Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg / Joanna Freszel / Andrey Boreyko
Kancheli / Lokschin / Mahler
Underdog oder Komponistenliebling
Although esteemed and recognized by great colleagues such as Shostakovich, not least due to his independent musical expressivity and highly sensitive inventiveness, Alexander Lokshin has remained obscure. Hardly anyone knows the name of this composer, who was born in 1920 and left eleven symphonies for posterity, almost all of them based on writings from different cultures. »Margaret’s Songs« were written in 1973; Boris Pasternak had translated Goethe’s text into Russian. At the age of 19, Shostakovich wrote his first symphony – a stroke of genius which brought the composer immediate recognition. This was in the middle of the »Golden Twenties«, when the worlds of the West and the Soviet East enjoyed playing with masks and puppets and tales of grotesque, fairy-tale figures. Tchaikovsky, Stravinsky, Hindemith and many others had shown the way.
Performers
Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg
Joanna Freszel soprano
conductor Andrey Boreyko
Programme
Giya Kancheli
Morning Prayers
Alexander Lokschin
Lieder der Margarete / Drei Szenen aus Goethes »Faust« für Sopran und Orchester
– Interval –
Gustav Mahler
Blumine / Zweiter Satz der Erstfassung der Sinfonie Nr. 1 D-Dur
Dmitri Schostakowitsch
Sinfonie Nr. 1 f-Moll op. 10
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