Vasks:flute Concerto
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Description
In his early works Vasks was influenced by Bartók, Shostakovich, and the 'New Polish School', he was inspired after 1990 by the minimalism coming out of Estonia. This Baltic-Finnish stylistic atmosphere is present in Vasks’s Third Symphony (2004-05), a commission from the Tampere Filharmonia. The orchestra’s management asked the composer for an 'introductory piece' of 15 to 20 minutes duration. His trust in the unique energy of his own inner voices gave birth to a symphonic landscape of more than 40 minutes duration, his longest and most intellectually rich orchestral work so far. In his symphony, Vasks wanted to represent the beauty of the world God created, the destiny of humanity, and the fate of the Latvian people, as he explained. The symphony speaks 'of love and fidelity to basic principles, of loss, and of the strength to rise and move forward – and also of the endless battle between darkness and light'. Like its predecessors, the Third Symphony is quite transparent. There are seldom more than two simultaneous sound events at any given moment, one of which is usually a static background. There is little contrapuntal activity. Melodic gestures, atmosphere, and instrumental colour establish the work’s character. His Concerto for Flute and Orchestra is constructed symmetrically. The burlesque middle movement is framed by elegiac outer movements flowing along in serene tranquility and beauty. Passages with wind chorales and distant ringing of bells alternate with passages the mood of which ranges from meditative via lamenting to euphoric.
Tobias Hagedorn; Claudia Chan; Xavier Larsson Paez; Sofia von Atzingen; Nejc Grm; Victor Virnot; Ma
Jovita Zahl; Philipp Kronbichler; Peter Degenhardt; John McAlpine; Friedrich Jaecker; Sarah Becker;
Various
Palm/Gielen/Rsof
Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin; Rundfunkchor Berlin; Kammerchor des Rundfunkchors Berlin; Marek
Schallfeld Ensemble; Spoldzielnia Muzyczna Contemporary Ensemble; AuditivVokal Dresden; airborne ex
Sebastian Berweck; Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin; Ensemble Musikfabrik; Trio Splitsignals Berli
Franziska Rabl; Karsten Jesgarz; James Tolksdorf; Marek Reichert; Opernchor Theater Hof; Hofer Symp
Julian Joseph and Marcelo Bratke
Timothy Ridout; Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne; Jamie Phillips
The Chapel Choir of Selwyn College, Cambridge, Adam Field, Sarah MacDonald
Portsmouth Cathedral Choir, Sachin Gunga, David Price
Julien Van Mellaerts, Dylan Perez
Aisslinn Nosky and Yiheng Yang
Valerio Celentano
Valentina Danelon/Cristina Santin