Martinu: The Six Symphonies

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MARTINU
Martinu: The Six Symphonies
BBC Symphony Orchestra, Jiri Belohlavek

[ Onyx / 3 CD ]

Release Date: Monday 1 August 2011

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"Play them back to back and the inevitable risk is that they may all begin to sound too much alike, but such is Jiri Belohlavek's skill as a Martinu interpreter that the effect is still of impressive stylistic variety...In short, Belohlavek and the BBC SO are now my top recommendation for the Martinu symphonies"
Gramophone Magazine Award WINNER 2012: Orchestral

"Magic always happens when Belohlávek conducts the BBC Symphony Orchestra in Czech works...this set of Martinu's six symphonies, taken from Barbican concerts last season, overflows with the same qualities that make the music so endearing: heart-warming ebullience, visionary fantasy, soaring passion, the most piquant orchestral colours."
(The Times)

"Martinu's symphonies tend to divide opinion and have not enjoyed anything like the same exposure as those of his Czech predecessor, Dvorak. But if anyone can find the key to their language, it is Jiří Bělohlávek...there is plenty of freshness, verve and expressive wisdom on this set."
(Daily Telegraph)

"You won't find a more persuasive champion than Belohlávek, who has the music in his blood. His skill at unravelling Martinu's rhythmic and textural knots - evidenced time and again in these live performances by the BBC Symphony Orchestra - is such that you immediately sense the stature of the music."
(Financial Times)

Recorded live at the Barbican in London, these recordings represent the first complete CD cycle of Martinu's symphonies conducted by Jiří Bělohlávek. The critically acclaimed concerts were given to mark the 50th anniversary of Martinu's death in 1959.

Martinu's six symphonies are a major contribution to 20th-century symphonic literature, and yet are still undervalued. Spanning the years before, during and after the Second World War, they capture the turmoil, hopes and fears of the composer and his homeland - a homeland that suffered unimaginable cruelties under the Nazis. At the end of the war, Martinu was the only major Czech composer of his generation to have survived.

Yet through the underlying currents of menace in the later works, the irrepressible Czech spirit survives, and the country's folk music is never far from the surface in these powerful and sincere works. As conductor Jiří Bělohlávek says 'I personally love all of Martinu's symphonies for the rich, colourful orchestration and undeniable Czech flair which always prevail in them, despite the fact that they also reflect the musical developments of their time.'

Tracks:

Symphony No 1
Symphony No 2
Symphony No 3
Symphony No 4
Symphony No 5
Symphony No 6