Shostakovich: Symphony No. 1 - Gimeno

PentaTone Classics PTC 5186622
Stereo/Multichannel Hybrid
Classical - Orchestral
Shostakovich: Symphony No. 1, Scherzo, Op. 1, Theme and variations, Op. 3, Scherzo, Op. 7, Five fragments for orchestra, Op. 42
Orchestre Philharmonique Luxembourg
Gustavo Gimeno (conductor)
Gustavo Gimeno conducts the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg in a fascinating survey of confident, assured and striking orchestral works by the young Shostakovich. This new recording for PENTATONE includes his breathtaking Symphony No.1 op. 10 – the student work which brought Shostakovich international fame.
While indebted to the Russian masters, Shostakovich’s early works nevertheless demonstrate his precocious brilliance, originality and flair and they offer an intriguing glimpse at the evolution of his distinctive, mature style. From the easy going and good humoured Scherzo op. 1, the Tchaikovskian Theme and Variations in B-flat major op.3, or the Stravinskyan Scherzo op. 7, his youthful vitality is never in doubt. But with his Symphony No.1 op. 10 he produced his first masterpiece and found his own distinctive voice. It’s a thrilling work full of sardonic edginess, pained introspection and dramatic outbursts, and closes with a barnstorming finale. Composed 10 years later, the aptly titled Five Fragments for orchestra op. 42 are short, pungent and austere pieces; the arresting style is modernist but the sound is unmistakably Shostakovich.
Following his acclaimed conducting début with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in 2014, Gustavo Gimeno took up the post of Music Director of the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg with the 2015/2016 season. An auspicious collaboration with PENTATONE followed in 2016 and three releases with the orchestra are planned in 2017. “His musical rhetorics are refined, his grip on the structure of the compositions is accurate and convincing” observed Joep Stapel in the NRC Handelsblad, “Gimeno knew how to keep the tension and made the musicians … excel.”
Elsewhere in a busy international schedule, Gimeno has debuted with major orchestras in Europe and America, and toured with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra to Taiwan and Japan.
Gimeno made his debut with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in March 2017 with a series of concerts called “Young Russians”. The programme included early masterpieces by Prokofiev and Rachmaninov and roared to a close with Shostakovich’s Symphony No.1.
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Comment by hiredfox - June 2, 2017 (1 of 1)
A somewhat subdued and tentative performance lacking conviction and authority. That is not to gainsay that there are decent enough contributions from individual musicians or that at times everything clicks into place to produce spirited passages but overall this listener was left disappointed and rather underwhelmed.
The symphony is not a serious rival to Gergiev on Mariinsky. Pentatone has created a realistic acoustic ambience of the venue so top marks to them. The orchestra and conductor are unfamiliar to me without reference to the booklet notes.