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All SFS Media CDs including the Mahler Project, Keeping Score companion audio CDs and more!

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Keeping Score: Beethoven's Eroica (Companion Audio CD)

Companion audio CD to the acclaimed Keeping Score series.

Herbert Blomstedt conducted Beethoven's Eroica at Davies Symphony Hall from April 11th to 14th.

“On its very first page Beethoven threw his hat into the ring and laid his claim to immortality.” Thus H. L. Mencken on the Third Symphony. But there’s a big hole in that very first page, put there by a boiling-mad composer as he brusquely scraped off the dedication to Napoleon in response to the erstwhile First Consul’s having been proclaimed Emperor in May 1804. Beethoven retitled the work as Sinfonia eroica, “composed to celebrate the memory of a great man.”

Our price: $9.99
Keeping Score: Berlioz Symphonie fantastique (Companion Audio CD)
Companion audio CD to the acclaimed Keeping Score series.
 
The 24-year old Hector Berlioz, happily enrolled at the Paris Conservatory after a desultory sojourn in medical school, fell madly in love with Irish actress Harriet Smithson—or at least with his idealized image of her and her onstage roles. The real Harriet found him offputting—there’s something wrong about his eyes, she said—and kept her distance, leaving his torrent of passionate letters unanswered. Hector’s persistence won out and the two were married in 1833, despite their obvious incompatibility. But before the wedding bells came a period of anguish for the hypersensitive young composer, who in 1830 poured his yearning and frustration into the programmatic Symphonie fantastique, telling of a morbidly amorous young man’s fatal attraction to an idealized young lady. The gruesome plot leads inexorably to the Symphonie’s delectably sacriligeous finale, in which Berlioz exacted his gleeful revenge by morphing Harriet Smithson into a rowdy, cackling witch.

Our price: $9.99
Keeping Score: Ives Holidays Symphony and Copland Appalachian Spring (Companion Audio CD)
Companion audio CD to the acclaimed Keeping Score series.
 
Folk music played an important role in shaping the musical styles of both Aaron Copland and Charles Ives, a pair of American originals—one French-trained, the other stubbornly home-grown—who are both noted for weaving alluring sonic tapestries of American life. For New Englander Ives, the key to authenticity lay in a kaleidoscopic pageant of tunes, dances, evocative sounds, and wildly unorthodox harmonic idioms. The Holidays Symphony, beginning with “Washington’s Birthday” and ending with “Thanksgiving,” occupied him on and off for more than fifteen years. New Yorker Aaron Copland’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Appalachian Spring, a ballet score for Martha Graham written thirty years after the Ives, approaches the American scene quite differently, blending folk-inspired melodies, energetic dances, and evocative landscapes within a sophisticated Stravinskian language, the whole trimmed and buffed to a wiry yet colorful idiom that has become for many the quintessential sound of modern American music.

Our price: $9.99
Keeping Score: Shostakovich Symphony No. 5 (Companion Audio CD)
Companion audio CD to the acclaimed Keeping Score series.
 
As of 1936 Dmitri Shostakovich faced a cloudy professional future due to the displeasure of the Stalinist government, which had condemned his work as “muddle instead of music.” In the wake of the terrifying purges emanating from Stalin’s dictatorship and the clear message that even Russia’s most prominent composer was not exempt from scrutiny, Shostakovich was compelled to refashion his musical style in an attempt to avoid official censure. He succeeded both politically and artistically in 1937 with his Fifth Symphony, a profoundly moving expression of sorrow that culminates in “an enormous optimistic lift,” as Alexei Tolstoy stated in an early review. While Russian audiences cherished the symphony from its inception, many Western critics derided it as a hollow concession to political pressure. But time and distance have made it abundantly clear that the Fifth panders to nobody and speaks to all people, at all times, and in all places.

Our price: $9.99
Keeping Score: Stravinsky's Rite of Spring (Companion Audio CD)
Companion audio CD to the acclaimed Keeping Score series.
 
MIchael Tilson Thomas will conduct Stravinsky's Rite of Spring at Davies Symphony Hall on June 19th and 20th.
 
