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Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)

Posted By: Designol
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)

Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin; Tugan Sokhiev, conductor

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 298 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 160 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Classical | Label: Sony Classical | # 88875185152 | Time: 01:07:42

Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony was conceived in the Soviet Union as World War II was still raging. He gave out in a statement at the time that he intended it as "a hymn to free and happy Man, to his mighty powers, his pure and noble spirit." He added "I cannot say that I deliberately chose this theme. It was born in me and clamoured for expression. The music matured within me. It filled my soul."

Prokofiev originally wrote the Scythian Suite for the Sergei Diaghilev ballet Ala i Lolli, the story of which takes place among the Scythians. After Diaghilev called for a change of plan before the score was complete, the Prokofiev reworked the music into a suite for concert performance.

Tugan Sokhiev is a Russian-Ossetian conductor. Sokhiev began piano studies at age 7 and first conducted at age 17, inspired by Anatoly Briskin, the conductor of the North Ossetia State Philharmonic Orchestra. He subsequently attended the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, where he was one of the last students of Ilya Musin before the latter's death in 1999.

After his role as the Music Director of the Welsh National Opera from 2003, 2005 saw Sokhiev become principal guest conductor and musical adviser with the Orchestre national du Capitole de Toulouse. He received the accolade 'Révélation musicale de l'année' from the French Critics' Union in 2005, after a Paris performance with the Capitole de Toulouse orchestra, and in September 2008, he became the orchestra's music director. In September 2010, he was named principal conductor and artistic director of the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin (DSO Berlin). He took the title of principal conductor designate with immediate effect. In January 2014, the Bolshoi Theatre named Sokhiev its new music director.

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)

Reading Julian Barnes’s Shostakovich-based novella The Noise of Time (Jonathan Cape, 4/16), I couldn’t help thinking how the unpredictable Prokofiev, a much less likeable figure, might have made a more suitable subject. That Prokofiev could be every bit as Janus-faced as his great rival is confirmed by these fine yet very different recordings. Common to both is a textural clarity which, like the silenced audiences, belies the limitations of live recording, at least until we arrive at that awkward passage near the end of the Fifth Symphony when the composer suddenly reduces the dynamic level as if to make us confront the compromised and fretful quality of the rejoicing.

Tugan Sokhiev, the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin and his sound team are otherwise on splendid form for their unapologetically mainstream account of the Fifth. This much sought-after maestro takes the first movement broadly enough to lend credence to what might seem mere ideological posturing: the composer’s oft-quoted words equating its content to ‘the grandeur of the human spirit’. There are a few tank-like manoeuvres en route – Prokofiev would certainly have expected the first movement’s second theme to flow less stickily – but everything works in context. The scherzo is suitably brilliant, the third movement darker and more profound than usual, the finale as scintillating as I’ve ever heard it. By contrast, the modernist bite of the Scythian Suite may strike listeners as somewhat understated. There’s a racier, punchier account from Claudio Abbado and the outsize Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela on DVD only (Accentus). Still, this one is arguably just as potent when it comes to Prokofiev’s eerier atmospherics.

Unlike Sony Classical, RCO Live provides no coupling for the symphony, banking perhaps on the fact that this is a work to which Mariss Jansons has always brought a particular sensibility. His speeds have slowed since 1987 when his coruscating Leningrad Philharmonic rendition was captured in Dublin (Chandos, 5/88) but he remains markedly swifter than latter-day rivals in the first and third movements. Soviet Russian conductors once routinely interpreted the composition this way, which is not to say that the monumentalism of Karajan and now Sokhiev is misguided. It’s just another option. With a wonderful if rather too plush-sounding hall and a (mostly) glorious orchestra, Jansons secures a soft-grained interpretation that should satisfy his admirers. A pity that the booklet-notes so often get the wrong end of the stick – the finale is said to ‘culmin[ate] in something approaching a euphoric jam session’. The listener will decide precisely what mood the composer is seeking to convey but it’s difficult to think of music in which strict fidelity to the written score and absolute rhythmic discipline are more essential. Jansons’s denouement is as scrupulous as ever yet there’s just a hint of routine in the tired horn-playing near the start of the movement. I haven’t heard the performance included in Mariss Jansons Live – The Radio Recordings 1990 2014 (RCO) but suspect it is largely the same as this one, with the addition of concluding applause. Characteristically inscrutable artwork makes play with red chess pieces and bronze pawns as if shot from above but Sokhiev has the more convincing moves.

Review by David Gutman, Gramophone Magazine


Prokofiev’s earthy Scythian Suite has its origins in Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring. In 1915, the young composer was commissioned to write for the Ballet Russes in Paris, the company that had created such a sensation with Stravinsky’s revolutionary work. Alas, the resulting ballet was thought too similar to be staged. Instead, Prokofiev fashioned his score into a four-movement concert suite, captured here in all its excitable glory, Tugan Sokhiev urging his Berlin players into something of a frenzy. It’s worth hearing for the mighty closing crescendo alone. The Fifth Symphony dates from 1944 and, like Shostakovich’s Seventh, appears on the surface to embody the defiance of wartime Russia, but as this performance amply suggests, it is no mere piece of propaganda but a blazing hymn to the enduring spirit of all humanity.

Review by Stephen Pritchard, The Guardian (The Observer)


Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)



Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)



Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Tugan Sokhiev, conductor

Tracklist:

Symphony No.5 in B-flat major, Op.100 (1944)

01. I. Andante (13:57)
02. II. Allegro marcato (8:46)
03. III. Adagio (12:44)
04. IV. Allegro giocoso (9:17)

"Ala And Lolly"
Scythian Suite, Op.20 (1916)

05. I. Adoration of Veless and Ala (7:03)
06. II. The Enemy of God and the Dance of the Spirits (3:14)
07. III. Night (6:43)
08. IV. Lolly's Departure and the Sun's Procession (5:58)


Exact Audio Copy V1.1 from 23. June 2015

EAC extraction logfile from 18. November 2016, 22:30

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev / Prokofiev - Symphony No.5; Scythian Suite

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8 | 61:44.04 | 5:57.63 | 277804 | 304641


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==== Log checksum C85822C49B98C5713C6F1F755167872D565CCEE2AD888047A0A0AA2A3FD81E25 ====

foobar2000 1.2 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2017-08-23 23:19:17

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev / Prokofiev - Symphony No.5; Scythian Suite
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR15 -0.05 dB -19.40 dB 13:57 01-Symphony No.5 in B flat major, Op.100 - I. Andante
DR15 -0.39 dB -23.49 dB 8:46 02-Symphony No.5 in B flat major, Op.100 - II. Allegro marcato
DR17 -0.11 dB -23.23 dB 12:44 03-Symphony No.5 in B flat major, Op.100 - III. Adagio
DR16 0.00 dB -22.30 dB 9:17 04-Symphony No.5 in B flat major, Op.100 - IV. Allegro giocoso
DR12 -0.09 dB -18.82 dB 7:03 05-Scythian Suite, Op.20 - I. Adoration of Veless and Ala
DR12 0.00 dB -16.34 dB 3:14 06-Scythian Suite, Op.20 - II. The Enemy of God and the Dance of the Spirits
DR16 -6.06 dB -29.63 dB 6:43 07-Scythian Suite, Op.20 - III. Night
DR13 -0.11 dB -18.77 dB 5:58 08-Scythian Suite, Op.20 - IV. Lolly's Departure and the Sun's Procession
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 8
Official DR value: DR15

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 604 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Tugan Sokhiev - Sergey Prokofiev: Symphony No. 5; Scythian Suite (2016)

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