For several reasons, I’ve written very few reviews this year, so my list of favorites is necessarily short. Even so, here’s my customary warning: the recordings below are not to be considered somehow “the best” of the year; instead, they are simply recordings that I found both interesting and well done, ones that I returned to long after reviewing them. (And yeah, I could make the list longer by including all of the performances that I wrote about, but that’s hardly in the spirit of “favorites”!)
Duke Ellington: Night Creature (arr. David Berger); George Gershwin: An American in Paris (ed. M. Clauge); Leonard Bernstein: Symphonic Suite from “On the Waterfront”. Cincinnati Sympyhony Orchestra, cond. Louis Louis Langrée. Fanfare Cincinnati. While we all know that “serious” music does not have to sound like Mozart or Beethoven or even Shostakovich, it’s still easy to somehow think that music by more “popular” composers, especially those who lived in recent times, and very especially Americans, can’t really be “serious” and worthwhile. If proof of the silliness of such an attitude were needed, this album would do the job. Here we have creative, interesting, enjoyable music played with gusto and verve. Give this a listen (if you haven’t already) and find out for yourself.
Florence Price: Symphony 4; William Dawson: Negro Folk Symphony. Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Philadelphia Orchestra. DG CC 72970. This actually is half a favorite. I enjoyed the Price symphony, so I’m certainly not dissing it -- but the Dawson Negro Folk Symphony just is in another league. My reaction after hearing the work in concert early in the year was “where has this been all my life?”, so I was delighted to see this recording only a few months later. Do give it a listen and, if you are fortunate enough to see it on a concert program, go for it – it was just made for the concert hall!
Note: both of the above are available only by
download or streaming.
The Vox “Audiophile Edition” remasterings. I reviewed the set of Prokofiev complete piano music in this series in 2023, and my colleague Karl has reviewed a number of these “Vox Boxes” this year. It’s hard to remember a series that has been so consistently worthwhile: not a clunker in the bunch. If any of them catch your eye, buy with confidence.
That’s it. I wish you the best of the holiday season, and may your world be filled with favorites every day!
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