Special offer. Galina Ustvolskaya: Symphonies Nos 1-5
Oliver Barlow, Arlo Murray, Joonas Ahonen, Sergej Merkusjev (narrator), Barbara Kozelj, Paul Beniston, Andrew Barclay, Pieter Schoeman, Alice Munday, Lee Tsarmaklis, David Whitehouse, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Christian Karlsen
Awards:
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Gramophone Magazine, December 2025, Editor's Choice
let me emphasise how much the mesmeric beauty of Ustvolskaya's pithy motifs manages to get under your skin, particularly when the performances from the soloists, LPO and Christian Karlsen are...
Special offer. Galina Ustvolskaya: Symphonies Nos 1-5
Oliver Barlow, Arlo Murray, Joonas Ahonen, Sergej Merkusjev (narrator), Barbara Kozelj, Paul Beniston, Andrew Barclay, Pieter Schoeman, Alice Munday, Lee Tsarmaklis, David Whitehouse, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Christian Karlsen
Purchase product
Awards:
-
Gramophone Magazine, December 2025, Editor's Choice
let me emphasise how much the mesmeric beauty of Ustvolskaya's pithy motifs manages to get under your skin, particularly when the performances from the soloists, LPO and Christian Karlsen are...
About
Galina Ustvolskaya was a profoundly original composer, unrivalled in the extremism of her style, who was largely ignored during her lifetime. Fiercely independent, Ustvolskaya created highly expressive, even violent music that sounds like the work of no other composer and reveals no distinct influences, while often being imbued with religiosity or spirituality. Her music has been described as having the ‘narrowness of a laser beam capable of piercing metal’.
Only after her death was Ustvolskaya’s original and uncompromising talent finally recognised. Christian Karlsen and the London Philharmonic Orchestra present here Ustvolskaya’s five symphonies. While the first appears superficially traditional (it is the only one for full symphony orchestra), it features two boys singing – through microphones, in a chanting manner – texts that speak of poverty, racism and injustice. Symphonies Nos 2 to 5 break decisively with the traditional mould; each consists of a single, rather short movement, in the manner of theatrical rituals. Written for instrumental combinations as varied as they are unusual, these symphonies became increasingly intransigent as their instrumentation contracted further and further, down to just a handful of instruments in the Fourth and Fifth Symphonies. A solo voice appears sporadically, not necessarily for singing, but rather to verbalise a prayer – a prayer asking for forgiveness but not for a better life.
Contents and tracklist
- Oliver Barlow, Arlo Murray
- London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Christian Karlsen
- Joonas Ahonen, Sergej Merkusjev (narrator)
- London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Christian Karlsen
- Joonas Ahonen, Sergej Merkusjev (narrator)
- London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Christian Karlsen
- Barbara Kozelj, Joonas Ahonen, Paul Beniston, Andrew Barclay
- Christian Karlsen
- Pieter Schoeman, Alice Munday, Paul Beniston, Lee Tsarmaklis, David Whitehouse, Andrew Barclay, Sergej Merkusjev (narrator)
- Christian Karlsen
Awards and reviews
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Gramophone MagazineDecember 2025Editor's Choice
December 2025
let me emphasise how much the mesmeric beauty of Ustvolskaya's pithy motifs manages to get under your skin, particularly when the performances from the soloists, LPO and Christian Karlsen are so committed.
December 2025
Bearing every sign of careful preparation, these performances make the most compelling case for Ustvolskaya as her own woman.