances, the audible results of this latest alliance of modern technology with traditional craftsmanship will be greater presence and brilliance and a more natural spatial balance than previously attainable.

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WARNING! All rights reserved.
Unauthorized copying, reproduction, hiring, lending, public performance and broadcasting prohibited.
Manufactured and Marketed by PolyGram Classics & Jazz, a Division of PolyGram Records, Inc., New York, N.Y.

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LP released 1975
Grammy 1975
Grand Premio del Disco “Ritmo” (Madrid) 1985
Recording: London, Conway Hall (Wembley, Brent Town Hall), 2, 4 & 9/1973
肖斯塔科维奇《第七交响曲》 / 捷吉耶夫指挥基洛夫剧院乐团 豆瓣
Rotterdam Hilharmonic Orchestra / Valery Gergiev
发布日期 2003年5月13日 出版发行: Philips
Shostakovich's "Leningrad" Symphony has been surrounded by controversy ever since it was written; it even ignited a battle between two great conductors, Toscanini and Stokowski, for the first American performance (Toscanini won). Composed in 1941 during the siege of Leningrad in homage to the Russian people's heroic resistance against the German invaders, it has been condemned by some as political propaganda, hailed by others as a symphonic masterpiece. Time and audiences everywhere have decided in favor of the latter view; today, the "Leningrad" is one of Shostakovich's best known, most popular symphonies. Though its programmatic content is clear, the emotional impact of the music itself invites listeners to imagine their own scenario. Gergiev has this music in his bloodstream and knows how to inspire an orchestra (two in this case); exploiting every instrumental resource, he elicits both massive and delicate playing, achieving powerful build-ups and tremendous climaxes. The result is a taut, concentrated performance that makes the symphony--Shostakovich's longest--seem shorter than usual; its no-holds-barred approach plumbs the depths and scales the heights of human experience, from bleak, grotesque irony to heart-breaking, anguished lamentation and ultimate triumph. The famous first movement march--a simple, deliberately trite little tune over a persistent snare drum figure--starts almost inaudibly; its eleven always different repetitions generate enormous suspense, and when the cumulative orchestration reaches its peak, you feel as if an entire army had marched over you. The recording's only flaw is its excessive dynamic contrast, so keep a finger on the volume control. --Edith Eisler
Leningrad 豆瓣
9.7 (6 个评分) 类型: 古典
发布日期 2000年8月8日
受围困危城之作
C大调第七号交响曲’Leningrad’ Op.60
第二次世界大战中,苏德战争爆发后,前苏联政府马上总动员艺术界“为祖国而战”,由此产生了许多伟大的爱国主义作品,肖斯塔科维奇这部作品就是其中的佳作。他表示:“此曲是战斗的诗篇,是坚强的民族精神之赞歌。”全曲的气势极其宏伟壮大,终乐章的音响更是震耳欲聋。
