Composed by Reyngol'd Moritsevich Gliere
Performed by Czecho-Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava) Conducted by Donald Johanos
Glière: Symphony No. 3 'Il'ya Muromets',Reyngol'd Moritsevich Gliere,Donald Johanos,Czecho-Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava),Marco Polo,20th/21st Century Symphony,Classical,Classical Composers,Symphonic
Average customer rating:
|
Gliere: Symphony 3
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000013ZC Release Date: 1994-03-25 |
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Il'ya Muromets': 1. Wandering Pilgrims. Il'ya Muromets And Svyatogor
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Il'ya Muromets': 2. Solovey The Brigand
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Il'ya Muromets': 3. With Vladimir Fair Sun
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Il'ya Muromets': 4. Prowess And Petrifaction Of Il'ya Muromets
Amazon.com
Listening to Gliere's monstrously long symphony is kind of like being on a binge. You know you're going to be overstuffed when it's over, but it's so yummy that you just don't care. This richly scored, opulent confection takes a couple of good themes and stretches them out over a very large canvas. Back in the old days of LP, the piece was usually played with large cuts, but truthfully this only makes the music less satisfying, because it comes across as incomplete and unbalanced. If you're going to do it at all, you might as well do it right. This recording really does, and at budget price, it's a bargain binge at that. --David HurwitzCustomer Reviews:
Decent recording, but feels drawn-out.......2007-03-07
Compared to Gliere's Symphony No. 2, I don't really understand why the third one is so popular. Some parts of Symphony No. 3 are impressive, but I got a little bored listening to certain parts of the last movement. It really felt drawn-out. Symphony No. 2 is more accessible for me since listening to it isn't as much of a chore.
Nevertheless, you can't beat Naxos' price and I think that it's an acceptable price to at least find out what all the fuss is about.
Gliere Glitters.......2005-10-27
Gliere: Bogatyr of Symphonists.......2000-10-29
Great, powerful music at a bargain price.......2000-08-29
Average customer rating: |
Gliere: Symphony No. 3
Manufacturer: Proarte ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000000C9C Release Date: 1993-01-29 |
Average customer rating: |
"Reinhold Glière: Symphony No. 3 (""Il'ya Murometz), Op. 42 "
Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000088NV5 Release Date: 2003-01-28 |
Average customer rating:
|
Gliere: Symphony No. 3, Op. 42 "Ilya Murometz"
Reinhold Gliere , Leon Botstein , and London Symphony Orchestra Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00007GZAT Release Date: 2003-01-28 |
Tracks:
- I. Wandering Pilgrims: Il'ya Murometz And Svyatogor
- II. Il'ya Murometz And Solovei The Brigand
- III. At The Court Of Vladimir The Mighty Sun
- IV. The Heroic Deeds And Petrification Of Il'ya Murometz
Amazon.com
This flamingly multicolored, unashamedly grand-scaled symphony receives a performance here so sonically beautiful that it's practically visible. The work is programmatic and tells of the heroic deeds of a medieval knight-strongman, (translated as) "Il 'ya from the town of Murom." Given the orchestration--quadruple woodwinds, four trumpets, eight horns, four trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps, celeste, and strings--he comes across as a combination of Superman, Batman, Robin Hood, and Wagner's Siegfried. Leon Botstein brings out great warmth in the London Symphony's string section, the flute bird-curlicues in the second movement are luscious, and, in general, his leadership has nice forward propulsion in a work that can easily sound bloated. If this sort of huge, Romantic palette is your cup of tea--and it is sort of irresistible--then look no further. This realization is ravishing, and Telarc's sound is an audiophile's dream. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Botstein is captivating but Downes's the real thriller!.......2003-05-19
Charles B. Yulish's fascinating notes in that Melodiya/Columbia LP recording explains that Ilya Murometz, according to historians, emerged in the 10th or 11th century, about the time Kiev became a focal point in northern Russia as a center for commerce. However, Kiev became also a focal point for invaders, which prompted Prince Vladimir, son of Sviatoslav, to build a ring of fortresses to protect the city. Vladimir, who became the first to consolidate Russia, enlisted northerners for defense purposes. Ilya was among the knights recruited, and he is often credited for helping Vladimir achieve various nationalistic goals, such as bringing Christianity to Russia. Vladimir converted to Christianity, though historians differs as to why (to marry Anna, the daughter of Emperor Basil II or was it due to some calculated ploy to power). Whatever the reason, Ilya's adventures and escapades, as Yulish observes, is best understood through the Russian bylina, a secular folk song equivalent to spiritual verses often spoken poetically. Gliere, quite a master of storytelling and picturialism, wrote his own story line for the purposes of the music, which is well detailed in Anthony Burton's synopsis for this recording.
