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Holistic Guidance - Henryk Gorecki: Symphony 3 "Sorrowful Songs"

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List Price: $16.98
Our Price: $10.97
Your Save: $ 6.01 ( 35% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Nonesuch
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0075597928228 Label: Nonesuch Manufacturer: Nonesuch Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Nonesuch Release Date: 1992-05-05 Studio: Nonesuch
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Editorial Reviews:
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This album, which catapulted Polish composer Henryk Gorecki to into the international spotlight, takes texts born in pain and turns them into statements of affirmation through the use of music that ebbs and flows in mystic minimalism. The clear voice of soprano Dawn Upshaw, singing the Polish texts, is a large part of the success of this particular recording, but the music, contemporary without either dissonance or movie-music mawkishness, clarifies and uplifts the words. This is a moving and essential element of the modern repertoire. --Sarah Bryan Miller
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Pink Floyd does better Comment: This is tripe. Do you love Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, Bruckner, Mahler, Debussy, Ravel, Prokofiev, Stravinsky, and Vaughan Williams? Well, you won't love this garbage. It is MUCH better to love the Beatles and Pink Floyd for what they honestly are. They are at least sincere and original art, in their sphere. This is a fraud on every level. It is properly used for backing tracks on bad movies and pop albums. It is music for callow youths who know nothing about aforementioned composers or music, but want to pretend they are "cerebral" and "deep". It is "classical" music for people who want to translate the machinations of the pop world into a score for a real paid orchestra. Mr. Holland's "Opus" rates as high. I'm sure orchestras love it- no rehearsals needed. Read the funny papers while sawing through this repetitive mediocre pop mess. Good god, Keith Emerson is a bona fide Mozart (and in fact is compared to Glass, Reich etc.) compared to this mindless dreck. I'll take a Bernard Herrman or a John Williams soundtrack any day. Ask yourself this: Why does your friend who knows "absolutely nothing" about classical music declare this as their favorite "classical" album? Guess.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The very best of Minimalist Classical works! Comment: I can hardly say enough good things about Henryk Gorecki: Symphony 3 "Sorrowful Songs". Here are the essential details along with my personal evaluation of the overall work.
Soprano: Dawn Upshaw
Orchestra: London Sinfonietta
Conductor: David Zinman
Overview -- This symphony reeks of dark beauty and mystery. It is a Minimalist work of steady meter which harbors dark corners tenoned with some buoyant and prophetic interludes. This is an unusual composition, contemporary in nature, to which one progressively gravitates more each time it is heard.
FIRST MOVEMENT -- Lento-Sostenuto Tranquillo Ma Cantabille (26:46)
A moody canon builds from a metered bass rumble of strings to a plateau of moderate volume.
As the plateau wisps away, the vocals of the soprano take up the melody.
A return to the original theme enhanced by additional counterpoint.
At last, the movement fades back to the place whence it came.
SECOND MOVEMENT - Lentoe Largo-Tranqillissimo (9:45)
A contemporary fantasy of piano and strings opens the movement, immediately followed by a dark ship of vocality and bass notes.
The soprano re-emerges, lending a hopeful, if still somewhat bleak, tranquility to the minimalist background.
The key abruptly changes to the major chord and the flavor of the theme evolves to a positive serenade, dissipating into a nebulous fade.
THIRD MOVEMENT - Lento-Cantabile Semplice (17:09)
Redundant strings open the way for the soprano to introduce a slightly new theme which is still vaguely evocative of the First Movement - the dimension of the work begins to escalate.
The listener begins to detect non-string instruments which mirror the vocal notes.
An unforeseen transition of key ushers in an inspirational organ melody, again in parallel with the soprano's voice.
Both the volume and the intensity are diminished to a more comforting level and then another key change to the major key evokes the approach of the conclusion to the work.
The Composer: Henryk Górecki was born in Poland in 1933. Clearly, World War Two had a monumental influence on his "Sacred Minimalist" works. His name is often listed with contemporary composers such as John Tavener, Giya Kancheli, and Arvo Pärt - from my view, Górecki's work surpasses them all. Symphony No. 3, dedicated to his wife, is probably Górecki's most popular composition to date.
The orchestra is superb, yielding just the right volume during each entrance of the soprano. Clearly, the conducting of David Zinman is nothing short of astonishing in this instance.
Zinman was born in New York in 1936 and graduated from Oberlin (Ohio) College Conservatory of Music. He pursued more advanced work in composition at the University of Minnesota where he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters. Since 1985 he has served as Music Director for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. He is also the Music Director of the Aspen Music Festival. At one point during his career he caught the notice of Pierre Monteux, the renowned maestro who helped to set the course of Zinman's musical career, opening the way for his work with the London Symphony Orchestra. He now ranks as one of the world's finest conductors.
Finally, Soprano Dawn Upshaw vocally melds into this fine work as if she were born to sing it. An astonishing achievement.
In summary, do not allow the symphony's sub-title of "Sorrowful Songs" keep you from hearing this Masterwork - I would say it is much more inspirational and moving than it is sad. This is not some "esoteric sound experiment" which we nowadays often encounter in contemporary Classical Music. I've never heard so much tonality in a Minimalist work as has been captured here.
Bravo! Don't miss this inspired and marvelous symphony!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Excellent, poignant recording Comment: I absolutely love this piece, and this (the original) is an excellent recording of it. Upshaw expresses the feeling of the music so wonderfully. I first heard this in concert with the Brooklyn Philharmonic, and they had a video of the view from a helicopter or airplane flying along a beach. This music expresses the same peace and beauty and poignancy (for me at least) of dawn at the beach.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Short Review since the others say about all! Comment: Listening to the incredible 1st Movement,which begins in virtual silence, and slowly builds to an incredible crescendo of strings, then the solo vocal, and then the apocalyptic strings right after the vocal is almost beyond belief. Driving alone at night,full of stars, and listening to this almost may make one feel at one with the heavens. Amazing! PS There are many similarities to the later composed theme to the movie "Fearless"; Barber's "Adagio for Strings"; and many others, though this may be in a class by itself!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Gorecki: Symphony 3 Comment: I cannot express how moving I find this work to be. The continuous "drone" of this symphony and the 3 note motif rings so true to express so much about our modern lives and our most personal thoughts. I do truly find it a "sorrowful song" as the vocal, coupled with the long legato notes of the double basses, challenges each step as this symphony moves forward. There is a daunting quality of hope as the reoccurring motif rings out to call for a new tomorrow. This symphony is a joy to listen to and I do listen often, in my car, at home and at work - for some strange reason it calls my name, over and over. I will seek out all of Gorecki work.
This image comes to mind as I listen to this symphony;
a homeless man stands in front of a "TV Center" (vendor of TVs) watching "the good life" on a color TV though the window, as he stands in the cold snowy night, illuminated by the color TV, in his black and white world.
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