Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
06.03.2020

Label: Decca Music Group Ltd.

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Orchestral

Artist: National Symphony Orchestra of Washington D.C & Antal Dorati

Composer: Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1993)

Album including Album cover

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  • Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840 - 1893):
  • 1Romeo and Juliet, TH 42: Fantasy Overture18:27
  • 2Fatum, Op. 7715:14
  • 3The Tempest, Op. 18, TH 4419:25
  • Total Runtime53:06

Info for Tchaikovsky: Tone Poems (Remastered)



Antal Dorati was one of a select number of notable 20th-century conductors whose professional image was shaped largely by the record company he was most readily associated with. The distinctive way in which his performances were recorded (most importantly by Mercury) suggested, at least to those who knew him through listening at home, that the man was the sound they were hearing. And he wasn’t alone in that. If Herbert von Karajan on DG came across as the designer smoothy and Otto Klemperer on Columbia seemed the granitic sage, Dorati on Mercury Living Presence was the pushy middleweight: assertive, light on his feet, punching out rhythms with unflagging energy (especially in Bartók and Stravinsky).

National Symphony Orchestra of Washington D.C
Antal Dorati, conductor

Digitally remastered



Antal Doráti
Antal Doráti (1906-1988) was unquestionably one of the most distinguished «conductor-composers» of the 20th century. In his long conducting career he appeared with virtually every major orchestra in the world, and became musical director of several of the most celebrated of them. Throughout his life, however, he was also composing - creating a substantial body of works whose existence has remained, until recently, unsuspected by the vast majority of concert-goers, but is now arousing increasing interest; and whose surprising extent is at least indicated by the present catalogue.

Doráti studied in Budapest with Leó Weiner and Zoltán Kodály. He himself recognized three periods in his composing career. The first, his «youthful» period, saw him as something of a prodigy, producing copiously - songs, chamber music, orchestral works, even operas. However, this period came to a precipitate end at about the age of 20, when he felt himself bereft of the ability to compose; and of all his «youthful» works, the self-criticism of his maturer years spared only two - the first two items in this catalogue. He now threw himself into an alternative career as a conductor upon the international stage, and there followed what he termed his «period of homesickness». During this 30-year span he managed to produce only a handful of original works, and those mostly in Hungarian folk idioms, written in exile. But he did pursue a valuable «sub-compositional» activity which continued to fascinate him throughout his life - the arrangement and orchestration of works by other composers, including the highly-successful Johann Strauss ballett Graduation Ball (the piece in which his participation is still probably best-known).

It was not until the mid-1950s, therefore, that the apperance of two very substantial scores - the terse, steely First Symphony and the monumental Claudel oratorio «Le Chemin de la Croix» - signalled the opening of the third, and by far the most important period. This dissolution of the creative block, Doráti felt, was the most important factor that enabled him to get over a severe crisis in his health. These two major works manifested an impressive sense of creative direction, which continued unabated for the final three decades of Doráti‘s life. ....

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