REVIEWS
“La leyenda de Achúcarro suma nuevos capítulos”
“Wonderful music [Sibelius’s Symphony No. 1] that the RTVE Orchestra successfully recreated in a warm and passionate interpretation, always under the control of Slatkin contrasting dynamics, calibrating planes with rigor and flashes of fantasy.”
—Caesar Wonenburger, El Debate
“Programa inteligente, bonito concierto. Mostra del Cinema Mediterrani y Slatkin”
“How beautiful it is to hear those textures [Ligeti’s Atmosphères], those timbral inventions, those micro-variations that the instrumentalists go through under Slatkin’s attentive instructions.”
—Francisco Leonarte, Mundoclasico.com
“Madrid / El milagro Achúcarro y el minimalismo femenino”
“It was directed by a North American musician with a broad and brilliant career who has performed in Spain with some regularity for some time, Leonard Slatkin. He is an interesting and reliable maestro who accompanied Achúcarro very well, and in the second part he made an excellent version of Jean Sibelius’s Symphony No. 1.”
—Tomás Marco, Scherzo
“Crítica / Cuando todo confluye”
“Leonard Slatkin achieved a great artistic result, working in depth with the RTVE Symphony Orchestra, with whom he showed great empathy and correspondence. The formation, cohesive and vibrant in its performances, with very notable interventions by its soloists and in total connivance with the pianist and director, showed that, when everything converges, as happened on this special occasion, the results are, simply, exceptional.”
—Juan Manuel Ruiz, Ritmo
“Olga Kern delivers mesmerising Rachmaninov with Leonard Slatkin and the NSO”
“[T]hey delivered an interpretation of Rachmaninov’s Third Piano Concerto that was utterly mesmerising in its execution and overwhelming in its music-making.”
—Andrew Larkin, Bachtrack.com
“Detroit Symphony Orchestra—Leonard Slatkin conducts Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind and Bartók’s MSPC, with Garrick Ohlsson playing Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 1”
“[A] rendition [of Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 1] that compelled attention, drew one in, and illuminated the music from the inside, Ohlsson’s virtuosity serving the music, Slatkin’s DSO a model of collegiate sensitivity and involvement.”
—Colin Anderson, Colin’s Column
“No Encores …”
“Samuel Barber’s Wintry Tale: A New Face at SFO”
“Familiar from his definitive 2004 recording of the opera, Leonard Slatkin leads his principals, large orchestra and chorus with surpassing skill and minute attention to Barber’s sweeping score.”
—John Stege, Santa Fe Reporter
“Vanessa: A Winter Storm in Santa Fe’s Desert”
“Conductor Leonard Slatkin gave the Santa Fe audience a rapturous reading of Barber’s score and the orchestra played with the full measure of its virtuosity.”
—Maria Nockin, Bachtrack.com
“Santa Fe Opera, Part 1: Celebrating 60 with Two Rarities and Strauss (of course)”
“Leonard Slatkin led a polished rendition of this most beautiful score [Barber’s Vanessa].”
,“Opera Goes to the Movies: SFO Puts Cinematic Twist on Vanessa”
“Leonard Slatkin conducted a secure and carefully colored performance. He extracted the best work I have heard this season from the company’s orchestra.”
—James M. Keller, Santa Fe New Mexican
“Report: Five Operas in Santa Fe”
“Conductor Leonard Slatkin gave the audience in Santa Fe a thrilling reading of Barber’s score. Vanessa is not often seen today. Slatkin and his cast definitely made a case for more performances. If you have the chance to see this opera somewhere, do not hesitate, just go!”
—Maria Nockin, Place de l’Opera (translated from Dutch)
“An Elegant Production of Barber’s Vanessa at Santa Fe Opera, July 30, 2016”
“[C]onductor Leonard Slatkin led the Santa Fe Opera Orchestra in a brilliant performance.”
“Hollywood Noir: Samuel Barber’s Vanessa at Santa Fe”
“Leonard Slatkin brought his great experience of the piece … and really inspired the Santa Fe Opera orchestra [to] highlight both the lyrical beauties and the complexities of Barber’s score.”
