Special offer. Stravinsky: L'Histoire du Soldat: Concert Suite & Renard
Catherin Ciesinski (mezzo-soprano) & Susan Naruki (soprano)
Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble, Robert Craft
Wistful is not a word one expects to use to describe a composition of Stravinsky but the Pastorale which opens this collection has just that kind of charm. Written originally as a vocal piece...
Special offer. Stravinsky: L'Histoire du Soldat: Concert Suite & Renard
Catherin Ciesinski (mezzo-soprano) & Susan Naruki (soprano)
Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble, Robert Craft
Purchase product
Wistful is not a word one expects to use to describe a composition of Stravinsky but the Pastorale which opens this collection has just that kind of charm. Written originally as a vocal piece...
About
Contents and tracklist
- Charles Neidich (clarinet), Rolf Schulte (violin), Stephen Taylor (oboe), Melanie Feld (cor anglais), Frank Morelli (bassoon)
- Recorded: 1995
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Christopher Gekker (trumpet), Gordon Gottlieb (percussion), Rolf Schulte (violin), Frank Morelli (bassoon), John Feeney (double bass), William Blount (clarinet), Michael Powell (trombone)
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 1995
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Charles Neidich (clarinet)
- Recorded: 1999
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Charles Neidich (clarinet)
- Recorded: 1999
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Katherine Ciesinski (mezzo-soprano)
- St. Luke's Orchestra
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 1992
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Katherine Ciesinski (mezzo-soprano)
- St. Luke's Orchestra
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 1992
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- John Aler (tenor), Richard O'Neill (viola), Fred Sherry (cello), Jennifer Frautschi (violin), William Purvis (horn), Gordon Gottlieb (timpani), Daniel Grabois (horn), Tara Helen O'Connor (flute), Alan R. Kay (clarinet), Stephen Taylor (cor anglais), Tom Kolor (percussion), Frank Morelli (bassoon), David Evitts (baritone), Chris Deane (cimbalom), David Bowlin (violin), Kurt Muroki (double bass), Wilbur Pauley (bass), Louis Hanzlik (trumpet), Steven Paul Spears (tenor), Daniel Druckman (percussion)
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 2 January 2005
- Recording Venue: American Academy of Arts and Letters
Stravinsky:
2 Stikhotvoreniya Konstantina Bal'monta (2 Poems of Konstantin Bal'mont)
Work length3:08
- Susan Narucki (soprano)
- Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 19 May 1997
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Susan Narucki (soprano)
- Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 19 May 1997
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- St. Luke's Orchestra
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 1991
- Recording Venue: SUNY, Purchase, NY, USA
- Philharmonia Orchestra
- Robert Craft
- Recorded: 2001
- Recording Venue: Abbey Road Studio No. 1, London
Awards and reviews
2010
Wistful is not a word one expects to use to describe a composition of Stravinsky but the Pastorale which opens this collection has just that kind of charm. Written originally as a vocal piece in 1908, it introduces Robert Craft's collection of early works dating from 1911 to 1918, the exception being the audacious arrangement of the Scherzo à la russe that Stravinsky made for Paul Whiteman's Band in 1944. The most familiar work here is the Histoire du soldat Suite, given a sharply characterised performance. But the opening of Renard establishes a similarly dynamic instrumental character, while the dramatic vocal participation is exuberantly full of bawdy wit. It is presented with great accuracy and élan, laced with weird barnyard noises from the orchestra, and is great fun even if one cannot hear all the words (no text is provided).
The two Bal'mont songs are beautiful and the Three Japanese Lyrics are sinuously seductive, all exquisitely sung by Susan Narucki. Both sets are provided with translations, but the four Pribaoutki are not. Here Catherine Ciesinski brings out their primitive, often robust Russian folk derivation.
The four Cats' Cradle Songs are equally memorable, slinky morsels with stealthy clarinet colouring. The programme ends with the Songof the Volga Boatmen, vulgarly scored but played roisterously by the Philharmonia Orchestra.
All these performances offer superb ensemble playing and spirited, crisply detailed direction from Craft who also provides excellent notes.