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Dvořák: Symphony No 9 album review – Shani brings a natural freshness to a familiar work

The Guardian·Erica Jeal·3 days ago
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L ahav Shani’s eight-year tenure at the helm of the Rotterdam Philharmonic is coming to a close – he becomes chief conductor at the Munich Philharmonic in September – and he is leaving this fine orchestra in good shape. Their recording of Dvořák’s Symphony No 9 brings a natural freshness to this familiar work, offering no big surprises or grand gestures but holding the attention fast with an elegant restlessness. The artwork for Dvořák: Symphony No 9. The unfolding of the first movement is unhurried but unstoppable: Shani doesn’t overshape the phrases, but gives them the space and momentum to flow organically from one to the next. The big woodwind solos – the velvety flute in the first movement, the cor anglais in the second – make their mark without signposting. Nothing is overly heavy, and there’s a skip to the middle section of the third movement that makes it sound almost humorous.…

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