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27Sep/111

S01 Ep05 (4 of 4) – Getting into the head and heart of Maestro John Morris Russell

S01 Ep05 (4 of 4) - Getting into the Head and Heart of Maestro John Morris RussellSpecial Guest: The great Maestro John Morris Russell and I finish off by looking at some of the giants of conducting. Mr. Russell also goes into great detail to explain the conception, some believe, that Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg and Anton Webern painted music into a corner.

PLEASE LISTEN TO PODCAST WITH ARTICLE.

Bartók, Béla Viktor János / Concerto for Orchestra – Fritz Reiner; Chicago Symphony Orchestra (RCA Victor LM-1934) – This is a truly amazing Symphonic record. This highly sought after LP has been talked about since the day it was released in 1956. An interesting side note to this, Bartok’s final work; in the Concerto for Orchestra’s (fourth movement), called Intermezzo interrotto is known as being a scathing political statement about Shostakovich’s Symphony No.7. Bartok was infuriated at the media attention Shostakovich’s Symphony No.7 (Leningrad) got from Arturo Toscanini conducting it on July 19, 1942 (in fact it became so famous that Shostakovich landed on the front cover of Time Magazine) 1,2(Another recording to look for is

21Sep/110

S01 Ep05 (3 of 4) – Speakin’ the truth and feelin’ the vibe with the Maestro!

S01 Ep05 (3 of 4) Maestro John Morris Russell (3 of 4)

Special Guest: Maestro John Morris Russell and I sat down to discuss different composer and conductors in this special two part interview.

PLEASE LISTEN TO PODCAST WITH ARTICLE.

Brahms, Johannes: Concerto For Violin in D; Itzhak Perlman / Carlo Maria Giulini / Chicago Symphony (Angel S-37286) – This 1979 Grammy Award Winning Recording for BEST CLASSICAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR is truly a thing of beauty. The famous conductor Carlo Maria Giulini who, by this time, had a long and positive association with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and was at the top of his game playing the music that he truly loved most; the music of Brahms.1 To set this recording into the outer stratosphere as far as recordings go, is the tension between Giulini and Itzhak Perlman (in the prime of his career). Perlman, universally considered one of the best, if not the best violinist of the 20th Century, is playing a piece of music written by Brahms specifically for his friend Joseph Joachim and to show off the violin. This record is not hard to find, and should be in every music fan’s collection.