Cheap Yevgeny Mravinsky: Soviet Conductor, Russian Aristocrat (DVD) (Yevgeny Mravinsky) Price
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| ACTORS: | Yevgeny Mravinsky |
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| MANUFACTURER: | Emi Distribution |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Color |
| TYPE: | Music Videos - Classical |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 724359969091 |
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Customer Reviews of Yevgeny Mravinsky: Soviet Conductor, Russian Aristocrat
summit between man and art Mravinsky must have been of a model whom entire generations in the Soviet Bloc aspired to emulate: aristocratic by ancestry and behavior, distant and exacting, meticulous to a fault, and impermeable to the official propaganda. Why else would so many people, who were subjected to his high demands, speak so highly about the late Russian maestro? <
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>Unlike earlier EMI Classic Archive releases, this DVD is more a biographical sketch than a musical encounter with Mravinsky. On one hand, this is a refreshing approach, especially given the quality of execution, but on the other, one is left wanting more instances of Mravinsky, the conductor. The quality of the film-shooting in the scenes when he conducts is just average--for a while his top 1/3 of the head is cropped, maybe to allow his hands to stay visible, grainy film etc. The sounds ranges from good to average. <
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>As far as how Mravinsky himself comes across, the title says it all: Soviet conductor, Russian aristocrat. In his case, the better part of a century of trials seems to have carved him into a singular profile, seldom smiling or self-satisfied, ever struggling to match reality (of his work) with some type of ideal (in his artistic representations.) <
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>Rating this DVD is far from easy. Considering the scarcity of footage with Mravinsky performing, this is a 5-star/must have for Mravinsky fans. Otherwise, it would be a 4-star release.
"To go without music is to forgo happiness"
This title tops for my money the new batch of EMI Classic Archive releases. Commercially available and good quality footage of the legendary Russian conductor Evgeny Mravinsky (1903-1988) is still something of a rarity, but here we get as part of an extensive biographic survey produced by the BBC (2003) loads of first-rate material - fragments from rehearsals, concerts, and even home-made video's. Interviews with the conductor's widow, members of the Leningrad Philharmonic and fellow-conductors who worked with him (mainly Kurt Sanderling and Mariss Jansons) shed new light on the career and personality of this unique musician, caught between the memories of his life in pre-Revolutionary Russia and his artistic pre-eminence within a Soviet society which he resented. His association with Dmitry Shostakovich in the 1930s and 1940s, of whom he premiered several symphonies in spite of the composer's repeated problems with the Stalinist government, was in this respect characteristic.
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>The documentary is followed by two concert performances of Mravinsky with the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra in Weber's "Oberon" and Tchaikovsky's "Francesca da Rimini", one of the conductor's signature works, respectively dating from 1978 and 1983. The sound quality leaves a lot to be desired, but to see Mravinsky in action at such length is in itself an exhilarating experience, especially because the largely static camera almost exclusively focuses on him.
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>If you can find it on the DVD there is also an extensive bonus in the form of a 1971 BBC-Proms concert of Tchaikovsky's 4th by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Gennadi Rozhdestvensky (and recently released on CD as part of the BBC Legends series). A solid performance, well recorded (courtesy of Brian Large) but one that leaves you with as much regret that it wasn't Mravinsky instead of Rozhdestvensky who was filmed.
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>(Finally, Amazon erroneously gave this item the subtitle Russian arias, while in fact there are none on this disc.)
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