德军包围列宁格勒,造成城内危机的1941年七月末,作者肖斯塔科维奇在列宁格勒作为“防空监视队”的一员战斗在第一线。就是在这种十分艰苦的条件下,肖斯塔科维奇完成了本交响曲的大部分草稿。1942年三月五日,在古比雪夫“文化宫殿”的礼堂,这部作品由隆莫斯德指挥,莫斯科国立剧场管弦乐团演奏,同时对全国及国外做现场直播。可见这部交响曲的初演,便是拿来宣传,用以提高士气和宏扬国威,完全作为前苏联的一项 “国家大事” 来对待。本曲题献给“列宁格勒”,并获得当年“斯大林奖”的首奖。
从结构上看,第七号交响曲显得冗长(全曲约70分钟,是他所有交响曲作品中最长的)。而且有些“不均衡”,光是第一乐章就占了全曲近三分之一的时间。根据肖斯塔科维奇1951年一篇文章的说法,这是一部一列宁格勒为标题,每乐章各有主题的交响曲,分别是:“战争”(War)、“回忆”(Recollection)、“祖国的原野”(The expanses of my native land)、“胜利”(Victory)。如果我们依循这些主题聆听,的确相当容易和作者产生共鸣。换句话说,第七乐章的主题都相当明确,几乎让人一听就知道作曲家想要表达的意涵,因此有评论者认为:“与其说本曲是交响曲,倒不如说比较接近大型的组曲”,这句话可说为这部交响曲的特性下了颇为精准的注脚。
第一乐章 中庸的稍快板。首先呈示出“人的主题”, 描绘的是战争之前安宁的生活。小提琴明朗平稳地奏出主题,接着是肖斯塔科维奇作品中常见的气息很长的木管独白。突然,远方传来的鼓声击碎了和平的美梦,出现了进行曲风格的“战争主题”。
第二乐章 稍快的中板,三段体诙谐曲乐章。相传作曲家这样描述本乐章:“……这是对愉快的事情,人生快乐插曲的回忆。但悲哀的情绪笼罩着这种回忆……”乐章主部由第一小提琴轻松奏出的主乐念,以及由此而产生的弦乐器那强烈的节奏背景,还有双簧管优雅的副乐念等构成。双簧管的副乐念由低音竖笛接替,竖琴长笛的低音伴奏部分很有特色。此乐章可以说是最具肖斯塔科维奇风格的音乐。
第三乐章 慢板至最缓板。 自古以来人们都说:“俄罗斯人对自己的祖国和土地有着一种深厚的挚爱。”这一乐章在于表现“对自然的美之敬意”,犹如俄罗斯大地上郁郁葱葱、无边无际的原始森林一般。
第四乐章 不太快的快板转中板。由定音鼓呈示出类似贝多芬“命运主题”动机的短暂导入部后,主题由弦乐器齐奏展示,然后进入自由发展的主部。依照肖斯塔科维奇的本意,这个终乐章在于表现“胜利之来临”。 最后,第一乐章“人的主题”由铜管乐器强有力地奏出,在排山倒海般的凯歌之后,四个定音鼓奏出乐章的中心主题,全曲结束。
作曲家们在从事创作时,总会有某些特别的“情境”刺激他们的创作灵感,无论是当时社会上发生的重大事件、亲朋好友间的情感联系、自己对于生活经验或生命的沉思默想……等等不一而足。身为听众的我们,则可以从他们所要抒发的情感总寻找共鸣、感动,或者从音乐中“回顾”他们创作的情境……。肖斯塔科维奇的第七号交响曲“列宁格勒”自然也具有此项性质,不过,由于他身处于当时的环境,使得这件原本单纯的创作动机变得较为复杂。
列宁格勒原名彼得格勒,为纪念列宁改为此名(现名圣彼德堡),自1703年建城开始就是俄罗斯帝国的首都,一直都是政经文化重镇,许多艺术家都曾活跃于此,纳粹进攻苏联时,肖斯塔科维奇居于城中,并且曾亲自在前线协助作战,第七交响曲的前三乐章就是在此围(危)城中完成,至于最后一乐章,由于德军在1941年9月切断了列宁格勒所有的外界联系,肖斯塔科维奇随家人撤离到库比雪夫(kuibyshev),并在同年年底完成这部作品。从创作时间上来看,第七号交响曲的确是因列宁格勒而生。
此曲的标题“列宁格勒”本来已经大致告诉我们它想要呈现的主题:为第二次世界大战期间被纳粹军团围攻的列宁格勒而作。然而,1979年一部号称是肖斯塔科维奇回忆录《证言》(Testimony)的出版,为原本单纯的写作动机平添了复杂的因子,诸如:“我在写作此一主题(注:指第一乐章的“入侵”主题,小鼓声不断重复的乐段)时,心里想的其实是另一种摧残人性的敌人”、“我写的是……暴政下牺牲的几百万人的追悼之歌”等字句,强调的反而是谴责极权政体对无辜人民的任意侵凌,本曲想当然应具有的爱国主义反而未见着墨。不过,由于这本回忆录的内容争议颇大,它所陈述的内容可以作为我们研究肖斯塔科维奇的参考之一,倒不见得要全盘接受。总之,无论肖斯塔科维奇真正的动机是什么,德军围攻列宁格勒一役,绝对是他创作第七交响曲最重要的触媒。
索尔蒂指挥维也纳爱乐乐团:瓦格纳序曲和管弦乐曲集 豆瓣
Wiener Philharmoniker / Georg Solti 类型: 古典
发布日期 1994年10月11日 出版发行: London / Decca
详细内容: Disc: 11. Rienzi: Rienzi -- Overture2. Der fliegende Holldnder: Der fliegende Holldnder -- Overture3. Tristan und Isolde: Tristan und Isolde -- Prelude, Act I4. Tannhauser: Tannhauser -- Overture5. Tannhauser: Tannhauser -- BacchanaleDisc: 21. Lohengrin: Lohengrin -- Prelude, Act I2. Siegfried Idyll3. Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg -- Prelude and Hymn, Act I4. Parsifal: Parsifal -- Prelude, Act I5. Gotterdammerung: Gotterdammerung -- Siegfried's Funeral March广告语: 这张唱片是已故伟大的指挥家索尔蒂爵士指挥维也纳爱乐乐团的名曲集,它与棱角分棱线突出的德国风格演奏方式迥异,其诠释方式反而比较珍惜作品中的和谐之美。唱片收录了瓦格纳最著名歌剧《作品选自《黎恩济》,《漂泊的荷兰人》,《特里斯坦与伊索尔德》,《汤豪塞》,《罗恩格林》等选段.
青城山道教音乐 豆瓣
8.5 (8 个评分) 张孔山
发布日期 1998年1月1日 出版发行: 青城山道教
青城山道教音乐有着悠久的历史。《魏书·释老志》、唐代《蜀王青城山祈雨醮词》都明确记载:早在二世纪初张陵天师创立道教时就有“祈醮之科”、“定律之音。
这是青城山道教音乐的早期形态。
今天能品味的青城山道教音乐,历经1800多年的南北文化交流和道派仪制融合,可以说它圆融各派、博采众长,更具有民族文化的普遍性。
这里奉献给你的曲目是从青城山近60首道教乐曲中精选的部分。它兼顾了南韵、北韵的不同风格及吟唱、器乐的不同表现形式,具有较高的鉴赏和收藏价值。