Artist: Netherlands Radio Philharmonic, Edo de Waart, Markus Stenz
Title: Willem Jeths: Symphony No. 1 & Recorder Concerto
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Challenge Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless
Total Time: 00:57:38
Total Size: 216 mb
Tracklist01. Symphony No. 1 for Orchestra and Mezzo Soprano Unbegrenzt
02. Symphony No. 1 for Orchestra and Mezzo Soprano Wie ein Kondukt
03. Symphony No. 1 for Orchestra and Mezzo Soprano Metanoia
04. Symphony No. 1 for Orchestra and Mezzo Soprano Selige Sehnsucht
05. Recorder concerto
World Premiere recordings of a pair of orchestral works by leading Dutch composer Willem Jeths, featuring two world famous conductors - Edo de Waart and Markus Stenz - with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra. Following his Symphony No 1, the virtuoso Erik Bosgraaf is the soloist in the Recorder Concerto.
Jeths, born in 1959, had written an opera, three string quartets, eleven solo concertos and a large number of orchestral and chamber music works before attempting the most important genre of the orchestral repertoire. In fact, his is not a traditional symphony in the classical-romantic sense, but rather a piece with four movements themed around the cycle of life, death and transformation. Just under 45 minutes in length, the symphony consists of one single build-up of tension in which its musical and philosophical aspects - the opening and closing vocal movements incorporate poems by Goethe that revolve around the cyclic dimension of existence - are seen to be all interconnected.
Before composing his Recorder Concerto for Erik Bosgraaf, Willem Jeths heard him play a number of different instuments, one of which was a 16th-century renaissance recorder by Silvestro Ganassi. "That instrument is more powerful than the more common baroque variant, so I composed my concerto specifically for the Ganassi recorder." As the composition progressed, Jeths was increasingly captivated by what he calls the 'essence of the instrument': "To me, the sound of the recorder represents innocence and fragile purity. I had to give the soloist enough scope to let him put these qualities across to the best possible effect.(to) emerge in the limelight."
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