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Tchaikovsky: The 6 Symphonies

Tchaikovsky: The 6 Symphonies

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Creators: Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky, Claudio Abbado, Michael Tilson Thomas, Zubin Mehta, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra Of London, Carl Pini, Pinchas Zukerman
Label: Sony Classics
Category: Music

List Price: $46.98
Buy New: $33.33
You Save: $13.65 (29%)

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New (11) Used (6) from $32.92

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 42400

Format: Box Set
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 8
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 5.2 x 5 x 1.2

UPC: 828768880722
EAN: 0828768880722
ASIN: B000I2JHJA

Release Date: November 28, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • 1. Dreams of a Winter Journey - Allegro tranquillo
  • 2. Land of Desolation, Land of Mists - Adagio cantabile ma non tanto
  • 3. Scherzo. Allegro scherzando giocoso
  • 4. Finale. Andante lugubre - Allegro moderato - Allegro maestoso - Allegro vivo
  • 1. Ouverture. Allegro giusto
  • 2. Danses Caracteristiques. a) Marche. Tempo di marcia viva
  • 2. Danses Caracteristiques. b) Danse de la Fee Dragee. Andante non troppo
  • 2. Danses Caracteristiques. c) Danse Russe (Trepak). Tempo di trepak, molto vivace
  • 2. Danses Caracteristiques. d) Danse Arabe. Allegretto
  • 2. Danses Caracteristiques. e) Danse Chinoise. Allegro moderato
  • 2. Danses Caracteristiques. f) Danse des Mirlitons. Moderato assai
  • 3. Valse des Fleurs. Tempo di valse

  Disc 2
  • 1. Andante sostenuto - Allegro vivo
  • 2. Andantino marziale, quasi moderato
  • 3. Scherzo. Allegro molto vivace
  • 4. Finale. Moderato assai - Allegro vivo

  Disc 3
  • 1. Introduzione. Moderato assai (Tempo di marcia funebre) - Allegro brillante
  • 2. Alla tedesca. Allegro moderato e semplice
  • 3. Andante elegiaco
  • 4. Scherzo. Allegro vivo
  • 5. Finale. Allegro con fuoco (Tempo di Polacca)
  • Largo - Andante - Allegro giusto
  • Largo - Allegro vivace

  Disc 4
  • 1. Andante sostenuto - Moderato con anima - Moderato assai, quasi Andante - Allegro vivo
  • 2. Andantino in modo di canzone
  • 3. Scherzo. Pizzicato ostinato. Allegro
  • 4. Finale. Allegro con fuoco

  Disc 5
  • 1. Andante - Allegro con anima
  • 2. Andante cantabile, con alcuna licenza - Moderato con anima - Andante mosso - Allegro non troppo
  • 3. Valse. Allegro moderato
  • 4. Finale. Andante maestoso - Allegro vivace - Molto vivace - Moderato assai e molto maestoso - Pre

  Disc 6
  • 1. Adagio - Allegro non troppo - Andante - Moderato mosso - Andante - Moderato assai - Allegro vivo
  • 2. Allegro con grazia
  • 3. Allegro molto vivace
  • 4. Finale. Adagio lamentoso - Andante
  • 1. Gigue
  • 2. Menuet
  • 3. Preghiera
  • 4. Theme and Variations

  Disc 7
  • 1. Lento lugubre; Moderato con moto; Andante
  • 2. Vivace con spirito
  • 3. Andante con moto
  • 4. Allegro con fuoco
  • 3. Melodie in E flat major

  Disc 8
  • 1. Jeu de sons
  • 2. Valse
  • 3. Scherzo burlesque
  • 4. Reves d'enfant
  • 5. Danse baroque
  • 1. Elegie. Andante molto cantabile
  • 2. Valse melancolique. Allegro moderato
  • 3. Scherzo. Molto Vivace
  • 4. Tema con variazioni. Andante con moto

Similar Items:

  • Bruckner: The Complete Symphonies
  • Ludwig van Beethoven: The 9 Symphonies - Arturo Toscanini / NBC Symphony Orchestra
  • Dvorak: The Symphonies
  • Dvorak: Symphonies Nos. 1-9; In Nature; Serenade for Winds; Serenade for Strings, etc.
  • Works of Igor Stravinsky

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Not everything on this set is by Abbaddo.   March 8, 2007
tjguitar
18 out of 18 found this review helpful

The other review is excellent in detailing the merits of these recordings and it's a great price for a huge box set.


However, i must mention that Claudio Abbaddo and the Chicago Symphony is not the only artist on this box set.


Abbado conducts the 6 symphonies, The Nutcracker Ballet Suite, The Tempest, 1812, Romeo and Juliet, Marche Slave and Voyevoda.


