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Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly - Shostakovich: The Jazz Album (1993) CD-Rip

Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly - Shostakovich: The Jazz Album (1993) CD-Rip
  • Title: Shostakovich: The Jazz Album
  • Year Of Release: 1993
  • Label: Decca
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) / FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 58:26
  • Total Size: 280 / 268 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Jazz Suite No.1 (Dimitri Chostakovitch)
1. 1. Waltz 02:39
2. 2. Polka 1:42
3. 3. Foxtrot 03:42
Piano Concerto No.1 for piano, trumpet & strings, Op.35 (Dimitri Chostakovitch)
4. 1. Allegretto 05:45
5. 2. Lento 08:05
6. 3. Moderato 01:43
7. 4. Allegro con brio 06:27
Jazz Suite No.2 (Dimitri Chostakovitch)
8. 1. March 03:15
9. 2. Lyric Waltz 02:37
10. 3. Dance I 03:01
11. 4. Waltz I 03:24
12. 5. Little Polka 02:37
13. 6. Waltz II 03:45
14. 7. Dance II 03:38
15. 8. Finale 02:23
Tahiti Trot (Vincent Youmans)
16. Youmans: Tahiti Trot 03:43

Performers:
Ronald Brautigam (piano)
Peter Masseurs (trumpet)
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
Riccardo Chailly, conductor

Shostakovich's lively and endearing forays into the popular music of his time were just that, and light years away from the work of real jazz masters such as, say Jelly Roll Morton or Duke Ellington And yet they do say something significant about Shostakovich's experience of jazz, as a comparison of these colourful, Chaplinesque Jazz Suites with roughly contemporaneous music by Gershwin, Milhaud, Martinu, Roussel and others will prove.
Shostakovich engaged in a particularly brittle almost Mahlerian form of parody – his concert works are full of it – and that's what comes across most powerfully here. Besides, and as annotator Elizabeth Wilson rightly observes, 'real' jazz was treated with suspicion in Soviet Russia and Shostakovich's exposure to it was therefore limited.
The two Jazz Suites were composed in the 1930s, the First in response to a competition to 'raise the level of Soviet jazz from popular cafe music to music with a professional status', the Second at the request of the then-newly formed State Orchestra for Jazz (!). The First will make you chuckle, but it's the Second (subtitled 'Suite for Promenade Orchestra') that contains the best music, especially its achingly nostalgic Second Waltz. The instrumentation is light (the saxophone and accordion add a touch of spice to a generally bland recipe), while the playing is quite superb. In fact, there's little to be said about Chailly's direction other than that it's good-humoured, affectionate and utterly professional, his Royal Concertgebouw players sound at home in every bar and the recording (Grotezaal, Concertgebouw) is both clean and ambient.
Taiti trot came to life when Nikolai Malko challenged Shostakovich to score Vincent Youmans's Tea for Two in an hour, or less – which he did, as a sort of mini-concerto for orchestra, each refrain being dealt to different instrumental forces. Fun that it is, its charm is terminal.
Which leaves the Piano Concerto, music that for sophistication and inventive ingenuity is actually closer to what we now think of as jazz than the Jazz Suites. (Sample the free-wheeling, improvisatory opening to the last movement, on track 7.) Ronald Brautigam's instrument is twangy at the bass end, which mightn't seem too inappropriate, but as it was recorded two years before the other items on the disc (1988), I doubt that that was the intention. Still, it's a lively and fairly intense reading, neatly supported by Chailly and trumpeter Peter Masseurs, but ultimately less memorable than Argerich or Jablonski or the composer himself.


Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly - Shostakovich: The Jazz Album (1993) CD-Rip


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