LEAVING HOME ORCHESTRAL MUSIC IN THE 20TH CENTURY
Volume 1 - Dancing On A Volcano:
A Conducted Tour by Sir Simon Rattle
and The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
Soloists including: Felicity Palmer, Gidon Kremer
Excerpts from: WAGNER: Ouverture to Tristan und Isolde; SCHÖNBERG: Verklärte
Nacht; MAHLER: Symphony No. 7; R. STRAUSS: Elektra; SCHÖNBERG: Five Orchestral
Pieces, Op. 16, No. 2; BERG: Violinkonzert; WEBERN:
Five Pieces for Orchestra Op. 10 (Nos. 3, 4, 5)
Sound Format: PCM Stereo
Picture Format: 4:3
Special Features: Biographies of the Composers, Audio Tracks
Languages: GB, D
Menu Languages: GB, D, F
Subtitles Languages: F, SP, IT, JP
Region Code: 0 worldwide
Running Time: 50 mins (+ audio tracks)
DVD9 / NTSC
Cat no.: 102 033
Written and presented by Sir Simon Rattle, the foremost British conductor of
our day, this series forms a fascinating introduction to, and overview of, the
music of the 20th century. Each of the seven programmes features over thirty
minutes of specially-shot music in performance, with Rattle conducting the City
of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Simon Rattle leads viewers on an exhilarating
journey through the music of our time, explaining the chief musical developments
from Mahler to the present day. Each programme is illustrated with evocative
imagery, archive film and photographs and the featured music is set within the
broader context of artistic and social change.
Why "Leaving Home"? The story of twentieth-century music is one of
leave-takings in many ways. As a wealth of talented composers searched for new
creative responses to the world around them, many made departures from the solid
'home' foundations of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century music - tonal harmony,
melody, regular rhythm and metre. Many had to literally leave home, displaced
by political upheavals. A remarkable diversity of expression developed - not
all of the difficult or discordant variety commonly associated with modern music.
The range is wide and this series samples the work of over thirty composers,
discovering new and challenging sounds as well as some unexpectedly familiar
music.
The first episode in the series describes a great musical culture in decline
in turn-of-the-nineteenth-century Vienna. From that decline erupted a musical
revolution whose reverberations have continued to this day. The names of Schönberg,
Webern and Berg still strike terror into the hearts of many concert-goers, but
with Simon Rattle we hear in this music's brooding power not only the collapse
of the old Austro-German order and the rise of Facism, but also the portents
of the music to come in the second half of the twentieth century.
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