Christina Landshamer, Munich Radio Orchestra & John Fiore – Beethoven: Egmont, Op. 84 (2022) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz]

Christina Landshamer, Munich Radio Orchestra & John Fiore – Beethoven: Egmont, Op. 84 (2022)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 42:52 minutes | 413 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © BR-Klassik

In September 1809, the Vienna Hofburg Theatre commissioned Ludwig van Beethoven to create new incidental music for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s “Egmont”. The tragedy had premiered in Mainz on 9 January 1789. It calls for incidental music; but various attempts, some commissioned by the poet himself, remained unfinished or were unsatisfactory. In Vienna, however, the production of “Egmont” was to include the music called for in several places. Beethoven set to work. Since the subject matter suited him – the tragedy is set in Brussels, which is under threat from Spanish troops, and deals with resistance against oppression and foreign rule – he made good progress. Nevertheless, the Viennese theatre premiere of “Egmont” on 24 May 1810 still had to do without music; the score was not completed until the third repetition. Beethoven’s music for the play had its premiere on 15 June 1810. The music itself speaks for the fact that the commission was close to Beethoven’s heart; it far exceeds the standard of the stage music of the time. This applies to the compositional demands, but also to the relationship of the music to the drama. Instead of mere illustration, Beethoven provided an interpretation and thus an additional level of meaning. The well-known Egmont Overture, the most dramatically dense piece of drama music, anticipates the plot, introduces the characters. A clear reference to the drama is made in the ending, which corresponds exactly to the symphony of victory called for by Goethe at the end of the tragedy. Five of the ten numbers are directly integrated into the stage action; the other five, in addition to the overture and the four inter-act music pieces, are less closely linked to the drama. A concert performance of the music, conceived entirely for scenic presentation, dispenses with the context to the play. Often only the overture was and is played. – The declamation texts written by Friedrich Mosengeil, authorised by Goethe and revised by Franz Grillparzer, have been supplemented here by passages from Goethe’s Trauerspiel and newly arranged by August Zirner.

Album 1 of the present recording offers the complete version with declamation and music; album 2 features only Beethoven’s music. The box is completed with Beethoven’s overture “Zur Namensfeier”, op. 115.

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Bavarian Radio Chorus, Munich Radio Orchestra, Andres Mustonen – Valentin Silvestrov: Requiem für Larissa (Live) (2022) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz]

Bavarian Radio Chorus, Munich Radio Orchestra, Andres Mustonen - Valentin Silvestrov: Requiem für Larissa (Live) (2022) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz] Download

Bavarian Radio Chorus, Munich Radio Orchestra, Andres Mustonen – Valentin Silvestrov: Requiem für Larissa (Live) (2022)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 01:00:12 minutes | 585 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © BR-Klassik

Valentin Silvestrov is probably the best-known Ukrainian composer, and his Requiem for Larissa, now released on CD by BR-KLASSIK, was written in response to the unexpected death in 1996 of his wife, the music and literature scholar Larissa Bondarenko. She had stood by his side from the very beginning of his artistic career. It was in 1999, shortly before the turn of the millennium, that Silvestrov was finally able to complete his Requiem. He did not set a drama of the Last Judgement to music, as Mozart, Berlioz or Verdi had done before him, but rather wrote a lament – in seemingly endless, world-forlorn repetitions. The composer stepped out of the present and into the past, commenting on his life with Larissa with memories of music that had inspired her, and with profound allusions, retrospections and epilogues of the most personal nature.
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Uladzimir Sinkevich, Munich Radio Orchestra & Ivan Repušić – Pēteris Vasks: Orchestral Works (2021) [Official Digital Download 24bit/48kHz]

Uladzimir Sinkevich, Munich Radio Orchestra & Ivan Repušić – Pēteris Vasks: Orchestral Works (2021)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/48 kHz | Time – 01:16:51 minutes | 823 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © BR-Klassik

All the works of the Latvian composer Peteris Vasks on this release are written for string orchestra: the three connected compositions Musica serena (2015), Musica dolorosa (1983) and Musica appassionata (2002), and also Vasks’ Concerto No 2 for Violoncello and Strings, also known as “Klatbutne” (“Presence”, 2011-2012).

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