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Alexander Ivashkin, Valeri Polyansky, Russian State Symphony Orchestra - The unknown Shostakovich (2000)

Posted By: tirexiss
Alexander Ivashkin, Valeri Polyansky, Russian State Symphony Orchestra - The unknown Shostakovich (2000)

Alexander Ivashkin, Valeri Polyansky, Russian State Symphony Orchestra - The unknown Shostakovich (2000)
EAC | FLAC (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 59:38 | 263 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: Chandos Records | Catalog: CHAN 9792

The title of this disc is somewhat misleading, as there is very little music on it originally composed by Shostakovich. The Overture (Entr’Acte) to Poor Columbus was written by Shostakovich at the behest of Soviet officials to add the appropriate political “spin” to Ervin Dressel’s opera. It’s in the chaotic style of the Russian master’s other theater works of the period, notably The Nose and The Bolt. Cut from the same stylistic cloth are the Two Preludes of 1920, orchestrated by Alfred Schnittke to sound nearly as if written by Shostakovich himself.

Alexander Ivashkin, Russian State SO, Valeri Polyansky - Giya Kancheli: Simi; Mourned by the Wind (2005)

Posted By: Designol
Alexander Ivashkin, Russian State SO, Valeri Polyansky - Giya Kancheli: Simi; Mourned by the Wind (2005)

Giya Kancheli - Simi; Mourned by the Wind (2005)
Alexander Ivashkin, cello; Russian State Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Valeri Polyansky

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 219 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 151 Mb | Artwork included
Contemporary Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 10297 | Time: 01:04:56

Giya Kancheli is one of Eastern Europe's most important contemporary composers, respected by musicologists and fellow composers alike. Schnittke said of him: 'His most striking quality…is the rare gift of being able to suspend all sense of time. From the very first note we are released from our ordinary, everyday time-sense to float, cloud-like, in eternity.' The political upheavals through which Kancheili has lived have greatly affected his music, which dwells on a complexity of interrelated themes - grief, fear, solitude, vigil, memory, nostalgia, innocence, intolerance, protest. It is profoundly influenced by the spirit of the folk music of his native Georgia.

Alexander Ivashkin - Sofia Gubaidulina: In croce, Ten Preludes, Quaternion (2001)

Posted By: Designol
Alexander Ivashkin - Sofia Gubaidulina: In croce, Ten Preludes, Quaternion (2001)

Sofia Gubaidulina: In croce, Ten Preludes, Quaternion (2001)
Alexander Ivashkin, cello; Natalia Pavlutskaya, cello; Rachel Johnston, cello;
Miranda Wilson, cello; Malcolm Hicks, organ

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 175 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 129 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 9958 | Time: 00:55:51

Alexander Ivashkin’s bold, confident cello-playing is the thread running through these works; he partners the organist Malcolm Hicks in the 1979 In croce, plays the Ten Preludes for the solo instrument from 1979, and leads a quartet of cellos in the remarkable Quaternion. Though many of Sofia Gubaidulina’s works have a religious dimension, In croce does not, despite its title; ‘On the cross’ refers to the way in which the two instruments exchange roles during the work, the cello beginning with microtones in the lowest register and gradually rising to a high diatonic end, while the organ starts off high in a pure A major and descends to the depths to a cluster that gradually collapses when the instrument’s blower is turned off. Though the Ten Preludes stretch the player’s capabilities to the maximum, they remain more or less within the conventional resources of the instrument. But Quaternion creates a whole new, ethereal, sound-world in which the cellos are tuned in pairs a quarter-tone apart, the players wear thimbles on their fingers in one section, and the music is persistently coloured by harmonics.

Russian State SO; V. Polyansky, T. Grindenko, A. Ivashkin - Alfred Schnittke: Symphony No. 6; Concerto grosso No. 2 (2004)

Posted By: Designol
Russian State SO; V. Polyansky, T. Grindenko, A. Ivashkin - Alfred Schnittke: Symphony No. 6; Concerto grosso No. 2 (2004)

Alfred Schnittke: Symphony No. 6; Concerto grosso No. 2 (2004)
Tatiana Grindenko (violin), Alexander Ivashkin (cello)
Russian State Symphony Orchestra; Valeri Polyansky, conductor

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 259 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 160 Mb | Artwork included
Genre: Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN10180 | Time: 01:09:20

With two fine soloists in the Concerto grosso, this is a must for collectors of Chandos Schnittke series, and a welcome reminder of one of the later 20th-centurys most distinctive and troubling musical voices. (Gramophone)

Alexander Ivashkin, Tatyana Lazareva - Sergey Prokofiev: Complete Works for Cello and Piano (2003)

Posted By: Designol
Alexander Ivashkin, Tatyana Lazareva - Sergey Prokofiev: Complete Works for Cello and Piano (2003)

Sergey Prokofiev: Complete Works for Cello and Piano (2003)
Alexander Ivashkin, cello; Tatyana Lazareva, piano

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 263 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 157 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 10045 | Time: 01:07:43

Captured in the Maly Hall of the Moscow Conservatory where much of Prokofiev's work was first heard, it's surprising to find so many aspects of the composer's style represented, from the Romanticism of the early Ballade through the spiky dissonances of Chout to the elegiac, unfinished Solo Sonata. Aided by characterful piano-playing by Tatyana Lazareva, Ivashkin's recital compares most favourably with his similar programme on Ode for which he was accompanied by a more reticent pianist; although the earlier disc includes the Concertino movement in the guise of Rostropovich's cello quintet arrangement, the absence of the Chout transmogrification makes the Chandos collection appear better value.

Alexander Ivashkin, Russian State SO, Valeri Polyansky - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 2; Symphony-Concerto (2002)

Posted By: Designol
Alexander Ivashkin, Russian State SO, Valeri Polyansky - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 2; Symphony-Concerto (2002)

Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 2 Op. 40, Symphony-Concerto Op. 125 (2002)
Alexander Ivashkin, cello; Russian State Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Valeri Polyansky

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 341 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 184 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 9989 | Time: 01:19:39

Chandos’s previous Prokofiev series, recorded in the 80s with Neëme Järvi and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, is still probably the most recommendable complete cycle available. Chandos now seem to feel the need to start again, the reason possibly being that they are now using ‘authentically’ all-Russian forces. Whatever the company’s motivation (or if indeed it is to be a complete cycle), the results are impressively powerful, and the coupling stimulating and generous.