—Robert Hugill, PlanetHugill.com
“Detroit Symphony Orchestra/Leonard Slatkin — Richard Strauss’s Salome — Lise Lindstrom, Chris Merritt, Jane Henschel, Daniel Sutin”
“Leonard Slatkin conducted with pristine attention to detail and also with patience, creating, holding and building tension; colours and instrumental complexities were delicately and lucidly traced and fortissimos were vibrant and momentous. The DSO was superb and there was much to enrich the ears over 100 or so minutes; what emerged was a symphony with voices with a compelling if lurid tale to tell, to which all involved should be proud.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
“DSO’s Salome Is a Rewarding Spectacle Not to Miss”
“Presiding over a 100-piece orchestra, Slatkin drew a thick and sumptuously blended sound from the ensemble. Strauss demands a virtuoso ensemble, and the orchestra was up to the challenge. The power of the DSO’s low brass made a particularly strong impression, but most important for the future was the way all of the principal and section players who have joined the ensemble in recent years increasingly seem to be comprising a single organism. That hasn’t happened by accident in the DSO’s post-strike era. It’s part of the legacy that Slatkin shares with the musicians who have committed themselves to Detroit.”
—Mark Stryker, Detroit Free Press
“Slatkin, Seong-Jin, and the ONL”
“I still have no rational understanding of what happened at the very end, but it was one of those moments that marks one’s auditory memory forever. A collective rapture swept over the stage, inspired by the bond between Seong-Jin Cho and Leonard Slatkin. The powerful ending in perfect synchronization, touched not only the musicians, but completely moved those in attendance … we all felt as if we had witnessed something extremely grand.”
—Beate Langenbruch, Bachtrack.com (translated from French)
“Detroit Symphony Orchestra/Leonard Slatkin—Brahms Festival (4)”
“Slatkin’s measure of the first movement married lyricism and direction ideally. … With an eloquent slow movement, given broadly and with much soul, an appealingly elegant third and an exhilarating Finale, with something saved for an uplifting coda, this was an account that did Brahms 2 proud.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
“Detroit Symphony Orchestra/Leonard Slatkin—Brahms Festival (1)”
“Slatkin’s marriage of passion and precision, formality and flexibility, with an expressive heart central to the whole, ensured that the explosion of emotion that concludes the first movement was a natural corollary to what had gone before, and that the curiously marked Andante moderato second movement (bordering on Adagio here) was given all the time needed for full expression, eruption and consolation, very intensely brought off. … There are of course many ways to play Brahms 4: Slatkin and his Detroiters convinced rightness throughout.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
“Thus Spoke (Brilliantly) the Orchestre National de Lyon”
“The homogeneity and accuracy of the orchestra under the direction of Leonard Slatkin, whose gestures were, as usual, precise, clean, and economical, was remarkable. [In Zarathustra] the last, suspense-filled rallentando was perfectly controlled. … The excitement was such that the public could barely withhold its applause until after the last notes had resonated.”
—Camille Grimaud, Bachtrack.com (translated from French)
“Stirring ‘Mahler 2’ Captures Slatkin, DSO, at Their Best”
“Slatkin’s compelling performance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 2 (“Resurrection”) offered a snapshot of the DSO as it reaches full strength. Slatkin has appointed more than 30 musicians, including most of the principals, and assimilating so many new players, many of them young and relatively inexperienced, into a cohesive ensemble capable of finding the layers of focused expression audible on Saturday [December 5, 2015] has been one of the conductor’s major accomplishments.”
—Mark Stryker, Detroit Free Press
“Slatkin Conducts a Moving Mahler ‘Resurrection’ in Detroit”
“The Detroit Symphony played with exceptional virtuosity and great power. … First-desk solos were excellent, and there was real energy behind the climaxes. Interpretively speaking, I have rarely heard a Slatkin performance this cogent and fully formed. Every bar had character, and the orchestra was more than willing to follow his lead.”
—Brian Wigman, Bachtrack.com
SLATKIN: Slatkin Conducts Slatkin
“This is a glowing tribute to the Slatkin legacy, impressively compiled and presented.”
—Gerald Fenech, Classical Music Daily
“Altogether, it’s an intriguing collection, and the recording of the modern pieces is of superlative quality.”
