Lyatoshynsky: Voices from the East

 
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BORIS MIKOLAYOVICH LYATOSHYNSKY
Lyatoshynsky: Voices from the East
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Kirill Karabits

[ Chandos SACD / Hybrid SACD ]

Release Date: Friday 18 January 2019

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With their second album on Chandos, the highly lauded team of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and its Chief Conductor, Kirill Karabits, presents another volume in their surround-sound series 'Voices from the East'. This is music very close to the heart of the native Ukrainian Karabits: Boris Lyatoshynsky taught orchestration to his father, Ivan Karabits.

Having absorbed the music of the Russian tradition and late-nineteenth-century Western European romanticism, Lyatoshynsky shaped his personal voice under the influence of twentieth-century modernist movements such as expressionism, as well as Ukrainian folk music, becoming a self-professed national composer. The premiere of Symphony No. 3 could not be given until Lyatoshynsky had rewritten the finale to accord with Communist Party requirements, the original movement having met with objections from the Soviet authorities. On this recording the symphony is heard as originally conceived. The symphonic ballad Grazhyna was written to mark the centenary of the death of Poland's greatest poet, Adam Mickiewicz (1798-1855). Both works are played by the BSO under a conductor whose musical decisions have the authority of one who directly embodies the legacy of the composer.

Editor's Choice - Orchestral Section

"… Karabits and his Bournemouth players really bring out the detail of Lyatoshynsky's imaginative orchestration [Symphony No. 3], and what might seem in other hands a somewhat sprawling work is here given a carefully shaped rendition of great intensity … The music [Grazhyna] is much more romantic in tone that the symphony … it is very pictorial music indeed. The players of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra react to it with vigour and dedication, and their performances benefit from outstanding engineering. More Lyatoshynsky, please!"

Ivan Moody, Gramophone magazine - January 2019

Tracks:

Symphony No.3, Op.50 (1951)
Grazhyna, Op.58 (1955)