Beethoven: Symphony No. 9
- Regular
- £12.99
- Sale
- £12.99
- Regular
- Unit Price
- per
Format Details:
Format Details:
Description
Manchester Camerata and Douglas Boyd conclude their critically acclaimed Beethoven cycle with a vivid live recording of the Symphony No 9 'Choral'.
Manchester Camerata concludes its acclaimed Beethoven cycle, appropriately with the composer's final Symphony, the glorious Ninth. Like the previous releases in this cycle these live recordings capture the spirit and freshness of these remarkable, genre-busting works, as well as the excitement, atmosphere and energy of the chamber orchestra under Douglas Boyd, the ensemble's Music Director for 10 years.
Manchester Camerata has become one of the finest, most innovative chamber orchestras in the UK, and Douglas Boyd has proven to be an eminent Beethovenian. Conducting the composer's Fidelio at the 2009 Garsington Opera Festival, The Times noted "his grasp of Beethovenian idiom" and "pungent underlining of orchestral detail", praising the musical performance as "sublime and exultant".
Critical acclaim for Douglas Boyd's and Manchester Camerata's Beethoven Symphony cycle:
"Gutsy, powerful, vivid – this Mancunian Beethoven is something quite special." - Gramophone, Editor's Choice
"Brilliant live accounts...fresh...sizzling...invigorating." - The Sunday Times
"A performance that combines dazzling agility with a properly Beethovenian truculence." – The Daily Telegraph
Personnel: Manchester Camerata, Douglas Boyd (conductor), Rebecca von Lipinksi (soprano), Anna Grevelius (mezzo-soprano), Peter Wedd (tenor), Roderick Williams (baritone)
Tracklisting
Sonnambula
Christoph Croise; Daniel Schnyder
Bruce Wolosoff
Daniel-Ben Pienaar
Sean Jones, Nicholas Phan, London Symphony Orchestra, Joseph Young
National Philharmonic, Curtis Stewart, Michael Repper
Theatro
Susan Narucki, Curtis Macomber
Sonnambula
Giulia Ventura
Gianandrea Gavazzeni; Rai Turin Orchestra; Bruno Prevedi
Bruce Wolosoff
Christoph Croise; Daniel Schnyder
Hans Knappertsbusch
Triin Ruubel, Xandi van Dijk, Theodor Sink, Kart Ruubel
Leipziger Streichquartett, Christian Zacharias