Rachmaninov’s complete symphonies
Slatkin’s benchmark brilliance

RACHMANINOV, S.: Isle of the Dead (The) / Symphony No. 1
RACHMANINOV, S.: Symphony No. 2 / Vocalise
RACHMANINOV, S.: Symphony No. 3 / Symphonic Dances
8.573234 • Disc 1

Symphony No. 1
The Isle of the Dead

After the disastrous failure of its première in 1897, Rachmaninov’s youthfully exuberant Symphony No. 1 had to wait until after his death before it was reconstructed from the surviving orchestral parts and performed again, in Moscow in 1945. Since then it has taken its rightful place as one of the great Russian symphonic works of the late nineteenth century. The Isle of the Dead, Op. 29 is a vivid and powerful symphonic poem based on a well-known nineteenth-century painting by the Swiss symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin.


‘Leonard Slatkin and his marvelous Detroit Symphony complete their superb Rachmaninoff symphony cycle with a spectacular First Symphony. Slatkin’s interpretations of the Second and Third symphonies were straightforward, powerful, and no-nonsense, focusing on the structure of both works and downplaying their emotional excesses.’
Fanfare
★★★★
8.572458 • Disc 2

Symphony No. 2, Op. 27
Vocalise, Op. 34, No. 14

In the wake of his First Symphony’s catastrophic première, Rachmaninov took a decade before commencing his Second, painstakingly revising it before conducting the triumphant première in 1908. Although haunted, like his First, by the Dies irae chant melody, the Second Symphony brims with Rachmaninov’s revitalised assurance as a composer, from its brooding opening to the vigorous grandeur of its conclusion. Eric Carmen borrowed the third movement’s poignant theme for his popular song Never Gonna Fall In Love Again, a tribute to the enduring power of Rachmaninov’s Romantic genius.


‘Slatkin is probably the best Rachmaninov conductor alive today… his version of the Second Symphony that he remade in Detroit, which is a live recording, is just amazingly good. It’s one of the truly great Rachmaninov Twos… a glorious Rachmaninov Second Symphony.’
ClassicsToday.com
★★★★★
8.573051 • Disc 3

Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Op. 44
Symphonic Dances, Op. 45

Completed in 1936, two years after the hugely popular Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Rachmaninov’s Third Symphony was considered by the composer to be one of his finest works. Both this and the Symphonic Dances, his last work, offer a summation of his late style in blending intense rhythmic energy with rich romanticism. Leonard Slatkin and the DSO’s recording of the Second Symphony was hailed by BBC Music Magazine as ‘a performance warmed by musicians who clearly love this symphony’.


‘Structurally and from the point of view of identifying shifting moods, Slatkin has a secure grasp in both pieces, finding sublime, yearning wistfulness at the centre of the finale of the Symphonic Dances but harnessing vigour and bite for a thrilling conclusion – and he lets the ominous crash of the tam‑tam echo on after the final chord, just as it should.’
Gramophone
★★★★
★★★★
★★★★