Bedrich Smetana Collection
£26.55
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 96909
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 8
Release Date: 26th May 2023
Contents
Works
Andante in E flat major, B97Czech Dances, Book 1
Czech Dances, Book 2
Doctor Faust
Festive Overture in D major, op.4
Festive Symphony in E major, op.6
Hakon Jarl, op.16
March of the National Guard
Ma vlast (My Country)
Nasim devam, polka for orchestra in D major
Pensee fugitive
Piano Trio in G minor, op.15
Richard III, op.11
Shakespeare Festival March in E major, op.20
Sketches (Skizzen), op.4
Sketches (Skizzen), op.5
Stammbuchblatter (Album leaves) (14)
Stammbuchblatter (Album leaves), op.2
Stammbuchblatter (Album leaves), op.3
String Quartet no.1 in E minor 'From My Life'
String Quartet no.2 in D minor
The Bartered Bride (Prodana nevesta) (sung in German)
The Peasant Woman
Artists
Anny Schlemm (soprano)Rolf Apeck (tenor)
Harald Neukirch (tenor)
Theo Adam (bass-baritone)
Antonin Kubalek (piano)
Roberto Plano (piano)
Joachim Trio
Stamitz Quartet
Chor der Staatsoper Dresden
Janacek Philharmonic Orchestra
Staatskapelle Dresden
Conductors
Theodore KucharOtmar Suitner
Works
Andante in E flat major, B97Czech Dances, Book 1
Czech Dances, Book 2
Doctor Faust
Festive Overture in D major, op.4
Festive Symphony in E major, op.6
Hakon Jarl, op.16
March of the National Guard
Ma vlast (My Country)
Nasim devam, polka for orchestra in D major
Pensee fugitive
Piano Trio in G minor, op.15
Richard III, op.11
Shakespeare Festival March in E major, op.20
Sketches (Skizzen), op.4
Sketches (Skizzen), op.5
Stammbuchblatter (Album leaves) (14)
Stammbuchblatter (Album leaves), op.2
Stammbuchblatter (Album leaves), op.3
String Quartet no.1 in E minor 'From My Life'
String Quartet no.2 in D minor
The Bartered Bride (Prodana nevesta) (sung in German)
The Peasant Woman
Artists
Anny Schlemm (soprano)Rolf Apeck (tenor)
Harald Neukirch (tenor)
Theo Adam (bass-baritone)
Antonin Kubalek (piano)
Roberto Plano (piano)
Joachim Trio
Stamitz Quartet
Chor der Staatsoper Dresden
Janacek Philharmonic Orchestra
Staatskapelle Dresden
Conductors
Theodore KucharOtmar Suitner
About
Yet this was the task that Bedřich Smetana (1824-1884) had set himself from early on – not only to become ‘a Liszt in technique and a Mozart in composition’ but the voice of a new nation. Given the obstacles he faced, his success in realising this ambition is all the more impressive. To begin with he had to overcome his father’s antipathy to his chosen destiny as a composer; then the vicissitudes of poverty, and then, at the height of his powers and renown, a succession of personal tragedies which left him deaf and mentally unstable; he died in reduced circumstances, living with his daughter, and it took the following generation of Czech composers to rehabilitate the hero who had lived in their midst.
To begin with, Smetana won a reputation as the life and soul of the party thanks not least to the kind of piano miniatures which were published as his earliest surviving works. He sent one set to Liszt, who replied with characteristic generosity, and the elder composer’s example, encouragement and friendship all became crucial to Smetana as he spread his wings. Large-scale orchestral works soon followed in his late 20s, such as the powerful if rambling Festive Symphony – here performed complete, a rarity in itself – and the G minor Piano Trio, written as an outpouring of grief at the death of his daughter Bedřiška, and a powerful foreshadowing of later masterpieces.
Finding recognition in his homeland hard to come by, he moved to Sweden, and it was only on his permanent return home in the early 1860s that The Bartered Bride and then Má vlast took shape, each through a complex genesis outlined by a new booklet essay and appreciation of the composer by Peter Quantrill. In their final forms they were acclaimed as the work of someone worthy to be hailed as a ‘Czech Beethoven’, for their heroic style, their mastery of old forms with a distinctively Czech twist, and their celebration of the nation’s history and sense of itself.
The performances here all won enthusiastic reviews on their original release; gathered together here, they make an ideal introduction to Smetana’s world.
‘One of the most dramatic sets of the tone-poems that I have ever encountered.’ – Rob Cowan, Gramophone, September 2019
‘Wonderful conducting and playing of both familiar and unfamiliar Smetana.’ – Fanfare, November 2008 (Orchestral works)
‘The Stamitz Quartet are one of the most impressive [Czech quartets]… Their performance of the E minor is on the grandest scale.’ – Gramophone, March 2005
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