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音軌:DTS-HD5.1 字幕:無
音軌1:PCM_bluray,48000Hz,stereo,s24,2304 kb/s
音軌2:dts-hd ma,48000Hz,5.1,s24
字幕:無字幕 For the first time ever, a Chinese symphony orchestra performed at LUCERNE FESTIVAL. If yet more evidence that classical music has long since become a global language were needed, it would be this appearance by the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra under music director Long Yu. These musicians from Asia played a program of three Russian composers. Aaron Avshalomov, who was born in 1894, served as a professor at the Shanghai Conservatory, where he taught from 1919 on; he was one of the founders of Chinas Western musical tradition. His tone poem Hutongs of Peking captures the sounds and voices that once echoed through the narrow alleys of the Chinese capital. Tchaikovskys immortal Violin Concerto was performed by one of the leading virtuosos of our time, Maxim Vengerov.And the orchestra demonstrated the degree to which a composer under Stalin had to wrestle with his own identity with Shostakovichs Fifth Symphony. Here the composer reacts to the political demand to be popular and monumental which leads to an absurdly overstated 'jubilant' conclusion.
Avshalomov, A: Hutungs of Peking Shanghai Symphony Orchestra Long Yu Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35 Shanghai Symphony Orchestra Long Yu Maxim Vengerov (violin) Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47 Shanghai Symphony Orchestra Long Yu
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