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BOULEZ PIERRE / BERLIN P. O.
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In a way that oddly prefigures the stance of the “holy minimalists” so currently popular, Stravinsky declared that a motive behind composing his Symphony of Psalms was his “eagerness to counter the many composers who had abused these magisterial verses as pegs for their own lyrico-sentimental ‘feelings’.” The result issued in one of the 20th century’s most perfect choral masterpieces. For all its objective austerity (violins, violas, and clarinets are exiled from the score), the piece is awash in fresh new sound colors and rhythmic vitality (with some family likeness to those Stravinsky explored in Les Noces and Oedipus Rex), ending in a poem of praise (Psalm 150) that radiantly answers the uneasy waiting of the middle movement (Psalm 40). Pierre Boulez maintains the necessary level of diaphanous precision, though he is a measure too sensuous, forceful, and even fast compared with Stravinsky’s own visionary account of the work, enveloping the final “Alleluia” in an undeniably beautiful but seductive sheen. Boulez also offers a finely etched, incisive reading of Stravinsky’s wartime Symphony in Three Movements that is strong on its astringent ironies. The composer’s interests were clearly geared to the symphony more as an exploration of possible sound worlds than to its traditional form, even in his most neoclassical period, as in the ritualistic gestures of the Symphonies of Wind Instuments. It’s a nice snapshot of earlier Stravinsky, though this disc would be even more compelling if it had instead included the Symphony in C to make a compendium of his best symphonies such as can be found on Georg Solti’s Stravinsky collection. But listeners familiar with only the great Stravinsky ballets have a goldmine left to discover in these works. –Thomas May
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