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ROBERT
SPANO LEADS THE ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS IN IT'S
NEWEST RECORDING- VAUGHAN WILLIAMS' EPIC SYMPHONY NO. 1, A
SEA SYMPHONY The first contemporary recording of this repertoire
to feature an American conductor leading an American ensemble
promises to become one of Telarc's most legendary discs
ATLANTA - July 17, 2002 - Robert Spano, who recently completed
his inaugural season as Music Director of the Atlanta Symphony
Orchestra, leads the ASO and Chorus in a breathtaking performance
of the monumental Sea Symphony by Vaughan Williams, with gifted
soloists Christine Goerke, soprano, and Brett Polegato, baritone.
The CD is set for commercial release on July 23, 2002. The
recording will be simultaneously released in discrete, multi-channel
surround sound SACD (Super Audio Compact Disc) format.
Spano
recently won widespread acclaim for his first Telarc recording
with the ASO, Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade and Russian Easter
Overture (CD-80568), termed by one critic "the best rendition
of [Scheherazade] to come around in years
I can't imagine
a more distinguished or appealing first release."
A Sea
Symphony, Vaughan Williams' epic setting of texts by American
poet Walt Whitman, was his first and hardest-won symphonic
work. As an organist and choir director himself, Vaughan Williams
was confident of his writing ability for chorus, but he was
unsure of his competence in the orchestral arena. He worked
with composer Maurice Ravel in Paris for three months before
he felt able to complete A Sea Symphony. It quickly established
him as the foremost English composer of his generation. A
Sea Symphony is a true choral symphony-the chorus is used
more often in it than in Mahler's Eighth Symphony, which was
premiered in the same year (1910). The symphony is in four
movements: "A Song for All Seas, All Ships;" "On
the Beach at Night, Alone;" "Scherzo: The Waves;"
and the final, majestic movement, "The Explorers."
The late ASO Music Director Emeritus Robert Shaw never performed
A Sea Symphony with the Atlanta forces. It was at the suggestion
of one of the members of the ASO Chorus that Robert Spano
decided to consider the work for a concert program that would
be recorded by Telarc. "I was immediately struck by the
work's power and grandeur," said Spano. "It is at
once a symphony and an oratorio, and operatic in scope and
theatricality. Vaughan Williams loved the poetry of Walt Whitman,
and his settings of these magnificent texts manifest that
love in their passion and sweep," he said. This is the
first contemporary recording of a Vaughan Williams symphony
to feature an American ensemble led by an American conductor.
Young
American baritone Brett Polegato has already appeared on distinguished
stages in numerous countries, including those of Lincoln Center,
La Scala, the Concertgebouw, the Royal Court Theatre of Versailles,
the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Houston Grand Opera, the Tchaikovsky
Conservatory, and Carnegie Hall. He made his La Scala debut
as Ned Keene in Peter Grimes and his Chicago Lyric Opera debut
the previous season in Mourning Becomes Electra. His other
recordings include Gluck's Armide on Deutsche Grammophon's
Archiv label, selected by Opera News as one of the five best
opera recordings of 1999.
Radiant
soprano Christine Goerke was the recipient of the 2001 Richard
Tucker Award. She has also been honored with the ARIA and
George London Awards, and in 1997 won the prestigious Birgit
Nilsson Prize. She garnered enormous international acclaim
for her performance as Iphigénie on Telarc CD-80546,
Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride, with Boston Baroque and
Martin Pearlman.
As the
Director of Choruses for the ASO, Norman McKenzie was chosen
to help carry forward the creative vision of legendary founding
conductor Robert Shaw to a new generation of music lovers.
Since its founding by Shaw in 1970, the ASO Chorus has been
composed entirely of volunteers, who meet weekly for rehearsals
and perform with the ASO several times each season.
Recordings
by the ASO Chorus that have won Grammy Awards for Best Choral
Performance include the Berlioz Requiem, Hindmith's When Lilacs
Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd, the Verdi Requiem, Walton's
Belshazzar's Feast, Harmonium by John Adams paired with The
Bells by Rachmaninoff, and a disc of choral masterpieces by
Barber, Bartók, and Vaughan Williams.
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