Michael Tilson Thomas conducts the London Symphony on the Manfred Symphony

Tilson Thomas conducts the Philharmonia on Suite No.4 and Suite No.2 for orchestra.

Tilson Thomas conducts the Los Angeles Philharmonic on Suite No. 3

and finally, Zubin Mehta conducts the Israeli Philharmonic for Serenade Melancolique and Melodie in E Flat Major.

Also, it seems that Amazon is not showing the track listings.

I will post the arrangement by disc:

CD1:
Symphony No. 1 and The Nutcracker Ballet Suite

CD2:
Symphony No. 2 and The Tempest

CD3:
Symphony No. 3 and 1812 Overture

CD4:
Symphony No. 4 and Romeo and Juliet

CD5:
Symphony No. 5 and Voyevoda

CD6:
Symphony No. 6, Marche Slav, and Suite No. 4

CD7:
Manfred Symphony, Serenade Melancolique, Melodie

CD8:
Suite No.2, Suite No. 3



4 out of 5 stars Appraising Abbado's controversial Tchaikovsky cycle   February 17, 2007
Santa Fe listener
15 out of 15 found this review helpful

Claudio Abbado spent considerable time with the CSO in the 1980s but rarely returned (so far as I know) after he was appointed as Karajan's successor in Berlin. His complete Tchaikovsky cycle was a flagship enterprise for Sony, and yet the results divide listeners, some of whom categorically dismiss Abbado's interpretations as boring and fussy, lacking in Slavic passion. I had casually bought into that judgment but decided recently to listen to the whole cycle afresh, leading to the following, sometimes surprising conclusions:

Sym. #1: We start off on a high point. This work, subtitled 'Winter Dreams,' is the most immature of the symphonies, relying on much repetition in place of solid sonata development, and at times it's hard to distinguish why this is a symphony and not part of a ballet suite. However, the melodies are gorgeous, and a conductor with real conviction can make the music come across. Abbado spins out the balletic first movement with energy and verve--it makes the often recommended Tilson Thomas version from Boston (on DG) seem overly refined. The lyrical second movement evokes real tenderness, the Scherzo (another balletic movement) skips along lightly but could use more rhythmic emphasis, and the finale, after an Andante lugubre introduction that could be darker, sweeps convincingly into the grand allegro, which has lots of punch and vitality. In all, an excellent performance. After you count in the fine sonics and the gorgeous playing of the Chicago Sym., Abbado outshines all his Western competition, including Karajan, Mehta, and Bernstein in their complete sets.

Sym. #2: Outstandings recordings of the First Sym. are thin on the ground, but not of the 'Little Russian,' which boasts a classic from Giulini (EMI) and a committed reading from Bernstein (Sony). Abbado has a great advantage in outstanding solo parts played with style and commitment by the Chicagoans--you won't hear better from Karajan's Berliners. Rather than aiming for folk-style earthiness, Abbado takes the work to be grander, more symphonically European. In that vein the first movement is convincing and thrilling. But the march that follows is reticent and fussy. The performance is back in form with an energetic, propulsive Scherzo, a total success. The finale is imposingly grand at the outset, rich with brass sonorities, and although the main allegro section sounds a bit fussed over, it has requisite vigor and enthusiasm. In sum, another success, much better played and recorded than esteemed rivals like Dorati on Mercury and Markevitch on Philips.

Sym. #3: The "Polish" Sym. is the problem child, a score so drawn out and balletic (Balanchine based his full-length "Jewels" on it) that few conductors can hold it together symphonically. It doesn't help matters that so much of the music hovers around Andante instead of a vigorous Allegro, or that the harmonies are often ambiguous. Abbado takes the shadowy first movement as a processional, delicately nuanced in the phrasing but moving along. It works well, but the next movement "Alla Tedesca" sounds exactly the same; he hasn't found any contrast in tempo or mood. The third movement, which is yet another shadowy andante, sounds inward and melancholy. By now the wandering nature of the piece has won out; attention begins to wander, to. Abbado doesn't find enough earthiness in the mercurial Scherzo to salvage matters, so we might as well give in and enjoy this as ballet. Tchaikovsky wants the finale to be played "with fire," but Abbado remains at low temperature, smooth and flowing. I've been highly critical here, so let it be said that none of Abbado's Western rivals do any better. Call this attempt to interpret a sprawling ballet-symphony a middling success, with reservations.

