Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Born and trained in Russia, the composer Alla Pavlova later settled in America. Her Symphony No. 1 Farewell Russia for chamber orchestra, written in 1994, expresses her feelings about the Russia she knew, now changed beyond recognition. Her Symphony No. 3, written in 2000, is romantic in conception, with an immediate appeal to the listener. It was inspired by a New York monument to Joan of Arc.
Pavlova: Symphonies 1 & 3, Music, Valery Brill, Alla Pavlova, Alexander Vedernikov, Konstantin Krimets, Leonid Lebedev, Russian Philharmonic Orchestra, Nikolay Lotakov, Mikhail Adamovich, Mikhail Shestakov, Olga Vedernikova, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral & Symphonic, Symphonic, Symphony
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Pavlova: Symphonies 1 & 3
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000CDJKF Release Date: 2003-11-18 |
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Album Description
Born and trained in Russia, the composer Alla Pavlova later settled in America. Her Symphony No. 1 `Farewell Russia' for chamber orchestra, written in 1994, expresses her feelings about the Russia she knew, now changed beyond recognition. Her Symphony No. 3, written in 2000, is romantic in conception, with an immediate appeal to the listener. It was inspired by a New York monument to Joan of Arc.Customer Reviews:
Mantle of Sibelius.......2006-04-11
Symphony Number 3 is fabulous.......2005-07-26
Pleasant Enough but Short on Substance and Variety.......2003-12-17
The First, subtitled 'Farewell Russia,' is actually a one-movement piece for eleven instruments, including an important part for piano who makes three cadenza-like contributions to the proceedings. The dynamic rarely rises above mezzo piano and there is a good deal of noodling and repetition. The composer, whose comments are quoted extensively in the booklet, says that it was composed in response to her returning to her native land after some years away. Frankly, all I am able to hear in the piece is a somewhat anemic kind of minimalism with occasional striking instrumental color. There is little that suggests an emotional response of any kind. I imagine that it would be best used as background music while one is paying attention to other things.
Symphony No. 3, in four movements lasting almost forty minutes, also rarely raises its voice. But it does insist, again and again, on repeating the same things, mostly andante and mostly mezzo piano until, for this listener at least, it wears out its welcome. Further, the composer says, it was inspired by a statue of Joan of Arc on New York's Riverside Drive. That is as may be but I see little connection between Joan of Arc and the insistent but wan Latin rhythms of the first movement. Her statement, 'It is my hope that this music will provide support and inspiration to the listeners at difficult moments of their lives' is tendentious and just a little pompous. The melodies are simple, tonal, not terrible memorable even after being repeated seemingly ad infinitum. This is pleasant enough, particularly if you don't pay much attention, but if you do and have any knowledge of classical music at all, you begin to wonder what the point is.
The performances are good, the instrumentalists quite competent, the recorded sound quite good. A shame they aren't matched by the music.
This is waiting-room music.
Scott Morrison
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