Exodus: Kaufmann • Rubin • Tal
Title:

Exodus: Kaufmann • Rubin • Tal

Artists:
Release Date:

20th September 2024

Cat No:

AV2713

Price:

£12.99 (1CD Jewel Case | 28-page booklet)

LISTEN & BUY

Summary:

“Leon Botstein and The Orchestra Now start with a sensitively played exploration of Exodus for baritone solo and orchestra by Josef Tal … Rubin’s Symphony No. 4, on the other hand, has about it a timeless quality that transcends its actual time period and gives it continuing resonance and relevance even some 80 years after it was composed” – Infodad 

enjoyable, enlightening, and worth hearing. Fantastic performances all around—particularly by Noam Heinz, who has to be one of the most outstanding baritones I have heard lately” – American Record Guide

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Exodus: Jewish Composers in Exile, the second AVIE release by New York-based The Orchestra Now and their founder-director Leon Botstein, brings together three German-speaking Jewish composers born within a few years of one another in the first decade of the 20th century. Joseph Tal, Walter Kaufmann and Marcel Rubin all escaped the Holocaust and embarked on new lives and careers, though with very different trajectories. The works on Exodus were all written during the 1940s by these three young composers striving to find their own voices whilst also adapting to their new environments.

Josef Tal, whose original name was Grünthal, emigrated from Berlin to Palestine in 1934. Influenced by Arnold Schoenberg, he veered towards modernism if not a wholly 12-tone technique. His work Exodus for baritone solo and large symphony orchestra, which weaves modernist techniques with neo classism, is a six-part setting of excerpts from the Bible’s Book of Exodus and the Psalms.

Like Tal, Walter Kaufmann left Berlin in 1934, first bound for India, from there to England, Canada and eventually the United States. Having absorbed the subcontinental art-music tradition during his time in India, Kaufman incorporated the pentatonic raga “Bhupali” into his Indian Symphony, a rhythmically vibrant and colourfully orchestrated three-movement work.

Marcel Rubin’s exile took him first to France, then Mexico City where he lived from 1942 to 1946, returning to his native Vienna in 1947. His Symphony No. 4, written during his time in Mexico, was originally titled “War and Peace” and spanned four movements that portrayed the horrors of war to a more idealised world. Subsequently revised in 1970 and given the title “Dies Irae” (The Day of Wrath), the symphony as heard on this album represents Rubin’s reflections on his war-time experiences.

Tracklist:

JOSEF TAL (1910–2008)
Exodus
1. I. Introduction — Servitude –
2. II. Prayer
3. III. Exodus
4. IV. The Passage of the Red Sea
5. V. Miriam’s Dance – IV. Andante

WALTER KAUFMANN (1907–1984)
Indian Symphony
6. I. First Movement
7. II. Second Movement
8. III. Third Movement

MARCEL RUBIN (1905–1995)
Symphony No. 4 ‘Dies Irae’
9. I. Kinderkreuzzug
10. II. Dies irae – Allegro deciso
11. III. Pastorale – Andante

Noam Heinzbaritone
The Orchestra Now (TŌN)
Leon Botsteinconductor

Publisher: Israel Music Institute (Tal);
Copyright Control (Kaufmann); Musikverlag Doblinger (Rubin)
Executive Producer for The Orchestra Now: Kristin Roca
Recording Producer, Recording, Mixing and Mastering Engineer: Marlan Barry
Digital Editing and Assistant Engineer: Ian Striedter
Production Assistance: Zachary Schwartzman and Erica Kiesewetter
Music Engraver: Marc Cerri
Recording: November 2023, The Fisher Center at Bard College, Annandale-On-Hudson, New York

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