Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Brahms: Symphony No. 4 & Hungarian Dances (2008) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski - Brahms: Symphony No. 4 & Hungarian Dances (2008) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz] Download

Artist: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski
Album: Brahms: Symphony No. 4 & Hungarian Dances
Genre: Classical
Release Date: 2008
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 57:01
Total Tracks: 12
Total Size: 1,00 GB

Tracklist:

01. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Symphony No. 4 in E minor Op. 98 – I. Allegro non troppo (12:34)
02. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Symphony No. 4 in E minor Op. 98 – II. Andante moderato (11:11)
03. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Symphony No. 4 in E minor Op. 98 – III. Allegro giocoso (06:25)
04. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Symphony No. 4 in E minor Op. 98 – IV. Allegro energico e passionato (09:58)
05. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 1 in G Minor – Allegro molto (03:04)
06. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 3 in F Major – Allegretto (02:16)
07. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 10 in F Major – Presto (01:44)
08. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 17 in F-sharp Minor – Andantino (02:45)
09. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 18 in D Major – Molto vivace (01:24)
10. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 19 in B Minor – Allegretto (01:48)
11. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 20 in E Minor – Poco Allegretto (02:09)
12. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Marek Janowski – Hungarian Dances for Orchestra – No. 21 in E Minor – Vivace (01:37)

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The brotherhood of writers likes to get hold of a slogan in order to effectively and boldly describe a composer and his oeuvre. However, such an abbreviated description is not without danger, if not followed by subtle arguments for the choice of the words. Nevertheless, please permit the undersigned also to mention a catchy phrase in the case of Johannes Brahms, which concentrates the mind on the essential. Therefore, should one wish to label Brahms as a composer, then it would most certainly not bear the inscription of a “symphonic” or “Lied” composer, but – if the word existed – of a “variationalistic” composer. After all, the main purpose of Brahms’ life as a composer was the constant transformation of the musical material at hand, the re-examination of traditional elements and forms. And also during the course of his four contributions to the symphonic genre, which indeed caused him such great problems at first, the variation model was ceded an increasingly important role.Marek Janowski concludes his superb Brahms cycle with this unquestionably great performance of the Fourth Symphony. Everything about it is memorable, stylish, and characterful. The first movement opens at a perfect tempo, and if you don’t thrill to the way the strings bloom lushly in their answer to the woodwinds’ initial phrase at the start of the second subject, then you may need medical attention. The orchestra’s glorious horn section really comes into its own in the scherzo, but then, this is truly great Brahms playing–warm, idiomatic, perfectly balanced, and rhythmically true, just like the conducting. Superbly realistic engineering in all formats provides the icing on the cake. Artistic Quality: 10, Sound Quality: 10. –Classics Today

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