Stravinsky’s early ballets The Firebird and The Rite of Spring are soaked in the folklore of the Russian people. Parisian arriviste Stravinsky, collaborating with flamboyant impresario Sergei Diaghilev and his Ballet Russes de Monte Carlo, brought out The Firebird in 1910. Supercharged with bewitching melodies and luscious orchestration, it established Stravinsky as the rising star of the Paris music scene. A few years later came The Rite of Spring and the audience riot that disrupted its premiere (“just what I wanted!” crowed Diaghilev.) The plot—a human sacrifice set in a prehistoric culture—reflected the contemporary “fauvist” movement, which employed sophisticated technique to create the illusion of primitivism. Stravinsky’s music, despite its barbed fauviste rhythms and dissonant harmonies, is shot through with Russian folk melodies that add a whiff of tradition to the full-throttle sprint that Aaron Copland declared to be “the most astonishing orchestral achievement of the twentieth century.”

Our price: $9.99
Keeping Score: Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4 (Companion Audio CD)

Companion audio CD to the acclaimed Keeping Score series

Two markedly different women bookend the story of the Tchaikovsky Fourth. Wealthy widow Nadezhda von Meck became Tchaikovsky’s patron in 1876, not long after he had begun work on the symphony. Her financial contributions stabilized Pyotr’s typically threadbare finances, while her sympathetic correspondence provided a valuable outlet for the often-troubled composer. The next year, former student Antonina Ivanovna Milyukova was doomed to suffer through a brief and disastrous marriage with Tchaikovsky that ended with her homosexual husband fleeing in panic. It was during the emotional wreckage of the (unconsummated) marriage’s aftermath that Tchaikovsky put the finishing touches on the Fourth.


Our price: $9.99
Youth Orchestra - Live at the Berlin Philharmonie, Mahler: Symphony No. 1 (CD)
SKU: 11060
 
New Release!
Free Shipping on all orders!
 
The award winning San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra performs Mahler's Symphony No. 1, recorded live at the Berlin Philharmonie.
 
The San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra is a pre-professional orchestral training program serving talented young instrumentalists ages 12-21 from across the greater Bay Area. Led by Music Director Donato Cabrera, the Youth Orchestra made its ninth international tour in the summer of 2012 with concerts in Germany, Austria, and Luxembourg. The six-date tour included performances at Regensburg’s Auditorium Maximum, Munich’s Philharmonie am Gasteig, at Wiesbaden’s Rheingau Festival, Luxembourg’s Festival international d’Echternach, in the Berliner Philharmonie, and Europa Hall in Salzburg. Tour repertoire included Bay Area composer John Adams’s Shaker Loops, Prokofiev’s Symphony No. 5 in B-flat major, Berlioz’s Roman Carnival Overture, and the here featured Mahler’s Symphony No. 1.
 
The San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra won a 2011-12 ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming of American Music on foreign tours. 
 
 
Gustav Mahler (1860-1911)
 
San Francisco Symphony
Donato Cabrera, conductor
 
Symphony No. 1 in D major                                            55:18
I.    Langsam. Schleppend.
          [Slow. Dragging.]                                                      16:32
II.   Kräftig bewegt, doch nicht zu schnell
          [With powerful movement, but not too fast]                   7:54
III.  Feierlich und gemessen, ohne zu schleppen
          [Solemn and measured, without dragging]                   10:25
IV.  Stürmisch bewegt
          [With violent movement]                                            20:27
 
Recorded live in PCM 44.1 kHz/16-bit audio at the Berlin Philharmonie, Berlin, Germany, July 3, 2012.
 
 
Visit the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra at www.sfsymphony.org/yo
 
Proceeds from the sale of this album benefit the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra touring program.

Our price: $14.95
The Composer Is Dead (Hardcover Book with CD)

SKU: 7789

A little spooky, a little sad, and a lot of musical fun - that's what's in store for you with Lemony Snicket's The Composer is Dead.
 
The San Francisco Symphony asked composer Nathaniel Stookey to write the music and the great storyteller Lemony Snicket to create the story. Edwin Outwater conducted the world premiere performance and recording of The Composer Is Dead with the SFS in July 2006.
 
by Lemony Snicket (Author), Carson Ellis (Illustrator)
 
With CD of music composed by Nathaniel Stookey, narrated by Lemony Snicket.

Hardcover: 40 pages

Reading level: Ages 4-8


Our price: $17.99
Adams: Harmonielehre, Short Ride in a Fast Machine (Hybrid SACD)
2013 Grammy® Award Winner for Best Orchestral Performance!

