Edition [10 CD set includes Symphonies, Chamber Works & Prince Igor]

Edition [10 CD set includes Symphonies, Chamber Works & Prince Igor] cover $75.00 Out of Stock
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BORODIN
Edition [10 CD set includes Symphonies, Chamber Works & Prince Igor]
Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra / Moscow Trio / Nikolai Okhotnikov (baritone) / Marco Rapetti (piano) / etc

[ Brilliant Classics / 10 CD Box Set ]

Release Date: Saturday 20 October 2012

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.

The only serious Borodin Collection in the market.

Borodin, a member of the "Mighty Handful" (a group of Russian composers with the same creative goals), was a scientist by profession (chemistry), and composed in his spare time. No "amateurish" quality however can be traced in his (relatively small) oeuvre, which abounds in sophisticated, romantic harmonies and melodies, a firm feeling for structure, and a keen sense for "couleur locale", without too overtly references to Russian folklore.

The set (near complete) presents the 3 symphonies, the complete chamber music, songs, the complete piano music and the famous opera Prince Igor.

Mostly Russian performers: the Moscow Trio, soprano Marianna Tarassova and the great Nikolai Ghiaurov in Prince Igor.

Alexander Porfireyevich Borodin was the illegitimate son of a prince and his mistress, educated at home in St Petersburg by his mother. Although music was an early passion, he discovered his avocation once he matriculated at the city's Medical Surgical Academy. A chemist he became, and a good one, though not without his extracurricular enthusiasms: the head of department once admonished him thus, mid lecture: 'Mr Borodin, busy yourself a little less with songs.

We have left to us a small, eccentrically proportioned body of work which acknowledges the learnt influence of Wagner and Chopin in their respective fields while nonetheless cultivating a personal and nationally inflected voice that was principally nurtured by his fellow member of 'The Mighty Handful', Mily Balakirev.

That voice was first cultivated in abstract orchestral works, which met with mixed acclaim, but the Second Symphony is one of the most popular Russian works of its kind; perhaps less well known these days than half a century ago, but full of Borodin's trademark, lyrical melodies, bending towards a wistfulness and melancholy that never threatens to break into outright hysteria unlike the work of his contemporary Tchaikovsky.

Songs and chamber music are barely known outside his home country, but they are worth discovering, as this unique edition will quickly reveal. And then there's his sprawling, unfinished masterpiece: Prince Igor, work of almost two decades, completed and partly orchestrated by RimskyKorsakov and Glazunov, the brainchild of the Mighty Handful's christener, Vladimir Stasov. This chronicle of a bloody but exuberant period in Russian history makes the most of Borodin's fascination with Russia's outposts, in music of 'oriental' flavour that survives in popular recognition through the bounding energy of the Polovtsian Dances.

"This set remains uniquely valuable for letting us hear so much of the composer's music that is otherwise scarce or simply unobtainable. For that reason, and at Brilliant's price, these recordings are an essential acquisition for anyone interested in the Russian repertory of the nineteenth century. The booklet, as is usual with these collected editions, is not bulky - a mere ten pages of notes to cover all ten discs - but David Nice provides all the essential information, and ranges widely through the incidents of Borodin's life and the work that was necessary for Rimsky-Korsakov and Glazunov to put these pieces into performable condition." (MusicWeb)

Tracks:

Prince Igor (highlights)
String Sextet in D minor
String Quartet No. 1 in A major
String Quartet No. 2 in D major
Symphonies Nos. 1-3 (Complete)
In the Steppes of Central Asia