Casella Symphony No 1; Piano, Timpani and Percussion Concerto
The launch of a series devoted to the orchestral music of Alfredo Casella
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Alfredo Casella
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: 13/2010
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 66
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: 8 572413

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony No 1 |
Alfredo Casella, Composer
Alfredo Casella, Composer Francesco La Vecchia, Conductor Rome Symphony Orchestra |
Concerto for Piano, Strings, Timpani and Percussio |
Alfredo Casella, Composer
Alfredo Casella, Composer Antonio Ceravolo, Percussion Desirée Scuccuglia, Piano Francesco La Vecchia, Conductor Rome Symphony Orchestra |
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: 13/2010
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 0
Catalogue Number: 8 572414

Author: Guy Rickards
The symphonies present a very different Casella: boldly late-Romantic, rich in youthful exuberance and burgeoning orchestral promise. Structurally and stylistically, the First sprawls through the gamut of influences the 22-year-old composer had encountered by 1905, from Brahms to Wagner via Bruckner, Strauss and the Russian nationalists. These last loom large in the Second (1910), as does Mahler, but overall No 2 is a more controlled work, recycling the First’s slow movement, rescored with an extra bar in the middle. La Vecchia takes an extra 37 seconds in No 2’s incarnation, making that a very long bar. The newcomer would be an automatic recommendation had Noseda’s rival account, also claimed as a “premiere recording”, not appeared recently. La Vecchia’s was recorded first, in January 2009, a full year before Noseda’s, but Chandos issued its disc first. Noseda’s is the better account: over six minutes swifter, the tighter structure pays dividends and the playing of the BBC Philharmonic is more refined. Chandos’s sound outstrips Naxos’s, although the latter’s is very clear.
Had Casella maintained this same rate of symphonic production throughout his career (No 3, to follow on Volume 3, only appeared in 1940), he would easily have overhauled Malipiero’s tally of 11 and might have become Italy’s answer to another close contemporary, Myaskovsky (who started his symphonic trail three years after Casella). But let’s be grateful for what we have and to Naxos for a most worthwhile series.
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