[Cover graphic]

Compact Disc CDA67622

£13.99


In this second volume of Spohr’s symphonies, Howard Shelley and the Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana continue their exploration of this enjoyable and little-known repertoire. Formerly one of the most significant personalities in nineteenth-century German music, Spohr’s symphonies were as popular as those of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven until he fell from fashion in the later part of the nineteenth century.

Symphony No 4 was quickly acclaimed as the composer’s symphonic masterpiece after its first performance. It is a forward-looking, programmatic work based on a poem by Carl Pfeiffer, ‘The Consecration of Sounds’. Unusually, it features a slow finale, and in this way was an important example to future composers including Tchaikovsky and Mahler. Symphony No 5 is a deeply felt work, pouring out pent-up emotions from dramatic events in the composer’s life at the time of writing with real expressive power.

The disc also features the overture to a cantata Das befreite Deutschland (‘Germany liberated’), composed following Napoleon’s disastrous defeat at the battle of Leipzig in October 1813.


Recorded in the Auditorio Stelio Molo, Lugano, Switzerland, on 23–27 April 2007
Recording Engineer
MICHAEL RAST
Recording Producer
BEN CONNELLAN
Front Picture Research
RICHARD HOWARD
Booklet Editor
TIM PARRY
Executive Producer
SIMON PERRY
© Hyperion Records Ltd, London, MMVIII

Duration: 78'22
DDD
Front illustration: Moon Rising Over the Sea (1821) by Caspar David Friedrich (1774–1840)


Contents:

  1. Overture ‘Das befreite Deutschland’ WoO 64 (1814) [8'10]
    Adagio — Allegro moderato
    first recording

    Symphony No 4 in F major Op 86 (1832) [36'27]
    ‘Die Weihe der Töne’ (‘The Consecration of Sounds’)

  2. Largo — Allegro [10'08]
  3. Andantino — Allegro — Andantino [6'43]
  4. Tempo di Marcia — Andante maestoso [12'54]
  5. Larghetto — Allegretto [6'42]

    Symphony No 5 in C minor Op 102 (1837) [33'23]

  6. Andante — Allegro [12'12]
  7. Larghetto [6'25]
  8. Scherzo [4'08]
  9. Presto [10'38]
Sleeve Notes


'Spohr the symphonist repays the attention this disc merits; his programmatic fourth symphony features a slow finale that set a precedent for Tchaikovsky and Mahler, while Shelley and his fine Italian players capture the expressive power of the turbulent fifth' (Observer)

'The Fifth Symphony … carries a weightier burden of grief in the wake of some personal losses … especially in the Larghetto, a dark movement beautifully scored with low strings and sombre brass … Howard Shelley and his orchestra give it a fresh and vivid performance' (International Record Review)

'Here is a follow-up to the recording of Louis Spohr's first two symphonies that I praised last October … There's a lovely anticipation of 'Forest Murmurs' from Wagner's Siegfired; similarly, the Larghetto of Symphony No 5 might put you in mind of Mendelssohn's Scotch Symphony. Shelley gets both delicacy and passion from the excellent orchestra' (Classic FM Magazine)


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