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             Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953) Scythian 
              Suite, Op. 20 (1914-15) [17:42]  
              Alban BERG (1885-1935) Symphonic 
              Pieces from the opera Lulu (Lulu-Suite) (1934) [29:05] 
               
              Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
              Ach! Ich fühl's, es ist verschwunden, Pamina’s aria 
              from Die Zauberflöte (1791) [3:03]  
              Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
              Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74, (Pathétique) (1893) 
              [45:34]  
                
              Anna Prohaska (soprano)  
              Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela/Claudio Abbado  
              rec. live, Lucerne Festival (Concert Hall of the Culture and Convention 
              Center), Lucerne, 18-19 March 2010  
              Picture Format DVD: NTSC 16:9; Sound Formats DVD: Dolby Digital 
              5.1., DTS 5.1, PCM Stereo; Region Code: 0 (worldwide); Booklet notes: 
              texts in German; Disc Format: DVD 9  
                
              ACCENTUS MUSIC ACC20101 [95:24]   
                
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                To those who may be unaware, the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra 
                  is among the finest youth orchestras in the world. They have 
                  recorded extensively over the years, particularly for Deutsche 
                  Grammophon and Dorian. Founded in 1975, they offer a regular 
                  slate of concerts and concert tours and are led (since 1999) 
                  by the dynamic young conductor Gustavo Dudamel, who also holds 
                  the post of music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, 
                  and who can be seen in the audience at the start of this concert. 
                   
                   
                  Claudio Abbado has guest-conducted the orchestra many times 
                  and here leads them quite impressively in all works. The Prokofiev 
                  Scythian Suite is given a brisk reading: in Abbado’s 
                  Chicago Symphony recording from 1978 for DG, his tempos were 
                  much more mainstream, the whole clocking in at 20:38, compared 
                  with this performance’s 17:42. That’s a nearly three-minute 
                  difference, but the music still comes across well in this live 
                  effort, not least because of the youthful zest and talent of 
                  the Simon Bolivar players. Nothing sounds rushed here, only 
                  spirited and lively. Abbado’s CSO reading was powerful and detailed, 
                  and other performances, like the Dorati/Mercury from around 
                  1960 and the Mata/Dorian from 1991 were also fine efforts. But 
                  this Scythian Suite, because it’s both an audio and video 
                  production, lets you see the vast orchestra - Prokofiev calls 
                  for 150 or more performers in the score - which includes nine 
                  players on percussion, two each on harp and celesta, and all 
                  kinds of reinforcements in the brass and string sections. It’s 
                  quite a sonic spectacular and a sight to behold, giving this 
                  already solid performance an added advantage over most others. 
                   
                   
                  In the Berg Lulu Suite Abbado is once again very brisk: 
                  his 1970 DG recording with the London Symphony Orchestra clocked 
                  in at 33:49, compared with this one’s 29:05! The stopwatch doesn’t 
                  necessarily tell a great deal, but one can observe that Abbado 
                  has generally become faster over the years in works he regularly 
                  conducts. Yet, his interpretations seem to have gained greater 
                  spirit, maybe even greater depth. [There is in this recording 
                  a cut of two minutes in the first movement] This Lulu Suite 
                  is simply splendid, and again much of the credit must go 
                  to the Simon Bolivar players. Anna Prohaska, in her relatively 
                  small role here, turns in fine work too: her high notes are 
                  especially impressive and her shriek near the end is chilling 
                  and powerful. Her Mozart aria is fine too, if a little stiff. 
                   
                   
                  The Tchaikovsky Sixth runs against Abbado’s tendency toward 
                  faster tempos: here he delivers the work with fairly mainstream 
                  pacing and, at 45:34, takes almost two minutes longer than his 
                  1986 Chicago Symphony recording on DG. The first movement introduction 
                  is taken slowly, and the rest is paced quite judiciously. Some 
                  of the woodwinds play a little stiffly in delivering the exposition 
                  of the dark main theme, but the strings perform the famous sad 
                  theme with great feeling and melting beauty. The development 
                  section comes across with both fierceness and desperation. On 
                  the whole the first movement, then, is fully convincing, if 
                  not of transcendental quality.  
                   
                  The middle movements are played with spirit and accuracy, and 
                  the finale comes across with great feeling in its sense of resignation 
                  and loss. In the end, one must assess this as a fine account, 
                  but lacking that last bit of virtuosity and commitment heard 
                  on versions by Gergiev, Maazel, Ormandy and Bernstein - though 
                  one must disqualify his absurdly bloated 1986 version on DG. 
                  The sound on all works is good but a bit cushioned. The camera-work 
                  is excellent throughout.  
                   
                  Robert Cummings 
                  
               
             
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