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Michael Tilson Thomas & London Symphony Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No. 7 (1999)

Michael Tilson Thomas & London Symphony Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No. 7 (1999)
  • Title: Mahler: Symphony No. 7
  • Year Of Release: 1999
  • Label: RCA / Sony Music
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, scans)
  • Total Time: 01:21:06
  • Total Size: 349 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

СD 1
1. Langsam: Allegro risoluto, ma non troppo
2. Nachtmusic: Allegro moderato
3. Scherzo: Schattenhaft

CD 2
1. Nachtmusik: Andante amoroso
2. Rondo - Finale: Tempo I (Allegro ordinario)

The Seventh remains the least well-known of all Mahler's symphonies. Precisely because its material is so enormously wide-ranging, its colors so thrillingly kaleidoscopic, this work is also perhaps the one from all the composer's canon most reliant on a knowing, strong-willed interpretive presence. This Michael Tilson Thomas provides in spades in one of his finest performances on disc.

The Seventh has been given the picturesque epithet "Song of the Night" because of its preoccupation with a nocturnal sound world, by turns creepily unsettling and sweetly charming in the three middle movements. But MTT clearly understands what's at stake here in the larger architecture of the piece, particularly in the problematic, ambiguous meanderings of its two gigantic outer movements. He keeps the flow of invention keenly on course from the marvelous cantorial tenor horn opening against dark, plodding chords, so that the expanse of Mahler's imagination has freedom to roam but with purpose. The juxtapositions of richly characterized solos with ensemble work of brilliant choreography from the London Symphony seem to constantly open up new sonic vistas, perhaps most tellingly in the Elysian chimera announced by sweeping harp glissandi at the development's climax. MTT's sense of scale is right on target for the strange rhythms of the spectral scherzo and for the enchanting intimacy (cum mandolin and guitar) of the serenading second "Nachtmusik." In an Amazon.com interview, MTT compares the finale to "having psychotic breaks while conducting a performance of Meistersinger."

While several notches below the seismic force that propels Bernstein's exuberant second recording of the Seventh, this account conveys its emotional richness and insight in thrilling recorded sound. The booklet notes are by one of the best in the business, Michael Steinberg. -- Thomas May


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  • owen1438
  •  wrote in 06:53
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Many thanks for sharing!