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Symphony no. 1 | Recorder concerto
Willem Jeths

Symphony no. 1 | Recorder concerto

Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra / Erik Bosgraaf / Karin Strobos

Label: Challenge Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917269321
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Catalog number: CC 72693
Releasedate: 27-11-15
- World premiere recordings of 2 major orchestral works by leading Dutch composer Willem Jeths: Symphony no.1 for orchestra and mezzo soprano and the Recorder Concerto

- Two worldwide famous conductors, Edo de Waart and Markus Stenz, are chief advocates of these new pieces

- The great virtuoso Erik Bosgraaf is the main character in the Recorder Concerto.

-  Bosgraaf is one of the best and original players on his intsrument worldwide!
Willem Jeths (1959) has written a symphony. He already had an opera, three string quartets, eleven solo concertos and a large number of orchestral and chamber music works to his name, but he waited a long time before attempting the most important genre of the orchestral repertoire. In fact it is not a traditional symphony in the classical-romantic sense, but rather a piece with four movements themed around the cycle of life, death and transformation. In retrospect, the first step towards the symphony was the successful premiere of his orchestral work Scale – Le tombeau de Mahler with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra at the end of 2010. Even while he was composing it, Jeths felt that Scale needed to be part of a larger whole. In 2012 he wrote the orchestral work Metanoia, in which he linked material from Scale to new ideas. The content of Metanoia connects seamlessly to its predecessor. To surround this dramatic instrumental diptych, Jeths composed two vocal movements of a more philosophical character. In Goethe’s voluminous collection of poems West-östlicher Divan from 1814-1819 he found two poems that revolve around the cyclic dimension of existence. In the opening movement, he incorporated two stanzas from the poem Unbegrenzt [Uncircumscribed] and in the final movement, the entire poem Selige Sehnsucht [Blessed Yearning]. And so the symphony begins and ends with Goethe; not only does it have a cyclic theme, but also a cyclic form. The piece, just under 45 minutes in length, in fact consists of one single build-up of tension in which we see that its musical and its philosophical aspects are all interconnected.

When we consider the art of writing concertos, Willem Jeths is undoubtedly a musician who has the experience that is required. No fewer than thirteen such works have now flowed from his pen.

‘Erik came over to my place a few times to play things through. He also played a number of different recorders to me. These included a sixteenth century renaissance recorder by Silvestro Ganassi. That instrument is more powerful than the more common baroque variant, so I composed my concerto specifically for the Ganassi recorder.’ As the composition progressed, Jeths was increasingly captivated by what he calls the “essence of the instrument”. ‘To me, the sound of the recorder represents innocence and fragile purity. I had to give the soloist enough scope to let him put these qualities across to the best possible effect. My orchestration is therefore deliberately thin. The orchestra plays a subservient part in this piece so that the soloist can emerge in the limelight.'