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Dvorak - Suk - Janacek. Three very different composers with three different stories, and yet there is a great closeness and spiritual kinship between them. Dvorak's op. 53 is now part of the repertoire of all the world's great violinists, however even that greatest of virtuosi, Joseph Joachim - the man to whom Dvorak dedicated the work - helped search for and was closely involved in shaping the concerto's final form. Suk's Fantasy in G minor is, internally, a highly diverse work, a kind of virtuoso, rhapsodic symphonic poem for violin that stands on the threshold of a new and momentous creative period in the composer's work. And what of Janacek: he already had a name for his intended violin concerto, "The Wandering of a Little Soul", but in the end he used the material he had collected in his final opera "From the House of the Dead". The material from which the concerto was later reconstructed is typical Janacek: sharply defined, with great energy and urgency. The 28-year old violinist Josef Spacek, a laureate of the keenly watched Queen Elisabeth Music Competition, recorded these concerts live with "his" Czech Philharmonic Orchestra under it's principal conductor Jiri Belohlavek. This stellar constellation of musicians would surely have appealed to the composer himself. Dvorak - Suk - Janacek - Czech Philharmonic Orchestra - Belohlavek - Spacek: names that need no further introduction. |
1. Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in A minor, Op. 53, B 108 00:31:10 1. Allegro, ma non troppo 00:10:58 2. Adagio, ma non troppo 00:10:01 3. Finale. Allegro giocoso, ma non troppo 00:10:11 2. Fantasy for Violin and Orchestra in G minor, Op. 24 00:23:10 3. The Wandering of a Little Soul. Concerto for Violin and Orchestra 00:11:52 |
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