Jeu de cartes, Agon & Orpheus

Jeu de cartes, Agon & Orpheus cover $30.00 Out of Stock
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STRAVINSKY
Jeu de cartes, Agon & Orpheus
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra / Ilan Volkov

[ Hyperion / CD ]

Release Date: Thursday 1 October 2009

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

"With such purposeful, sensitive conducting and such assured playing, this can be very warmly recommended' (International Record Review)

'This is a fine new Stravinsky disc from the excellent partnership of Ilan Volkov and the BBC SSO … It's an account that is similar in many ways to Stravinsky's own Sony Classical recording, but obviously in better sound. Volkov and his players seem to perform the work with even greater confidence and joie de vivre … The notes are by Stephen Walsh and are a model of clarity and conciseness, allied to deep understanding of the music. With such purposeful, sensitive conducting and such assured playing, this can be very warmly recommended' (International Record Review)

'Ilan Volkov shows tremendous empathy for Stravinsky's music. With the aid of meticulous playing from the BBC Symphony Orchestra, he delivers performances that project vibrant rhythmic urgency alongside a wonderful attention to internal detail and a subtle control of instrumental colour … [Jeu de Cartes] In comparison, Robert Craft and the LSO on the Naxos label sound surprisingly flaccid and lacking in youthful energy' (BBC Music Magazine)

Stravinsky's ballet music contains some of the composer's most dazzling inspirations, and his work with Diaghilev's Ballets Russes brought him to international attention before the first world war. But it was through his collaborations with Diaghilev's protégé George Balanchine that Stravinsky evolved the individual 'neoclassical' style of his own that is arguably his greatest contribution to the musical language of the twentieth century.

Contemporary audiences were thrilled by the innovative nature of these works. Walter Terry wrote in the Herald Tribune at the premiere of Agon that it was 'quite possibly the most brilliant ballet creation of our day … true, Agon is not warm, not overtly human, but its very coolness is refreshing and it generates excitement because it totally ignores human foibles, dramatic situation, and concentrates wholly on the miracle of the dancing body'.