Classical composers, symphonies


I thought I would reach out to Audiogon fans of classical music for some help, having seen the numerous posts in the afficionados thread.

I am a big fan of large orchestral works like symphonies, particularly of Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, V Williams, Wagner, Mahler, Brahms, and Bruckner(Romantic).

If you could recommend one or more additional composers to explore that are similar, who would you recommend?

Thanks in advance.
recluse

Showing 2 responses by mamboni

Scriabin Symphony No.3 - bombastic, harmonically daring, forward looking, plenty of meat for the ears of the serious romantic symphony afficionado. The Jarvi/DNRSO performance on CHANDOS (with the excellent Arensky Silhouettes) is an absolute barn burner - it will test your system, and your wall paint.


Reinhold Gliere. His symphonies represent the high water mark of Russian romantic symphonies - huge orchestrations, long, ornate, with a little schmaltz. His Third Symphony "Ilya Murometz" is over one hour long unedited (which it often is). I own several versions on CD. My favorate is the only version that is completely unedited performed by Farberman/RPO (Unicorn Kanchana), 1988. At over 100 minutes (2 CDs) this represents a serious listening session. The acoustic is enormous.- rear row balcony. The CDs are recorded at a low level - I ripped them and reburned at higher level to CDR for listening - it improved the detail and ambience considerably. Also, this particular pressing plant CDs were prone to the rare disc rot disease. In fact I had to buy a second set for this very reason. But, this symphony is an extraordinary tour de force of late romanticism with brilliant orchestration and gorgeous melodies and harmonies - well worth the effort.

I wrote the first review on Amazon which details the CD improvement process and covers the other versions available. I always laugh when I read the 2nd scathing review, "for someone's extended sessions of morbid self-imposed sleep deprivation," LOL. There are a few grains of truth in his review.