One Movement Symphonies: Barber, Sibelius & Scriabin

Format
Audio
Published
28 May 2021
ISBN
0030911114923

One Movement Symphonies: Barber, Sibelius & Scriabin

Reference Recordings proudly presents a unique album of one movement symphonies composed by Barber, Sibelius and Scriabin, in an outstanding interpretation from Michael Stern and the Kansas City Symphony.

This album, the ninth in our series with the orchestra, was produced by David Frost, seven-time winner of the Classical Producer of the Year GRAMMY® award. It was recorded by RR’s own engineering team of GRAMMY®-winning engineer and Technical Director Keith O. Johnson, and multi-GRAMMY® nominated engineer Sean Martin.

Music Director Michael Stern is in his second decade with the Kansas City Symphony, hailed for its remarkable artistic ascent, original programming, organizational development and stability, as well as the extraordinary growth of its varied audiences since his tenure began. The Kansas City Symphony has a vision to transform hearts, minds and its community through the power of symphonic music.

Review

A symphony is classified by most musical dictionaries as an extended work written in the Western Art Music tradition, most often in four movements. So what happens when a composer throws out a part of that definition and instead creates an epic extended work in one movement? Still written for a full symphony orchestra, it’s almost like it’s the movie version instead of a TV series that’s been broken into distinct, but related parts. And sometimes, all you want is a movie.

This album by the Kansas City Symphony is a beautiful rendering of three of these works that are each truly delightful in their own way. Only 39 years old, the Kansas City Symphony sounds warm, delicate and sophisticated beyond its years. They bring all the soaring joy of the Finnish countryside to Sibelius’ Symphony No. 7 while Barber’s Symphony in One Movement is more dramatic and Scriabin’s Symphony No. 4 is a symphonic poem more often known as Le Poème de l’extase or Poem of Ecstasy. Rhythmically ambiguous and with the tonality derived from Scriabin’s ‘mystic chord’ (a fascinating concept in its own right, well worth reading about), it’s a fitting finale to this splendid album.


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