BBC Symphony Orchestra, Jirí Belohlávek (conductor)
Martinu° The Six Symphonies
Gramophone Award Winner 2012 - Orchestral
The piece won an ovation in this performance, which was marked by consistently virtuosic playing from the orchestra and a sense of easy command from Be?lohlávek that typifies his control over the music of his homeland. You would have to look long and hard to find this level of advocacy for any composer.' The Guardian on the 4th Symphony 'The performance was marked by precision and an assured sense of direction. The urgency of the symphony's opening movement sometimes recalled Stravinsky and Bartók - also recent exiles to the US - in its restless uncertainty. The central Largo was beautifully played, with the BBC SO responding to Belohlávek's peeling away of orchestral layers.' Musicweb on the 3rd Symphony
o Recorded live at the Barbican in London, these recordings represent the first complete CD cycle of Martinu° 's symphonies conducted by Jirí Belohlávek. The critically acclaimed concerts were given to mark the 50th anniversary of Martinu° 's death in 1959. o Martinu° 's six symphonies are a major contribution to 20th-century symphonic literature, and yet are still undervalued. Spanning the years before, during and after the Second World War, they capture the turmoil, hopes and fears of the composer and his homeland - a homeland that suffered unimaginable cruelties under the Nazis. At the end of the war, Martinu° was the only major Czech composer of his generation to have survived. o Yet through the underlying currents of menace in the later works, the irrepressible Czech spirit survives, and the country's folk music is never far from the surface in these powerful and sincere works. As conductor Jirí Belohlávek says 'I personally love all of Martinu°'s symphonies for the rich, colourful orchestration and undeniable Czech flair which always prevail in them, despite the fact that they also reflect the musical developments of their time.'