Arnold Rosner: Orchestral Music, Vol. 4 London Philharmonic Orchestra & Nick Palmer
Album info
Album-Release:
2024
HRA-Release:
16.02.2024
Label: Toccata Classics
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Orchestral
Artist: London Philharmonic Orchestra & Nick Palmer
Composer: Arnold Rosner (1945-2013)
Album including Album cover
- Arnold Rosner (1945 - 2013): Scherzo for Orchestra, Op. 29a:
- 1 Rosner: Scherzo for Orchestra, Op. 29a 11:44
- Concerto Grosso No. 2, Op. 74:
- 2 Rosner: Concerto Grosso No. 2, Op. 74: I. Lento. Allegro 08:51
- 3 Rosner: Concerto Grosso No. 2, Op. 74: II. Adagio 07:13
- 4 Rosner: Concerto Grosso No. 2, Op. 74: III. Allegro molto 08:07
- Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105:
- 5 Rosner: Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105: Theme 01:11
- 6 Rosner: Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105: Var. 1, Grazioso 02:16
- 7 Rosner: Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105: Var. 2, Adagio 01:57
- 8 Rosner: Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105: Var. 3, Allegro 03:45
- 9 Rosner: Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105: Var. 4, Adagio 04:48
- 10 Rosner: Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin, Op. 105: Var. 5, Allegro 04:52
- Canzona Secundi Toni:
- 11 Rosner: Canzona Secundi Toni 08:38
- A My Lai Elegy:
- 12 Rosner: A My Lai Elegy 25:42
Info for Arnold Rosner: Orchestral Music, Vol. 4
The musical language of the New York-based Arnold Rosner (1945–2013) clothes the modal harmony and rhythm of pre-Baroque polyphony in rich Romantic colours, producing a style that is instantly recognisable and immediately appealing. This fourth Toccata Classics album of his orchestral music opens with an engaging and energetic early Scherzo and a Concerto Grosso that has something of the dignified reserve of the Swiss composer Frank Martin, whom Rosner much admired – as the broadly expressive Variations on a Theme by Frank Martin go on to show. Rosner’s A Mylai Elegy, a symphonic poem inspired by a massacre of civilians in Vietnam, has few equals in the orchestral repertoire: it veers from profound sadness to wild, freewheeling anger – protest music at its grandest and most passionate.
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Nick Palmer, Dirigent
Nick Palmer
has been widely recognized for his compelling performances, visionary leadership and emotional connection to audiences and is regarded as one of the most talented symphonic and Pops conductors on the scene today.
Maestro Palmer — Music Director of the Lafayette Symphony in Indiana, the North Charleston POPS! in South Carolina, the Evening Under the Stars Music Festival in Massachusetts, and Principal Pops Conductor of the Altoona Symphony in Pennsylvania—was a recipient of the Helen M. Thompson Award from the League of American Orchestras as the nation’s most outstanding young music director.
Under Palmer’s direction since 2007, the LSO has experienced increased ticket sales, dynamic and creative programming, a marked development in educational programs and regional concerts, and dramatic artistic growth. Dick Jaeger commented in the Journal & Courier “without trepidation this reviewer is ready to state that the Lafayette Symphony Orchestra and conductor are setting the bar higher and higher for other regional orchestras around the state and Midwest”.
A favorite guest conductor in Europe, Mexico, and South America, Palmer conducted the Europa Philharmonie at the Hardinsburg Castle near Berlin, toured with the Orchestra di San Remo for two weeks in Italy and led concerts with the Czech Radio Orchestra at the Prague and Nelahozeves Castles celebrating the music of George Gershwin. The German press hailed Palmer’s conducting as “a musical high point with world class flair” and Radio Suisse Romande in Switzerland noted Palmer’s “great professionalism with unity and verve”.
A native of Hingham, Massachusetts, Palmer graduated cum laude from Harvard University and received his Masters and Doctoral degrees in Orchestral Conducting from the New England Conservatory of Music and the University of Iowa, respectively. He also has studied at the Juilliard School, Pierre Monteux Domaine School, Aspen Music School, the Festival at Sandpoint, and the Academia Chigiana in Italy, where he was a student of Franco Ferrara and Carlo Maria Giulini.
Maestro Nick is no stranger to the recording studio. Over the years, he has led orchestras in the recording of both major works (for the label Symphonic Discoveries) and new music for Albany Recordings with the Altoona and Owensboro Symphonies. Most recently, he has been asked by the estate of late composer Arnold Rosner to lead a new recording project with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Last season, Palmer and the orchestra recorded two CD’s at the legendary Abbey Road Studio. He will lead two more recordings at Abbey Road in 2019 and 2020.
This album contains no booklet.