—Christian Hoskins, Gramophone
KASTALSKY: Requiem for Fallen Brothers
“The three soloists and four choirs involved have really grasped what is needed to communicate this complex work, and Slatkin’s driven direction of the Orchestra of St Luke’s means that the tension never lets up. It may have had to wait until now to be revealed to audiences but this is an extraordinary work and this fine recording will, I am convinced, ensure that it acquires a permanent place in the repertoire.”
—Ivan Moody, Gramophone
“This production, captured live, is to say the least, successful, thanks to the passionate direction of Leonard Slatkin, galvanizing an armada of American choral societies and New York’s Orchestra of St. Luke’s with the help of engaging soloists … Anna Dennis and Joseph Beutel.
Leonard Slatkin gives this epic work an interpretation full of contrasts. He celebrates both its grandeur and its shimmering sonority of bells and keyboard glockenspiels. Despite the uniformly slow tempos, the work never falls into an indifferent dullness. The two orchestral interludes, detailed with the precision of a goldsmith, serve as brief oases of relaxation in this sorrowful work.
Here then is a daring publication, the discovery of a major choral work.”
—Benedict Hévry, ResMusica [translated from French]
“This fully-fleshed out Requiem has a tremendously dignified tread, noble grief and imperious ways. Naxos have done well by Kastalsky.”
—Rob Barnett, MusicWeb International
“This is essential listening! Conductor Leonard Slatkin does a superb job holding and melding together a variety of choirs, and leading the Orchestra of St. Luke’s: the performance could easily not have cohered as well as it does. An offbeat work that was well worth retrieving from the scrap heap of history; others will perform it again, but Slatkin has set the bar very high here.”
—James Manheim, AllMusic.com
“This recording is worthy of many hearings. I can say with certainty that it is completely enjoyable and, on occasion, a surprisingly innovative composition. It is also performed with great care and professionalism. The musical idiosyncrasies are alluring and the overall effect compelling. Orchestra and chorus both live up to the excellence one would expect and the production qualities are lively. I recommend a listen, or a dozen.”
—Paul Pattison, special to KC Arts Beat
“Leonard Slatkin leads his large orchestral and choral ensembles in this sonic panorama into which he infuses grandeur, devotion and fervor. … This new Naxos release directed by Slatkin is the world’s first recording of the Requiem in its entirety. This passionate and venerable account is yours to discover.”
—Crescendo Magazine [translated from French]
“Through it all, Slatkin reveals the inner logic and structural grandeur of this complex work with exemplary clarity and inner detail.”
—Raul da Gama, The Whole Note
“The recording is taken from 2018 performances at Washington National Cathedral, and given the resonant acoustic emerges with surprising clarity. The excellent Orchestra of St. Luke’s supports no less than four choirs under the authoritative direction of Leonard Slatkin.”
—Clive Paget, Limelight
“The epitome of a major release.”
—Ralph Graves, WTJU, 91.1 FM
“⭑⭑⭑⭑⭑ Slatkin, who admits a deep belief in this work, draws a touching performance.”
—Daniel Jaffé, BBC Music Magazine
“⭑ CRITIC’S CHOICE ⭑ [H]eartfelt, profound and consistently beautiful. Leonard Slatkin masterfully marshals the large forces, including the renowned Orchestra of St. Luke’s (in top form here) for the loving resurrection of this important piece.”
—Joshua Rosenblum, Opera News
Additional information at Naxos
Purchase on Amazon | Apple Music
COPLAND: Billy the Kid (Complete Ballet) / Grohg (One-Act Ballet)
“The Detroit Symphony Orchestra under Leonard Slatkin sound well situated and fully committed to making these scores breathe life. … It is an offering anyone interested in Copland and the US compositional 20th century will find stimulating and worthwhile. Sincerely recommended.”
—Grego Applegate Edwards, Gapplegate Classical-Modern Music Review
“In short, everything about this performance and recording is utterly musical. … At the start of this review I said Slatkin is doing good things in Detroit. Strike that, he’s doing great things there, as this unmissable coupling so triumphantly testifies. Such are the musical and technical virtues on display here that I’m sorely tempted to make Slatkin’s Billy the Kid my top choice.”
