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Bruckner: Symphony No. 8 & Messiaen: Couleurs de la Cité Céleste

Pierre-Laurent Aimard (piano)

London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Simon Rattle

Bruckner: Symphony No. 8 & Messiaen: Couleurs de la Cité Céleste
Rattle’s performance of Messiaen’s 1963 score superbly well, and the control of rhythm and colour is exemplary. The LSO winds and percussion are on superb form and Pierre-Laurent Aimard’s contribution...

Bruckner: Symphony No. 8 & Messiaen: Couleurs de la Cité Céleste

Pierre-Laurent Aimard (piano)

London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Simon Rattle

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$21.75

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Rattle’s performance of Messiaen’s 1963 score superbly well, and the control of rhythm and colour is exemplary. The LSO winds and percussion are on superb form and Pierre-Laurent Aimard’s contribution...

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Sir Simon Rattle and the LSO are joined by revered French pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard in a concert film that brings together music by Anton Bruckner and Olivier Messiaen: two composers as united in their devotion to the Catholic faith as they are divergent in their approaches to writing music.

The programme begins with Bruckner’s monumental Eighth Symphony, with Rattle leading the London Symphony Orchestra through its 1939 edition, prepared by the Austrian musicologist Robert Haas. The composer’s last complete symphony, it has since become characterised by its explosive, dramatic nature and immense scale. Taking Bruckner over five years to compose and revise, it would only be performed three times whilst he was alive.

In stark contrast to the magnitude of Bruckner’s Eighth, Messiaen’s Couleurs de la Cité Céleste lasts just over quarter of an hour.

The 20th-century work comprises sequences of short episodes and serves as a microcosm of the composer’s various preoccupations, from birdsong to the book of Revelations. Centred on the piano and performed by a reduced orchestra, Aimard takes to the stage, offering an expert rendition of Messiaen’s often overlooked work.

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Awards and reviews

September 2018

Rattle’s performance of Messiaen’s 1963 score superbly well, and the control of rhythm and colour is exemplary. The LSO winds and percussion are on superb form and Pierre-Laurent Aimard’s contribution is powerfully incisive. The result stands comparison with Boulez’s pioneering 1966 recording with Yvonne Loriod.

Classical Music July 2018

Film director Corentin Leconte ensures non-interventionist camerawork; the LSO is on top form, the full dynamic range on display. The string sound throughout is beautifully rich, the brass magisterial. Rattle conveys the expanse of the first movement well; the Scherzo is dynamic, full of fantasy. A batonless Sir Simon, reminding us of his firebrand days in choice of repertoire if not dynamism, is partnered by the peerless Aimard in the Apocalypse-inspired Messiaen. The LSO players soak up the challenges, playing with the accuracy of chronometers.
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