Not forgetting even for a moment the Rakhlin's classic Melodiya recording or Sir Edward Downes very theatrical approach to the score, Leon Botstein, whose approach reminds me a good deal of Scherchen's, makes a very strong case for this work, and the London Symphony Orchestra responds with upmost conviction, authority, and flair. Their's a performance that ripe in more ways than one. What I like particularly about Botstein's reading is the buildup from the first movement's andante sostenuto into the very exciting and thrust forward allegro risoluto section. Even the tranquillo misterioso is arresting in its own right. But turn to andante second movement "Il'ya Murometz and Solovei the Brigand" and even the mysterious layers behind each note are well captured. The finale "The Heroic Deeds and Petrification of Il'ya Murometz" is well served also, and Botstein's sense of urgency brings extra dimensions of drama to it, though as the expense of the expansiveness especially in the climax (where after the Tartars multiplied themselves, Il'ya and his bogatyrs were turned to stones as they flee towards the mountains).
This in turn arises a problem I have with Botstein's recording. Going back to Downes's 1991 Chandos recording with the BBC Philharmonic, and it is Downes who articulates the expansiveness and the spaciousness that make the story-telling more intriguing yet absorbing. Botstein is effective in this regard, but Downes is much more than that. Their timings in the first three movements are very identical, and yet it's Downes who unfolds the story behind the score more naturally. It is this momentous, heavily-scored piece where accentuation does indeed count, otherwise some of the effects would be drowned (Farberman understood this in the well, far-searching Unicorn-Kanchana recording). For example, the climax, and the poco meno section preceding it, is absolutely captivating in Downes' hands while Botstein is too fleeting and comparatively thinner in tone. And credit shall be given to Downes' BBC Philharmonic, the ensemble with more body and weight, and with more sonorous phrasings throughout than Botstein's orchestra. Furthermore, the Chandos recording sounds more intimate and involving than Telarc, with the bloom and atmosphere wonderfully at present so as to give the sound more vitality and reverberance.
So, with a couple of reservations, this disc is very collectable, for Botstein, at least for some I suspect, may have set new standards in performing Gliere's masterpiece. But as for me, Botstein's performance remains a tad too symphonic while Downes' very theatrical approach serves the music even better (even to the point of using a component home theater surround system rather than going out to see an action-packed film).
Playing 9/10, recording 7/10, musical interpretation 2/10.......2003-03-23
So if you are looking for a recording of this piece:
- for the full version at the correct tempi, choose Farberman with the Royal Philharmonic, on 2 CDs
- for technical excitement, but few spine chills, go for LSO with Botstein
- for a good compromise, get the BBC Philharmonic with Downes
- as an excellent introduction, see if you can find a record of the Philadelphia Orchestra with Ormandy - cut to only 65 minutes, but all the best music.
For further info about Gliere and his Third Symphony, see my website (type 'gliere' into Google and look for clarihorn).
Not among the best.......2003-03-11
A total, unmitigated disaster from every point of view!.......2003-03-10
The present recording is a colossal disaster from every perspective. When a recording announces itself as being "complete and uncut" and yet, in this case, has a performance time of 72 minutes, you know something is terribly wrong. I was antipating a solid performance from Leon Botstein, and spectacular sonics from Telarc. Neither is the case. Telarc's engineers have totally missed the boat on this recording: The LSO sounds like it was recorded in a Turkish bath house, the acoustics are so terrible. There is no definition, no balance, everything sounds muffled and totally out of kilter. This is astonishing given Telarc's past record of superlative orchestral recording.
