Fischer Conducts Tchaikovsky

The symphony number 6 by Tchaikovsky is one of my great favorites. As such, I immediately became interested in this new recording.

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We get to enjoy the following compositions conducted by Ivan Fischer.

Borodin:

Prince Igor: Polovtsian Dances, with the Czech Philharmonic Choir

Tchaikovsky:

Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 ‘Pathétique’, with the Budapest Festival Orchestra.

When Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky stepped onto the stage in Saint Petersburg on 28 October 1893 to introduce his Sixth Symphony to the public, he was received with Huge applause. Three quarters of an hour later the astonished audience was dumbfounded. How could a symphony begin so softly and end even more so? And what about the second movement with its amazing waltz, and the third with its unstoppable march?

Nine days after the premiere, Tchaikovsky died in a city struck by cholera.

The truly Russian mood that we associate with Tchaikovsky is also felt in the music of Borodin. His opera ‘Prince Igor’ remained incomplete when he died, but the Overture, the Chorus and Dance of the Polovtsian girls, the Polovtsian March and the added well-known Polovtsian Dances, gained a place of its own in orchestral repertoire.

Here is the symphony number 6 by Tchaikovsky:

 

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