Sym. #4: The last three symphonies are meat for every great conductor, needless to say, so Abbado had little chance of rising to the very summit. He competes with himself, in fact, given that his Decca recording of the Fourth with the Vienna Phil. ranks among his best recordings from the Seventies. A good or even very good reading won't do, and that's about all that Abbado gives us. The CSO brass suddenly begin to snarl a bit, a la Solti, and softer passages get fussed over. The first movement fails to cohere convincingly, and one wonders exactly where the interpretation is going. Is this just big-band international Tchaikovsky? On the whole, yes. The oboe solo in the Andante flows by without much individuality or expression, and you realize that this music doesn't mean much to anyone here. The Scherzo is virtuosic without being thrilling. The finale is heavy and not fast enough to raise one's blood, immediately turning tepid in the lyrical second subject. All in all, not an inspired reading. In fact, a definite miss unless you simply must hear the CSO run thorugh its paces.

Sym. #5: Although much loved, the Fifth suffers from repeating the same motive in the first and last movements, as well as repetitive development sections that hammer simple rhythmic patterns over and over. To really succeed, an interpretation must be intense, dramatic, and played with edge of the seat intensity (in a word, the way Mravinsky does it). Abbado starts out with a full, broad statement that isn't premonitory enough (it doesn't promise great things to come), but no one can doubt how detailed and beautiful the playing is. There's a lot to be said for avoiding banality in this music or hollow grandiosity. Add in the outstanding Chicago playing (thankfully less blaring in the brass), and the first movement turns into a real success. Likewise the Andante, which begins with ravishing cellos and a natural, unforced solo horn. Here Abbado moves things along rather quickly, perhaps too much so for the music to tell as expressively as it might. But again, no sentimentality allowed. The waltz Scherzo is weaker in its characterization, coming off as well played but faceless. Up to this point, I've been feeling that Abbado's reading deserves respet, which is confirmed by a sober but full-voiced finale, the place where sentimentality and false heroics lay real traps. In all, I like this Fifth and rate it higher than the Fourth. Those who prefer blood-and-thunder won't agree. This is a Fifth for those who usually avoid the work.

Sym. #6: It's as difficult to produce a truly memorable 'Pathetique' as it is to produce a truly memorable Beethoven Fifth, and yet neither work ever misfires under a good conductor. So the challenge is greatness, pure and simple. Abbado had looming over his head Reiner's acclaimed Sixth with the same CSO in Living Stereo on RCA, a classic. Let's note right off that the playing and recording here are up to Reiner's standards. Reiner was a cool customer, perhaps the greatest technicin of his day. Abbado is cool, too, but without the intensity of a master craftsman. His 'Pathetique' is too loose-limbed at the beginning; one soon realizes that as with the Fourth, he has no pressing thing to say in this music. One episode follows another beautifully, if at times cautiously (E.g., a tepid second subject in the opening movement that needs to soar). The succeeding movements don't change that impression, even though everyone concerned tries to thrill us in the Scherzo, and do. Tchaikovksy's last symphony rises and falls on its tragic finale--I want a wrenching catharsis--but Abbado has decided that pathos is the dominant feeling. He's not alone in that, so if you want less than catharsis, here is a well-played finale that I find unmemorable. In all, I'd place Abbado's Sixth a little higher than the Fourth but well shy of the Fifth.

Manfred Sym.: The last two discs in the set switch conductors to Michael Tilson Thomas, leading three different orchestras. If you know Markevitch's electrifying Manfred (in EMI's Great Condcutors seris), it will seem that MTT starts out too tamely, but this performance contains many hidden bombshells. The plaing of the London Sym. really excels expectations. To my knowledge, the best played and recorded Manfred has been Chailly's on Decca, but this one gives it some serious competition. I wish MTT had turned in an unforgettable reading--he certainly turns in the best he has to offer in Tchaikovsky--but his occasional fussiness barely detracts from a thrilling ride.

Sony originally released this cycle at one symphony per disc, the remainder being filled up with the usual suspects: Romeo and Juliet, the 1812 Over., the Nutcracker Suite. They're still here, making this an 8-CD box competing with several 5-CD sets, but it's available at a good price,especially on the used market. The unuusal item is The Tempest tone poem and, even more so, three of Tchaikovsky's neglected orchestral suites (#2, #3, and #5 'Mozartiana). Don't pass them by, because suddenly Tilson Thomas (once again) finds all the sparkle and liveliness, all the vibrancy and joy, that only fitfully appears in the symphonies.

Overall judgement: I was surprised, given its lackluster reputation, that this is often a spectacular set, full of exciting playing. Abbado has no riveting conception in the last three symphonies, and in fact rises to his best in the First and Second. For overall conviction, I'd buy the Temirkanov set on RCA, but Abbado is more convincing to me than Karajan, and better in the early works than Bernstein. Experienced collectors will already have multiple favorites among the individual suymphonies and won't want a complete set. For them, Abbado's "Winter Dreams" is the overlooked gem, and going farther afield, there's the great Manfred Sym. performance and utterly captivating Suites from MTT. It might add up to a great bargain after all.



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