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    Myaskosky - Symphony No.7 (Leo Ginsburg) / Knipper - Symphonietta, Concert Poem (Mikhail Terian) - 1988

    Posted By: elcoronel
    Myaskosky - Symphony No.7 (Leo Ginsburg) / Knipper - Symphonietta, Concert Poem (Mikhail Terian) - 1988

    Nikolai Myaskovsky - Symphony No.7 (Leo Ginsburg) / Lev Knipper - Symphonietta, Concert Poem (Mikhail Terian)
    Classical | EAC | FLAC, IMG+CUE, LOG | Covers | 1CD, 302 MB
    Label: OLYMPIA | Catalog Number: OCD 163 | TT: 57'21''

    While still engaged on the vast canvas of the Sixth Symphony, commenced in 1919 but not completed until 1923, Myaskovsky began work on his Seventh Symphony which he nished in 1922. In many respects the symphonies are interwoven and represent very different fruits stemming from the same creative act. The Sixth is Myaskovsky’s expression of his attitude to the 1917 revolution. Some critics have hailed it as the rst socialist realist symphony with its celebration of popular French revolutionary airs like Ca Ira and the Carmagnole, culminating in an optimistic apotheosis - a formula later to be adopted frequently by many of Myaskovsky’s own pupils. Others have regarded the Sixth as the end of a musical era, the swan song of the great romantic musical tradition, whose peak was represented by Tchaikovsky’s own Sixth Symphony and have tended to ignore the revolutionary references, highlighting the traditional aspects of the music of the rst three movements. Myaskovsky himself wrote about the external inuences (ie.non-Russian) that gave rise to the symphony, referring to an artist, whose name is not given, whom he met at the house of his friends, the Derzhanovskys. This artist had spent much time abroad, particularly in France, where he had learned many songs of workers and artisans. “This man made a deep
    impression on me and I made up my mind to write a symphony expressing in some ways the feelings that he aroused in me." The symphony also contained many other images: the theme of Verhaeren’s “Les Aubes" about the death of a revolutionary hero and the honours paid to him by the people, also the howling winter winds of Petrograd evoked in the Scherzo. Above all, however, the symphony is about life and death — an expression of the ambivalence felt by Myaskovsky‘s generation towards the realities of the Revolution, an event which while it was welcomed was not fully understood. It is an indication of Myaskovsky's own hesitation in seeking to express his own feelings to his full satisfaction that he found it necessary to lay aside the Sixth and embark upon the composition of the Seventh Symphony. In the Seventh, Myaskovsky returns to the more introspective and relaxed world of the Third and Fifth Symphonies, in which a personal, intimate range of ideas are given expression, combining muted echoes of the stormy world of the Sixth with more tranquil images like the musette or cradle song. Indeed, throughout the vast output of Myaskovsky’s twenty-seven symphonies, the composer’s art returns again and again to these echoes or residual upsurges of inspiration, derived from previous compositions but becoming manifested in very different forms. A one-movement work, the Seventh Symphony begins darkly but powerful emotions soon assert themselves with vibrant passion, in a theme that is started by the woodwinds. An atmosphere of muted tension is created broken orchestral snatches of an insistent character. An upwardly striving theme emerges only to be submerged in a turbulent sea of ambiguity. Darkness returns, shadows move, passions are again aroused, shafts of light are projected by the brass as the pace of the development quickens. Just when the soaring theme appears to become dominant, it weakens and plunges once more into a sea of tranquillity and introspection, having been no more than the composer’s description, “minaccioso“ (threatening). The central part of the symphony contains a beautiful, pastoral passage, in which the theme rst heard at the very beginning of the symphony is allowed to develop its innate lyricism freely and hilly, undergoing various gentle changes. The mood alters — elementsиdescribed as tenebroso herald a spiky, scherzo section which gradually builds up in intensity, marked by a jaunty but still troubled little theme that undergoes many variations, from which emerges once again the pastoral theme, this time more langorous than ever. In an atmosphere of subdued tension, the theme subsides, giving place to a nal faster passage, in which the turbulent ambiguity of the 1rst part of the symphony is given one last expression, ending abruptly.

    Tracklist:

    L.Knipper - Symphonietta:
    [1] 1. Sonatina
    [2] 2. Aria
    [3] 3. Intermezzo
    [4] 4. Finale
    [5]L.Knipper - Concert poem

    [6] N.Myaskovsky - Symphony No.7
    Andante sostenuto calmo - Allegro minassimo, poco stravagante - Andante - Allegro scherzando e tenebroso

    Performers:

    N.Shakhovskaya - cello [5]
    Moscow Conservatory Chamber Orchestra - Mikhail Terian [1-5]
    USSR Radio Symphony Orchestra - Leo Ginsburg

    Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

    EAC extraction logfile from 27. October 2012, 14:30

    Lev Knipper & N. Myaskovsky / Knipper, Myaskovsky - Orchestral works

    Used drive : PHILIPS CDRW1610A Adapter: 0 ID: 0

    Read mode : Secure
    Utilize accurate stream : Yes
    Defeat audio cache : Yes
    Make use of C2 pointers : No

    Read offset correction : 733
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

    Used output format : User Defined Encoder
    Selected bitrate : 128 kBit/s
    Quality : High
    Add ID3 tag : No
    Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\FLAC\flac.exe
    Additional command line options : -T "COMMENT=rip by el coronel, rutracker.org" -V -8 %source%


    TOC of the extracted CD

    Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
    1 | 0:00.32 | 6:10.13 | 32 | 27794
    2 | 6:10.45 | 3:39.27 | 27795 | 44246
    3 | 9:49.72 | 3:49.13 | 44247 | 61434
    4 | 13:39.10 | 5:30.70 | 61435 | 86254
    5 | 19:10.05 | 14:41.52 | 86255 | 152381
    6 | 33:51.57 | 23:30.38 | 152382 | 258169


    Range status and errors

    Selected range

    Filename G:\Music\Myaskovsky 7 Ginsburg\Knipper, Myaskovsky - Orchestral works (Teryan, Ginsburg).wav

    Peak level 100.0 %
    Extraction speed 7.3 X
    Range quality 100.0 %
    Test CRC 2B3CA620
    Copy CRC 2B3CA620
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred


    AccurateRip summary

    Track 1 not present in database
    Track 2 not present in database
    Track 3 not present in database
    Track 4 not present in database
    Track 5 not present in database
    Track 6 not present in database

    None of the tracks are present in the AccurateRip database

    End of status report

    ==== Log checksum 250E6584D47B12A12FB319078377FF6BCA88C29C635D11FD66406216F01A9EAC ====