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Date: | Mon, 20 Feb 2006 10:00:37 +0100 |
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Mitch Friedfeld <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>I was the one the other day who recited PIT's main pieces: Swan Lake,
>Onegin, Nutcracker, etc. I completely forgot the Serenade for String
>Orchestra, one of my very favorite pieces. As I said about a year ago,
>Tchaikovsky can make what is basically a series of scales into a wonderful
>piece of music. I've never heard a bad recording of this, and I'm sorry
>Marriner's didn't make it for you.
You shouldn't call our mutual friend Pjotr Ilyich "PIT", if you knew
what it sounds like in other peoples languages *g*, but I agree with you he
is a wonderful composer, and I like most of works by him. "Eugen Onegin"
is one my favourite operas, and Nusskracker and Swan Lake are so nice
ballets can be. I like the symphonies too, although this form didn't fit
Tjajkovskij especially well. Number 1 "Winterdreams" (Oh, what a wonderful
name on a symphony], 3 and 6 are my most beloved. Though my first love
with Tjajkovskij was the rhapsody "Cappriccio Italien". Tjajkovskij loved
Italy and after a journey thereto he filled this piece with the loveliest
of Italian melodies he knew. At one occasion he also works a melody out of
a scale that mister Friedfeld mentions, I don't think however any of the
truly "great" conductors ever had it on their repetoire - even Marce Slave
is more popular among them what it seems - mostly it is to find as filler
on el-cheapo labels, conducted by Sven von Egon, or Botnikkov-Bottnikova
Jr. or any other obscure ghostconductor one have never heard of.
James Zehm
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