—Dan Morgan, MusicWeb International
“Slatkin pulls all the stops out, and … Naxos has given him sound quality that enhances the performance: crisp, clear and forward rather than overloaded with reverb and echo. The end result is a simply dazzling performance that, for me, goes straight to the top of recordings of this work. Absolutely nothing is played without heart and energy, no details are glossed over, and end result is a very impressive achievement. … No two ways about it, this new release is a real ‘find’ for Copland fanciers. Highly recommended.”
—Lynn René Bayley, The Art Music Lounge
“Throughout, Slatkin’s judgement is spot-on (where other conductors can rush he retains poise) and the DSO is at-one (whether tuttis or solos) with its maestro and the music with playing of precision, vivid detail and sonorous projection, superbly recorded, too, with a natural perspective and a tangibility that puts the listener in one of Orchestra Hall’s best seats. It’s a dramatic performance, full of colour and atmosphere.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
“As you would expect from Slatkin, a noted interpreter of American music, and his then orchestra, the Detroit Symphony, these are vivid and idiomatic performances of two of Copland’s more fascinating scores. … All in all, a compelling issue for anyone who loves Americana.”
—David Mellor, Classic FM
“Slatkin and the DSO give a technicolor rendition of this unusual score, as well as an elegiac performance of the more familiar Billy the Kid. All three discs are both an affordable way for a collector to acquire all of Copland’s ballet scores, as well as a testament to the fine partnership of Slatkin and the DSO.”
—Charles T. Downey, IonArts
Additional information at Naxos
Purchase on Amazon | iTunes
COPLAND: Symphony No. 3 / Three Latin American Sketches
“Slatkin’s rhythms are razor-sharp and spring-heeled, and he paces and phrases in a way that speaks of long familiarity with—and affection for—this iconic score. And it just gets better, the arc and spark of the second movement especially impressive. … Most important, the sheer chutzpah of this performance is audible in every bar. … Indeed, while some conductors grow dull with age, Slatkin just gets sharper; and that’s why more Copland from this source is such a pleasing prospect. A heady, hyper-bold account of Copland’s original score, superbly recorded; go for it.”
—Dan Morgan, MusicWeb International
“[L]et me say at the outset, that having heard most of the previous releases of the Third Symphony, this stands out as the finest version on disc. [Slatkin’s] interpretation oozes Americana, the pulse and flow of the music so perfectly judged, and never can that feeling of thanksgiving and euphoria that gripped the States at the end of the Second World War have been so perfectly encapsulated. … I have never heard the Detroit [Symphony Orchestra] in such fine form, and maybe returning to the original Copland score injected a feeling that this was to be a landmark performance. … Whatever recording you already have this one will supersede it.”
—David Denton, David’s Review Corner
“Slatkin has approached this project with a sense of completeness that is likely to appeal to those wishing to take a thorough approach to the Copland canon. … [T]he significance of Slatkin’s new recording is that he has restored the material that Bernstein chose to cut. … Indeed, there is so much heart-on-sleeve tub-thumping in the “social agenda” behind this music that, while the coda may strike some as silly, it still stands as evidence that Copland had skills in working with multi-voice counterpoint that he did not exercise very often. Bernstein may have imposed his cuts on rhetorical grounds; but, where nuts-and-bolts technique is concerned, those cuts take a particularly informative light away from Copland himself.”
—Stephen Smoliar, The Rehearsal Studio
“[O]ne of the greatest pieces of all American symphonic music, by any assay, performed by an orchestra and conductor of ideal sympathy.”
—Jeff Simon, Buffalo News
“Here it is, after nearly seven decades: the first official commercial recording of Copland’s Third Symphony in its first edition. … Slatkin’s new recording … is in a league of its own. The smaller Detroit string section is used to huge advantage, yielding an almost chamber-music intimacy and greater expressiveness, particularly in the first and third movement. The wind and brass playing is characterful, crisp, and, like the string playing, poignant and illustrative.”
—Mark Hume, Amazon.com
“[T]his is in every respect a terrific performance, excitingly played and conducted, powerfully recorded, and with a nice bonus in the form of the Three Latin American Sketches.”
