Composer: Alfred Schnittke
- Psalms of Repentance
Swedish Radio Choir
Tõnu Kaljuste, conductor
Date: 1999
Label: ECM
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Schnittke’s 12 Penitential Psalms (1988) are not biblical: Nos. 1-11 use sixteenth-century Russian texts and No. 12 is a wordless meditation which encapsulates the spirit and style of what precedes it. Though at times dark and despairing in tone, this is in no sense liturgical music. It is too expansive, and reaches towards the ecstatic too consistently, to qualify as ascetic or austere. Indeed, the warmly euphonious chorale-like textures with which several of the movements end are sumptuous enough for one to imagine Jan Garbarek’s soulful saxophone weaving its way through them.
As this suggests, the recording is extremely, and not inappropriately, resonant, and the performance is polished to a fault, the individual lines superbly controlled and the textures balanced with a fine feeling for their weight and diversity. It is also very different from the earlier, rival version on Chandos, with its less atmospheric, more enclosed, acoustic and faster tempos – seven minutes shorter overall. But even though some may find this ECM issue just a little too refined for its own good, it realizes the work’s expressive world with imposing and irresistible authenticity.
In the Penitential Psalms, Schnittke seems to be doing penance for the extravagant indulgences of works such as Stille Nacht and the Viola Concerto, abandoning modernism in general and expressionism in particular, while reinventing a kind of romanticism far removed from that of the later Prokofiev or Shostakovich. The music nevertheless retains strong links with the images of lament and spiritual aspiration, and there is nothing in the least artificial or contrived about its emotional aura. I cannot imagine a more convincing or better recorded account of it than this one.'
-- Arnold Whittall, Gramophone
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Alfred Schnittke (November 24, 1934 – August 3, 1998) was a Soviet and German composer. Schnittke completed his graduate work in composition at the Moscow Conservatory in 1961 and taught there from 1962 to 1972 Schnittke's early music shows the strong influence of Dmitri Shostakovich. Later, he created a new style which has been called "polystylism", where he juxtaposed and combined music of various styles past and present. As his health deteriorated, Schnittke's music started to abandon much of the extroversion of his polystylism and retreated into a more withdrawn, bleak style.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Schnittke
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Schnittke
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Tõnu Kaljuste (born August 28, 1953 in Tallinn) is an Estonian conductor. A Grammy Award winner, he was principal conductor of the Swedish Radio Choir between 1994 and 2000, and is well known for his recordings on ECM Records.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C3%B5nu_Kaljuste
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