SKU: 9924

Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony present a Hybrid SACD of John Adams' San Francisco Symphony commissioned Harmonielehre and the Michael Tilson Thomas commissioned Short Ride in a Fast Machine.

The SFS commissioned, premiered, and recorded Harmonielehre in March 1985 under Edo De Waart during Adams’ tenure as SFS composer in residence. Adams recalled, “I was a young composer when I wrote Harmonielehre and I had really only written two other orchestra pieces at that point and one of them was Harmonium, which was premiered by the San Francisco Symphony only a few years before that. Harmonielehre was tough coming out… I was searching for what I wanted to say. I knew that part of what I wanted to write for the orchestra was a music that would kind of strum the strings of its repertoire that would play to its strengths… [with Harmonielehre] I really confronted who I was, who I am, John Adams as a composer - somebody who grew up listening to classical music, classical orchestral music, who played in orchestras when I was younger, who conducted, who loved that repertoire, but at the same time was somebody who also grew up listening to jazz and rock and who was very influenced by minimalism. So it’s this rather strange marriage of the driving pulse of American minimalism and the sensuous and emotional and expressive world of the great European masterpieces.”

Michael Tilson Thomas, who conducted the work during his first season as SFS Music Director in 1995 and multiple times since, said of the work, “When a new piece is premiered, it can make a stunning impression. But the real story of that piece is what emerges over time.  When the SFS first performed Harmonielehre in the mid-80s it was a life changing moment for everybody who heard it. I heard it first on the recording and I was drawn into the piece in so many ways, its enormous power, but also its tenderness and depth of expression. And now, decades later, the piece still stands up.”    

MTT commissioned Short Ride in a Fast Machine from John Adams in 1986 for a Pittsburgh Symphony performance in Massachusetts. Adams shared, “Michael called me back in 1986 when he was opening a new music festival in Massachusetts with the Pittsburgh Symphony and he asked me to do a fanfare. The sort of traditional fanfare with blaring trumpets didn’t really appeal to me, and how do you write a fanfare when Copland has already done it so well? I thought about it and for some reason the connection with Cape Cod came to mind. Years before that I had been there with a former brother-in-law and he had asked me at about 1 in the morning if I would like to take a ride with him in his Lamborghini. I did and once he started up I wished I hadn’t because he drove very, very fast. The idea of a piece that had that combination of excitement and thrill and was just on the edge of anxiety or terror was the motivating force for [Short Ride in a Fast Machine.] The piece starts with the click of the wood block and that wood block never changes, it just keeps driving and it’s sort of like a gauntlet through which a 100-piece orchestra has to pass.”

In September 2011 MTT and the San Francisco Symphony capped their Centennial Season Opening Gala program with an orchestral and multimedia performance of Short Ride in a Fast Machine. This performance is featured on the San Francisco Symphony at 100 DVD.

 

Adams: Harmonielehre and Short Ride in a Fast Machine
 
1. Harmonielehre: Part I
2. Harmonielehre: Part II - The Anfortas Wound
3. Harmonielehre: Part III - Meister Eckhardt and Quackie
4. Short Ride in a Fast Machine

 

Harmonielehre recorded live at Davies Symphony Hall, San Francisco, December 8-11, 2010.
Short Ride in a Fast Machine recorded live at Davies Symphony Hall, San Francisco, September 7, 2011.

Our price: $18.98
American Mavericks: Cowell, Harrison, Varèse (Hybrid SACD)

New Release - Now Available! 

SKU: 10500

The latest release from Michael Tilson Thomas and the Grammy® award-winning San Francisco Symphony features stunning live recordings from the SFS's wildly successful American Mavericks festival. Presented in premium audio hybrid SACD, American Mavericks includes performances of four works by three influential but seldom heard twentieth century masters. Performances of Henry Cowell's Synchrony and his Piano Concerto, with Jeremy Denk on piano, combine Cowell's distinctive musical language with exceptionally expressive playing to produce a powerful musical experience. Lou Harrison's eclectic compositional style and organ soloist Paul Jacobs's spectacular virtuosity are on full display in Harrison's Concert for Organ with Percussion orchestra. This one-of-a-kind disc concludes with Edgard Varèse's monumental Amériques and the orchestral siren that has influenced generations of composers. 

Our price: $18.98
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