The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra & Hannu Lintu - Magnus Lindberg: Aura, Marea & Related Rocks (Live) (2021) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Hannu Lintu
- Title: Magnus Lindberg: Aura, Marea & Related Rocks (Live)
- Year Of Release: 2021
- Label: Ondine
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 48.0kHz +Booklet
- Total Time: 01:06:42
- Total Size: 300 / 645 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. Aura I. — (Live)
02. Aura II. — (Live)
03. Aura III. — (Live)
04. Aura IV. — (Live)
05. Related Rocks (Live)
06. Marea (Live)
Composer Magnus Lindberg (born 1958) is one of the leading names in today’s contemporary music. This album by the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra together with its chief conductor Hannu Lintu includes three works by the composer, including Aura, one of the most prominent monumental orchestral works of our era.
Aura – in memoriam Witold Lutosławski represents a grand synthesis of Magnus Lindberg’s output in the 1990s. The work was written in 1993-1994 to a commission from Suntory Limited in Japan and was premiered by the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra under Kazufumi Yamashita at Suntory Hall in Tokyo in June 1994. Clocking in at forty minutes, Aura is Lindberg’s most extensive orchestral work. Although not a symphony, this 4-movement work is closely linked to the symphonic concept represented by Lutosławski. Lindberg heard of Lutosławski’s death while writing the work and decided to dedicate it to his memory.
Although primarily known for his large orchestral works, Lindberg’s chamber works are by no means minor works. Related Rocks for two pianos, two percussionists and electronics was written in 1997 to a commission from IRCAM in Paris for the Belgian group Ictus. The choice of ensemble inevitably prompts an association with Bartók’s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion. However, Related Rocks is very different in conception from Bartók’s Sonata and also includes electronics.
The title of Lindberg’s Marea (1989–90) easily associates its music with the sea. However, the composer gave the title when the work had largely already acquired its final shape. While completing the work in Normandy, on the English Channel, the composer realised that the tide was an apt metaphor for his new work. Marea emerges as a sumptuous breathing motion implying strength under the surface, the mobility in the low register contrasting with a static texture in the upper register. This layering persists later in the work as well. The texture thins at times and is given an Impressionist shimmer by the piano, but in places the music coalesces into a spectral blaze of colour.
01. Aura I. — (Live)
02. Aura II. — (Live)
03. Aura III. — (Live)
04. Aura IV. — (Live)
05. Related Rocks (Live)
06. Marea (Live)
Composer Magnus Lindberg (born 1958) is one of the leading names in today’s contemporary music. This album by the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra together with its chief conductor Hannu Lintu includes three works by the composer, including Aura, one of the most prominent monumental orchestral works of our era.
Aura – in memoriam Witold Lutosławski represents a grand synthesis of Magnus Lindberg’s output in the 1990s. The work was written in 1993-1994 to a commission from Suntory Limited in Japan and was premiered by the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra under Kazufumi Yamashita at Suntory Hall in Tokyo in June 1994. Clocking in at forty minutes, Aura is Lindberg’s most extensive orchestral work. Although not a symphony, this 4-movement work is closely linked to the symphonic concept represented by Lutosławski. Lindberg heard of Lutosławski’s death while writing the work and decided to dedicate it to his memory.
Although primarily known for his large orchestral works, Lindberg’s chamber works are by no means minor works. Related Rocks for two pianos, two percussionists and electronics was written in 1997 to a commission from IRCAM in Paris for the Belgian group Ictus. The choice of ensemble inevitably prompts an association with Bartók’s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion. However, Related Rocks is very different in conception from Bartók’s Sonata and also includes electronics.
The title of Lindberg’s Marea (1989–90) easily associates its music with the sea. However, the composer gave the title when the work had largely already acquired its final shape. While completing the work in Normandy, on the English Channel, the composer realised that the tide was an apt metaphor for his new work. Marea emerges as a sumptuous breathing motion implying strength under the surface, the mobility in the low register contrasting with a static texture in the upper register. This layering persists later in the work as well. The texture thins at times and is given an Impressionist shimmer by the piano, but in places the music coalesces into a spectral blaze of colour.
Year 2021 | Classical | FLAC / APE
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