The LSO plays at its usual high level - but is totally sabatoged by Botstein's absolute dismissal of Gliere's tempo markings, either specifically or conceptually. The architecture of the four movements of this work are very carefully constructed - such that the first, second and fourth movements each have performing times between 27 and 28 minutes: yet Botstein manages the first in 22 minutes, the second in 20! and the last movement in 22. Botstein's tempi in the first movement are often not even in the same universe as Gliere's - i.e. the all important bits of liturgical chant at Rehearsal #8 are completely wrong, first measure to last. The materials given here are critical to the rest of the piece and are blown away as if they were a bit of meaningless trivia. The fourth movement, for example, begins in a "slower" tempo, progress through a series of accelerating tempi and then arrives at allegro - but is, rather, played at the arriving tempo - you know the conductor either does not know the score, or has totally misread it. The second movement builds entirely out of the "creepy" sul ponticello augmented triad blurr with which it opens - and the progression is supposed to be very, very slow. Gliere gives only one tempo marking for the movement: quarter=54. There are no accelerandi marked anywhere in the movement, and only one very brief retardando. Many of the complex figures are unplayable if the tempo is too fast - the result here is a hideous kind of sloppy rhythmic hyperventilation, not the orgasmic agitation which is, in fact, what is in the score. Here, it is all matter of fact without any feel for the "geist" of the music. The third movement lacks clarity and projection altogether. It is unlistenable. The long peroration at the end of the fourth movement, itself a very ingenious recapitulation, al roverso, of the materials that preceded it, is meaningless when it happens too soon. (See "accelerando" above). For all these (and many other reasons) I would have hoped that Mr Botstein, who is also known as a musicologist, would have paid more attention to the score. Certainly, he could have followed Gliere's markings "more closely." That he did not gives us this egregious bit of interperative charlatanism. The power of this music is fully revealed in that most fundamental of musical attributes: time. The piece works because things happen "at the right time" as much as a result of "what" happens. Gliere knows his business - and it is totally indefensible to tell the composer "you didn't write the correct tempi" in your score. Such arrogance! Such chutzpah!
Avoid this recording like the plague. It is absolutely, totally wrong and negates, at virtually every point, everything that's in the score.
An Ilya for the Ages.......2003-02-08
Average customer rating: |
Glinka: Russlan and Ludmilla; Gliere: Symphony No3
Manufacturer: Angel Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000AF4X Release Date: 1998-09-08 |
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Ilya Mourometz': I. Andante sostenuto-Allegro risoluto - Wandering Pilgrims: Ilya Mourometz And Svyatogor
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Ilya Mourometz': II. Andante - Solovei The Brigand
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Ilya Mourometz': Allegro - At The Court Of Vladimir The Mighty Sun
- Symphony No. 3 In B Minor, Op. 42 'Ilya Mourometz': III. Allegro tumultuloso-Andante - The Heroic Deeds And Petrification Of Ilya Mourometz
- Overture: Russlan And Ludmilla
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 19: I. Allegro quasi presto
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 19: II. Andante non troppo
- Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 19: III. Prestissimo scherzando
Average customer rating:
|
Gliere: Symphony No. 3 in B minor ("Il'ya Muromets"), Op. 42
Manufacturer: Russian Disc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000001LPE Release Date: 1994-06-28 |
Customer Reviews:
See My Review Below, Where CD Cover Is Imaged!!.......2005-04-24
Average customer rating: |
Gliere: Symphony No. 3 in B minor ("Il'ya Muromets"), Op. 42 / Ippolitov-Ivanov:Caucasian Sketches, suite for orchestra, Op. 10 / Stravinsky: L'oiseau de feu (The Firebird), concert suite for orchestra No. 2 (1919 version)
Reyngol'd Moritsevich Gliere , Mikhail Mikhaylovich Ippolitov-Ivanov , Igor Stravinsky , Leopold Stokowski , and Philadelphia Orchestra Manufacturer: Biddulph Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000009K90 Release Date: 1994-08-19 |
Average customer rating: |
Glière: Symphony No. 3 'Il'ya Muromets'
Manufacturer: Marco Polo ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000045WT Release Date: 1992-12-17 |
Tracks:
- Wandering Pilgrims. Il'ya Muromets And Svyatogor
- Solovey The Brigand
- With Vladimir Fair Sun
- Prowess And Petrifaction Of Il'ya Muromets
Average customer rating:
|
Gliere: Symphony No.3 in B, Op.42 'Ilya Muromets' - Natan Rakhlin conducts the USSR Radio & TV Symphony
Manufacturer: Russian Disc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000001LPV Release Date: 1996-04-16 |
Tracks:
- Sym No.3 in b, Op.42 'Ilya Muromets': 1. Wandering Pilgrims: Ilya Muromets And Svyatgor: Andante...