—David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
Additional information at Naxos
Purchase on Amazon | iTunes
RAVEL: Orchestral Works, Vol. 5 / Antar (after Rimsky-Korsakov) / Shéhérazade
“Slatkin’s conducting is excellent, as it almost always is when he’s interpreting Russian music, and the sonics are very good when the narrator isn’t narrating. The coupling is a fine performance of Shéhérazade.”
—David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
“This is a most rewarding CD, with Ravel’s nearly unknown incidental music Antar and the three Shéhérazade songs. Leonard Slatkin brings his Orchestre National de Lyon to perform with a great charismatic flair that fully engages the listener’s imagination. … In both works, Slatkin draws shimmering colours from the orchestra.”
—Remy Franck, Pizzicato
Additional information at Naxos
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COPLAND: Appalachian Spring (Complete Ballet) / Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
“I was … struck by the spontaneity of Slatkin’s reading, and the way he makes the music sound newly minted. This certainly isn’t one of those moulded, rather safe concert performances that, although beautiful, misses the ballet’s tough, hand-hewn character. This performance—bright and sunny—really is rooted in the great outdoors. That said, Slatkin’s also at home in the darkened pit, responding to the demands of his dancers and making the most of those big, expansive climaxes. As for the DSO, they respond to Copland’s gentle interludes with hushed intensity. … Slatkin’s Appalachian Spring is one of the most illuminating performances of this American classic that I’ve ever heard. Bravo, bravo and thrice bravo!”
—Dan Morgan, MusicWeb International, RECORDING OF THE MONTH
“The Detroit Symphony Orchestra gives Slatkin emotionally appropriate performances of both works, emphasizing the gritty urban ambience in Hear Ye! Hear Ye! and the naive sweetness of Appalachian Spring, all the while communicating Copland’s special style of Americana without caricature. Listeners will find both performances engaging and memorable.”
—Blair Sanderson, AllMusic.com
“Leonard Slatkin conducts the so-called Ormandy version [of Appalachian Spring] very emotionally and turns it into a real love letter to the composer. … After a powerful performance of the seldom-played ballet Hear Ye! Hear Ye!, Leonard Slatkin delivers a striking account of Appalachian Spring, vividly colorful with poetically tender passages and beautiful sound. A moving performance!”
—Remy Franck, Pizzicato (translated from German)
“[Hear Ye! Hear Ye! is] quite entertaining, particularly when given Leonard Slatkin’s zestful performance and an orchestra that was obviously enjoying it. It is coupled with Appalachian Spring, one of the finest 20th century American ballets. … From the peaceful opening pastoral scene, Slatkin transports us to pure Americana, vividly picturing the scenes of the young married couple creating a farm. From a random comparison with several other recorded performances, this would be my preference, the playing from the ballet-sized orchestra so sharply detailed. We also have the best sound quality I have ever heard from Detroit. Enthusiastically recommended.”
—David Denton, David’s Review Corner
Additional information at Naxos
Purchase on Amazon | iTunes
RAVEL: Orchestral Works, Vol. 3 — Orchestrations
“The Orchestre National de Lyon and conductor Leonard Slatkin give a characterful performance in this extremely enjoyable recording, which showcases Ravel’s skill as an orchestrator.”
—BBC Music Magazine
“[T]his performance is a precise and characterful rendition of Pictures, with particularly well-balanced and powerful brass playing.”
—Paul E. Robinson, Musical Toronto
Additional information at Naxos
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RAVEL: L’heure espagnole / Don Quichotte à Dulcinée
“Leonard Slatkin is an exceptionally versatile conductor, but it is perhaps in French repertoire of the 19th and 20th centuries that he feels most comfortable. The singers in Ravel’s exquisitely formed little comic opera L’Heure espagnole … are all entirely appropriate and admirably clear, but it is really Slatkin who’s the star here. … Sample the sly “Salut à la belle Horlogère!” (track eight) for a taste of how Slatkin holds the entire scene, orchestra and singing of mezzo-soprano Isabelle Druet, in the palm of his hand. … Highly recommended and absolutely delightful.”
—James Manheim, AllMusic.com
“Leonard Slatkin conducts with admirable delicacy, with a nice attention to detail.”
