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Martinu: Cantatas
Pavla Vykopalova (soprano), Ludmila Hudeckova (contralto), Martin Slavik (tenor), Jiri Bruckler (baritone), Petr Svoboda (baritone), Jaromir Meduna (recitation) & Ivo Kahanek (piano)
Members of the Bennewitz Quartet & Prague Philharmonic Choir, Lukas Vasilek
Awards:
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BBC Music Magazine, March 2017, Choral & Song Choice
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Gramophone Magazine, March 2017, Editor's Choice
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BBC Music Magazine Awards, 2018, Finalist - Choral
Baritone Jirí Brückler is superb here, and the top-quality professional Prague Philharmonic Choir master the most harmonically rich cantata of the four, a tale of a girl who doesn’t recognise...
Martinu: Cantatas
Pavla Vykopalova (soprano), Ludmila Hudeckova (contralto), Martin Slavik (tenor), Jiri Bruckler (baritone), Petr Svoboda (baritone), Jaromir Meduna (recitation) & Ivo Kahanek (piano)
Members of the Bennewitz Quartet & Prague Philharmonic Choir, Lukas Vasilek
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Awards:
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BBC Music Magazine, March 2017, Choral & Song Choice
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Gramophone Magazine, March 2017, Editor's Choice
-
BBC Music Magazine Awards, 2018, Finalist - Choral
Baritone Jirí Brückler is superb here, and the top-quality professional Prague Philharmonic Choir master the most harmonically rich cantata of the four, a tale of a girl who doesn’t recognise...
About
When Miloslav Bureš sent his first poem Song of the Ruby Spring to Bohuslav Martinů in 1955, he seemed to have touched the deepest spot of the composer’s heart. The poet set his verses into the landscape of the Czech Highlands, the region of Martinů’s childhood and a rich source of his memories. The composer must have identified strongly with the character of the pilgrim returning to his birthplace, because he wrote The Opening of the Springs within nine days. Later he set to music three more poems by Bureš, finishing the last one, Mikeš of the Mountains, half a year before his death. For Martinů, the cantatas represented an important link to his homeland at a time when the political situation and later also his poor health were diminishing his hopes of coming back home. One can only imagine what he felt when he was sitting in Schönenberg, Switzerland, listening to the vinyl record with the first recording of his Opening of the Springs published by Supraphon, or when his friends were sending him reports about the Czech premieres of his works...
Recorded in the Rudolfinum, Prague, October and December 2015
Contents and tracklist
- Daniel Havel (soloist), Jan Pařík (soloist), Jan Vobořil (soloist), Josef Hřebík (soloist), Ivo Kahánek (soloist), Pavla Vykopalová (vocalist), Ludmila Kromková (vocalist), Petr Svoboda (vocalist)
- Prague Philharmonic Choir
- Lukáš Vasilek
- Jaromír Meduna (soloist), Ivo Kahánek (soloist), Jakub Fišer (soloist), Štěpán Ježek (soloist), Jiri Pinkas (soloist), Pavla Vykopalová (vocalist), Ludmila Kromková (vocalist), Jiří Brückler (vocalist)
- Prague Philharmonic Choir
- Lukáš Vasilek
- Patrik Lavrinčík (soloist), Pavla Vykopalová (vocalist), Martin Slavík (vocalist)
- Prague Philharmonic Choir
- Lukáš Vasilek
- Ivo Kahánek (soloist), Jakub Fišer (soloist), Štěpán Ježek (soloist), Jiri Pinkas (soloist), Pavla Vykopalová (vocalist), Martin Slavík (vocalist)
- Prague Philharmonic Choir
- Lukáš Vasilek
Awards and reviews
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BBC Music MagazineMarch 2017Choral & Song Choice
-
Gramophone MagazineMarch 2017Editor's Choice
March 2017
Baritone Jirí Brückler is superb here, and the top-quality professional Prague Philharmonic Choir master the most harmonically rich cantata of the four, a tale of a girl who doesn’t recognise her long-lost love returning from the wars…valuable messages for our or indeed any time, and superlatively performed. Unmissable
March 2017
This is a singularly exotic issue for Czechs and non-Czechs alike...I cannot imagine these cantatas being better performed or recorded than here; Lukáš Vasilek is an outstanding conductor, and the Prague Philharmonic Choir respond to his every interpretative intuition. Very highly recommended.
15th December 2016
The Prague choir gets the balance right: vivid character and resonant voices but never saccharine and rhythmically taut. This is the ensemble that premiered three of the cantatas (in a previous guise) and it’s hard to imagine singing of more authority in Martinů’s music.