- Sym No.3 in b, Op.42 'Ilya Muromets': 2. Solovei The Brigand: Andante
- Sym No.3 in b, Op.42 'Ilya Muromets': 3. At The Court Of Vladimir The Mighty Sun: Allegro
- Sym No.3 in b, Op.42 'Ilya Muromets': 4. The Heroic Deeds And Petrification Of Ilya Muromets...
Customer Reviews:
Transfer Is A Disaster! That's Why Only 1 Star!!.......2005-04-24
Average customer rating:
|
Reinhold Gliere: Symphony No. 3 'Ilya Muromets'
Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000AOZ Release Date: 1992-10-28 |
Tracks:
- Symphony No.3 In B Minor: Andante Sostenuto
- Symphony No.3 In B Minor: Allegro Risoluto
- Symphony No.3 In B Minor: Andante
- Symphony No.3 In B Minor: Allegro - Andante - Allegro
- Symphony No.3 In B Minor: Allegro Tumultuoso - Tranquillo - Giocoso
- Symphony No.3 In B Minor: Poco Meno - Maestoso Solenne
Amazon.com
Glière (1875-1956) was one of the late Russian nationalists, along with Rimsky-Korsakov and Glazunov, whose music collectively captures the waning years of Romanticism in Russia. Glière's Symphony No. 3, Ilya Muromets, of 1912 takes its thematic cues from Richard Wagner, particularly Wagner's German nationalism in such tales as the Nibelungenlied. Ilya Muromets is a hero of Russia's golden age--similar to Odysseus and Achilles--and the symphony paints the tale of his moody adventures and his lifelong journeying. It is probably Glière's greatest symphony, imbued with the sense of something irretrievably lost because of the rise of Communism. --Paul CookCustomer Reviews:
Ranks Among the Best Ever.......2006-03-10
That is elite company, to be sure, but Gliere earns that distinction with this exceptional entry into the canon of symphonic literature.
There is nothing small about this symphony. It is a vast musical landscape, but one that is easy to understand. Gliere employs tight, compact writing stretched out over a lengthy 75 minute musical canvas. It is a descriptive work filled with intoxicating, hypnotic moments.
I could go on forever, but I'll leave it up to you to experience this excellent, well executed performance of one of the most wondrous, magical symphonies ever put to paper.
My highest recommendation.
Enjoy!
Gliere:Symphony no 3 / Downes, BBC Philharmonic.......1999-11-23
Well focused, highlighting Ilya's strengths, in fine sound.......1999-09-14
Track Listings:
- Haydn: Sonatas for Fortepiano, volume 1
- Henry Purcell: Airs & Instrumental Music
- Ibert: Macbeth/Golgotha/Don Quichotte
- Inaugural Recital
- J. Strauss, Jr. Edition, Vol. 10
- J. Strauss, Jr. Edition, Vol. 40
- J. Strauss, Jr. Edition, Vol. 45
- Joachim Raff: Symphonies Nos. 8 "Frühlingsklänge" & 9 "Im Sommer"
- John Sebastian Bach: Four Secular Cantatas
- Joseph Haydn: Variations and Sonatas, volume 3
Track Listings
Sonata 1 Op 29 / Sonatine 3 Op 7
The Great Ella Fitzgerald [Box set] [Import]
Music: Alternative Praise: This Body
Smells Like Bleach: A Punk Tribute to Nirvana
The Best Worship Songs of the 70's
Step It Up and Go! Tearing Up the Roots of Rock 'N Roll
Shushan the Palace: Hymns of Earth [Import]
Test of Time: Live Best Of [Live] [Import]
Dormition of the Mother of God