—Richard Lawrence, Gramophone
Additional information at Naxos
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RAVEL: L’Enfant et les sortilèges and Ma Mère l’Oye — Complete Ballet
“Slatkin and his orchestra capture the magic of this wonderful score [Ravel’s Ma Mère l’Oye] as well as most other accounts I have heard. It is a lovely performance with sufficient attention paid to the dynamics. The gorgeous strings playing softly at the beginning of the last section, The Fairy Garden, rarely fail to create one of those spine-tingling moments that stay with the listener, and they don’t disappoint here. The delicious woodwind soloists also give their all.”
—Leslie Wright, MusicWeb International
“[N]ot only one of the finest recordings of Ravel’s delightful masterpiece [L’Enfant et les sortilèges] I know, but … also one of the finest recent operatic recordings I have heard. … This is a recording of a charming, sophisticated work which will, I can guarantee, provide listening pleasure for years to come.”
—James Forrest, Fanfare
Additional information at Naxos
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SAINT-SAËNS: Symphony No. 3, “Organ” / Danse Macabre / Cyprès et Lauriers
“In a very busy field, this stands out for the integrity of Leonard Slatkin’s perceptive musicianship. Finding that mixture of suavity, nervous tension, self-confidence and grandiloquence that characterises so much of Saint-Saens’s music, Slatkin creates a performance of the Third Symphony which is utterly compelling. Whether it is the mighty tread of the basses beneath the nervous chatter of violins and wind in the first Allegro moderato, the infinite gracefulness of the violin line in the Poco adagio or the angst-laden Presto, it all makes convincing musical sense. … [T]his is the Saint-Saens Third Symphony recording par excellence.”
—Marc Rochester, Gramophone
“Slatkin’s take on the symphony is pretty middle-of-the-road in a good sense—no interpretive shenanigans or empty gestures for effect, just plenty of Saint-Saëns’s melodic richness. … [T]his disc shows the very best side of his talents.”
—Donald R. Vroon, American Record Guide
Additional information at Naxos
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BERLIOZ: Harold en Italie / Le carnaval romain / Benvenuto Cellini: Overture
“The recording … is superb. … The balance throughout is truthful. … Keith Anderson’s comprehensive notes are provided in English with French translation. I hope that Slatkin and his Lyon forces will go on to explore more of the Berlioz repertoire, and look forward to the results.”
—Paul Corfield Godfrey, MusicWeb International
“Slatkin lilts us into the main Allegro [Harold en Italie] as persuasively as anyone this side of the analogue divide and throughout the whole of the first movement (played with repeat), the to-ing and fro-ing between soloist and orchestra is admirably conversational. … The orgiastic finale plays on the most prominent quality in this particular production, an impressive richness of orchestral tone.”
—Rob Cowan, Gramophone
Additional information at Naxos
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MCTEE: Symphony No. 1 / Circuits / Einstein’s Dream / Double Play
“The Detroit Symphony Orchestra and its maestro are totally on top of this thrilling ride [Cindy McTee’s Symphony No. 1: Ballet for Orchestra], which only stops when it hits the buffers with a bang, and the sound quality is exemplary.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
“[T]his CD is a thoroughly enjoyable experience. The work of orchestra and conductor in these performances is exemplary. … The engineering is superb. I can think of no better way to come to know the work of this fascinating composer. Highly recommended.”
—Ronald E. Grames, Fanfare
Additional information at Naxos | McTee Website
Purchase on Amazon | iTunes
KINAH
“Written in a style that is both obviously contemporary and deeply romantic, Kinah struck me, from the very first notes, with a sense of delicate beauty, longing, and loss. … It was profound and heartbreaking and beautifully done.”
—Chuck Lavazzi, Stage Left
“Kinah is a work in which one finds oneself. The string sonorities sometimes recall the symphonies of Rachmaininov, other times the works of Barber. We can recognize in Leonard Slatkin an authentic talent for melody, sometimes sounding like a popular song, a children’s lullaby, or a religious chant, the melodic elements plunging us into the past.”
