Torrent details for "Copland - Quiet City, Symphony No. 3, Appalachian Spring - Serge…" Log in to bookmark
Controls:
×
Report Torrent
Please select a reason for reporting this torrent:
Your report will be reviewed by our moderation team.
×
Report Information
Loading report information...
This torrent has been reported 0 times.
Report Summary:
| User | Reason | Date |
|---|
Failed to load report information.
×
Success
Your report has been submitted successfully.
Checked by:
Category:
Language:
None
Total Size:
684.6 MB
Info Hash:
49E75A79504E31108C5DE8B4FAED83F1E4C2EF9E
Added By:
Added:
May 25, 2025, 8:04 a.m.
Stats:
|
(Last updated: May 25, 2025, 8:05 a.m.)
| File | Size |
|---|---|
| 01 - Quiet City.flac | 96.0 MB |
| 02 - Symphony 3 - 1st mvt. - Molto moderato, with simple expression.flac | 94.0 MB |
| 03 - Symphony 3 - 2nd mvt. - Allegro molto.flac | 70.2 MB |
| 04 - Symphony 3 - 3rd mvt. - Andantino quasi allegretto.flac | 80.1 MB |
| 05 - Symphony 3 - 4th mvt. - Molto deliberato (Fanfare); Allegro risoluto.flac | 129.4 MB |
| 06 - Appalachian Spring Suite.flac | 213.2 MB |
| booklet 2.jpeg | 269.0 KB |
| booklet.jpeg | 760.6 KB |
| cover.jpg | 494.4 KB |
| folder.jpg | 178.2 KB |
Name
DL
Uploader
Size
S/L
Added
-
684.6 MB
[52
/
40]
2025-05-25
| Uploaded by nomdeguerre | Size 684.6 MB | Health [ 52 /40 ] | Added 2025-05-25 |
NOTE
SOURCE: Copland - Quiet City, Symphony No. 3, Appalachian Spring - Serge Koussevitzky (1
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COVER

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MEDIAINFO
KOUSSEVITZKY Copland: Quiet City, Symphony No. 3, Appalachian Spring (1945/6)
COPLAND Quiet City
COPLAND Symphony No. 3
COPLAND Appalachian Spring Suite
Live concert recordings, 1945-46
Total duration: 73:09
Serge Koussevitzky, conductor
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Koussevitzky conducts the fourth-ever performance of Coplands Great American Symphony
"To have them gathered together on a single disc, conducted by the man and played by the orchestra who were in every way present at the creation, is the gift of a lifetime" - Fanfare
Aaron Copland's Symphony No. 3, regarded by many as the "Great American Symphony", was commissioned by Serge Koussevitzky and received its first performances with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under his baton. The première came in Boston's Symphony Hall on October 18, 1946, and it was repeated there the following night. Thereafter orchestra and conductor took it to New York, with a third performance in Brooklyn's Academy of Music on 15 November, and the following afternoon, this unbroadcast concert in Manhattan's Carnegie Hall (billed on the programme as the works "First performance in New York"). If the New York Times' critic remained to be totally convinced, the audience reaction was ecstatic, with a lengthy ovation lasting many minutes after the final climax.
The existence of the present recording was practically unknown until very recently. Not only is it the earliest recording of this work, it is the only known recording of Koussevitzky performing the masterwork he'd commissioned. A combination of detective work and a certain degree of informed guesswork suggests it was cut live, directly onto a set of acetate 78rpm discs by Carnegie Hall's in-house recording company as a single-copy record of the performance, quite possibly made privately for the composer himself. The discs show variable wear, from relatively clean to quite damaged, and there were a number of times during the lengthy and difficult restoration process where I longed for an alternate copy to work from. In the absence of this option I've done the best possible with the latest and most advanced digital restoration technology available, and beg understanding of the impossibility of achieving a consistently high sound quality throughout. That said, there is much to enjoy here, and long sections remained relatively unscathed.
The companion recordings, both also receiving their first releases, date from the same era of immediate postwar performances at a time when one senses relations between orchestra, conductor and composer were being warmly nurtured. Both again were sourced from acetate discs, in generally better condition and of similar original recording quality. The Appalachian Spring Suite hails from a radio broadcast from Hunter College in New York City, whilst Quiet City is almost certainly also a live radio broadcast from Boston.
Andrew Rose
×