—Pierre Liscia, Bachtrack.com (translated from French)
“It begins mournfully and mysteriously, then builds. There’s lyrical writing for the strings and a tolling bell. An offstage flugelhorn and trumpet are heard. There’s beauty here to accompany grief and loss. At about 12 minutes long, Kinah is an effective piece of music and a wonderful tribute to Slatkin’s parents.”
—Sarah Bryan Miller, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“This was a wholly sincere effort that left many audience members genuinely shaken and moved.”
—Brian Wigman, Bachtrack.com
“Kinah held the attention and stays in the consciousness, music that is very personal but also with a powerful outreach.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
“The piece finds Slatkin spreading his wings as a composer.”
—Mark Stryker, Detroit Free Press
ENDGAMES
“Endgames celebrates those instruments “that fall slightly under the orchestral radar” and the musicians that play them. … Each of the woodwinds is introduced in turn, sultry alto-flute, plaintive cor anglais (English horn) … as part of a jaunty, delightfully whimsical first movement. The slow one that follows tenderly expresses itself and sucks the listener into something generous and poignant, the sort of heart-tugging eloquence that American composers do so well. … As it is the cleverly titled Endgames is a feel-good gem.”
—Colin Anderson, ClassicalSource.com
CLASSICAL CROSSROADS
“Though it has much practical value, Slatkin’s latest title isn’t a nuts-and-bolts guide to the conductor’s craft; rather it’s an informative, witty exploration of the role of maestros in developing their ensembles. It will appeal to anyone curious about classical music and those seeking to make careers in the performing arts.”
—Library Journal
“Each chapter offers an informed, opinionated and sometimes provocative look at individual aspects of classical music and how orchestras operate.”
—
LEADING TONES
“Like the first book, Leading Tones is relaxed and admirably understated. Slatkin, a charming conversationalist, writes like he talks. … [I]t’s almost as if he had invited you over to his house, settled down in front of the fireplace, opened a bottle of port and launched into some late-night musings.”
—
“★ ★ ★ ★ His top-ten favourite works [to conduct] are interesting. As he says you can make a list and then realise just how many pieces and composers you have omitted. Elgar but no Vaughan Williams, Barber but no Gershwin or Copland and no Mahler or Stravinsky at all. Still, it’s an impossible task. His reasons for including works is fascinating and informative.
There are six colleagues whose friendship he has enjoyed and treasured, not least Gilbert Kaplan, the magazine proprietor who, without any musical training, took up a single work—Mahler’s ‘Resurrection’ Symphony and learnt how to conduct so that he could perform it and devoted the rest of his life to this mission. Slatkin’s help to enable Kaplan to realise his ambition is a really interesting read. ”
—Mike Langhorne, ClassicalSource.com
CONDUCTING BUSINESS
“Do you dream of being a conductor? Perhaps you’re studying to be one? Either way you should read this book. … Leonard Slatkin’s autobiography-cum-handbook spells out in its three parts, often in exquisite detail, exactly what it takes to do the job from soup to nuts.”
—Jeremy Nicholas, Gramophone
“The first thing to say about this entertaining, revealing and very readable book … is that it is not a straight autobiography. Rather it is part-memoir, part-insight into the music business and part-manual for aspiring conductors.”
—Mike Langhorne, ClassicalSource.com
“These stories—revealing, candid, colorful, and sometimes hilarious—provide the vehicle for many of Slatkin’s most insightful observations about the ‘conducting business’ and his own career within it. They are also what make the book a page-turner, not only for those ‘in pursuit of a conducting career’ but for anyone interested in the conducting profession and the world of orchestras.”
—Chester Lane, Symphony Now
“The demands of the conducting profession are dealt with head on, and there is much affection for people and insight into music that will endear musicians and music-lovers alike to a beautifully written, very human and rewarding manuscript.”
—Colin Anderson, Time Out London
“This is a highly personal but also impressively honest and straightforward account of a profession that has, indeed, been ‘veiled in mystery,’ at least since the twentieth century if not earlier.”
“Leonard Slatkin’s gloriously entertaining and informative book, Conducting Business, is subtitled ‘Unveiling the Mystery Behind the Maestro’, and that is exactly what his book does, with wit, acute observation, and the knack of evocatively conveying the inside story.”