The Legend Of Joseph: An Immense Pillared Hall In Palladian Style
The Legend Of Joseph: The Slave With Precious Stones The Slave With The Carpet, The Slave With The Greyhounds
The Legend Of Joseph: A Train Of Three Litters Comes Out Into The Loggia...
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of The Women: First Dance Figure
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of The Women: Second Dance Figure
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of The Women: Third Dance Figure
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of The Women: Sulamith's Dance: The Most Ardent Desire
The Legend Of Joseph: A Procession Of Men Appears Above....
The Legend Of Joseph: The Boxers Break Into A Sort Of Round Dance
The Legend Of Joseph: A Golden Hammock Appears In The Loggia...
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of Joseph: First Dance Figure: The Shepherd-Boy's Innocence
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of Joseph: Second Dance Figure: The Leaps
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of Joseph: Third Dance Figure: Searching And Wrestling After God
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of Joseph: Fourth Dance Figure: The Glorification Of God
The Legend Of Joseph: Just As Joseph Is Touched By Two Mulattos, Potiphar's Wife Starts As Though In A Dream...
The Legend Of Joseph: Potiphar Signals The End Of The Festivities
The Legend Of Joseph: Evening Falls
The Legend Of Joseph - Joseph's Dream: He Sees A Guardian Angel Approaching His Bed
The Legend Of Joseph: The Door Opens And Potiphar's Wife Steals In...
The Legend Of Joseph: Naked From His Shoulders To His Hips, Joseph Stands Before Her...
The Legend Of Joseph: At That Moment Two Servants With Torches Rush In...
The Legend Of Joseph: The Young Slave-Girl Arrives And Runs To Her Mistress With Arms Raised...
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of The Slave-Girls: First Dance Figure
The Legend Of Joseph - Dance Of The Slave-Girls: Second Dance Figure
The Legend Of Joseph: Potiphar Appears WithTorchbearers And Armed Men
The Legend Of Joseph: Henchmen Come Out Of The Palace Carrying A Brazier Filled With Red-Hot Embers...
The Legend Of Joseph: An Archangel Clad In Gold Appears...
The Legend Of Joseph: ...While A Procession Formed Around The Corpse Of Potiphar's Wife...Joseph And The Archangel Go Out Into The Open Air...
Richard Strauss's ballet score Josephs Legende (1912-14) is one of the few mature works by Strauss that have received little attention, even after all this time. It's never performed (possibly because of its arcane subject... more » matter) and rarely recorded. The catalog lists one full performance, now out of print, and one version of the 1947 shorter orchestral suite (an excellent version is on Chandos 9506 if you can find it). The ballet concerns the apocryphal biblical story of the young Joseph's near-seduction by Potiphar's wife. (Perhaps Salome handles this theme better.) This is the full version of the ballet, sumptuously performed by the Staatskapelle Dresden in a dynamic live recording with none of the intrusive ambient noise of concert performances. Highly recommended for all comers. --Paul Cook« less
Richard Strauss's ballet score Josephs Legende (1912-14) is one of the few mature works by Strauss that have received little attention, even after all this time. It's never performed (possibly because of its arcane subject matter) and rarely recorded. The catalog lists one full performance, now out of print, and one version of the 1947 shorter orchestral suite (an excellent version is on Chandos 9506 if you can find it). The ballet concerns the apocryphal biblical story of the young Joseph's near-seduction by Potiphar's wife. (Perhaps Salome handles this theme better.) This is the full version of the ballet, sumptuously performed by the Staatskapelle Dresden in a dynamic live recording with none of the intrusive ambient noise of concert performances. Highly recommended for all comers. --Paul Cook
"Bought this CD on a whim. After all, I've never walked around with snippits of "Josephs Legende" in my head. After listening to this recording, I was left to wonder why. It is vintage Strauss, pacing through turns lyrical and dramatic, and brimming with orchestral color. The late/great Sinopoli was in full command here, and what an army the Staatskapelle Dresden continues to be!Strauss is not to everyone's tastes. However, if you have a soft-spot in your heart for Heldenleben, Don Quixote, Alpensinfonie or the sentimental strains of Zarathustra, you will find much to explore and enjoy in this outstanding recording. Highly recommended"
Elegant Performance from Sinopoli and the Staatskapelle Dres
John Kwok | New York, NY USA | 04/18/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Richard Strauss's "Josephs Legende" may be the most neglected of his major works, and that's truly a shame, since it is replete with elegant melodies and harmonies from the opening notes to a glowing, truly magnificient, conclusion. Among these include several riveting dances devoted to Joseph and his affair with Potiphar's wife which form the latter half of the ballet. Regrettably, one of the reasons why this major ballet score has remained obscure is due to its relatively dark subject matter, namely that of the Biblical prophet Joseph and the events leading to his rescue by an angel, that involve not only adultery, but also madness and suicide. The late Giuseppe Sinopoli's interpretation with the Staatskapelle Dresden is absolutely riveting, and one that should have caught fire with critics and fans alike. This was among the last, if not the last, in a series of recordings which Sinopoli and his orchestra made for Deutsche Grammophon of Richard Strauss's scores. I personally think that it's as fine as the others, made more remarkable by the fact that this was a live concert recording, and yet, the sound quality is absolutely as exquisite as any from a Deutsche Grammophon studio recording made in the late 1990s. Hopefully one day this recording will be regarded as a classic of this little known work. If you are a great admirer of the Dresden Staatskapelle, Giuseppe Sinopoli and Richard Strauss, then I can assure you that you won't be disappointed."
A Beautiful Ballet
H. Wend | Buffalo Grove, Illinois USA | 04/02/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"From the opening bars it is easy to tell that Richard Strauss's Josephs Legende is full of passion. The music is hardly lacking in drama or is boring and is characterized by some of the composers best melodies through to the shimmering conclusion. It full deserves to be better known and this recording but the late Giuseppe Sinopoli and the Dresden Staatkapelle is a marvelous performance. Highly recommended."
A Neglected Ballet That Deserves Better
D. A Wend | Buffalo Grove, IL USA | 12/27/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Josephs Legende is a work that may not be classed among the best of Richard Strauss but it is among his most interesting works. The music contains elements of Salome and something of his next opera Die Frau Ohne Schatten. It was a chore for the composer to write with a wordy and symbolic scenerio by Hoffmannsthal and Count Harry Kessler, but he managed to overcome these hurdles his objections to write a work conveying great passion. The ballet was written for the Ballet Russe, and Nijinsky was to dance the role of Joseph and choreograph the dances. By the time the music was ready, Nijinsky had been fired by Diaghilev and replaced by Massine. The ballet is definately something for Straussians. It is not a good introduction to Strauss's music but will be interesting to anyone who has heard Salome, Elektra and the earlier tone poems. The performance by Giuseppe Sinopoli and the Dresden Staatskapelle is marvelous and brings out the seductive magic of the music."
Some lovely things but lots of filler, too
Ralph Moore | Bishop's Stortford, UK | 10/11/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)
"As much as I adore Strauss - at its best, his music will aways feature at the top of my favourites list - I have learned to my cost not to be a Strauss "completist". Hence "Guntram" was cast aside and while there is far more to delight the ear in this neglected ballet, no-one could possibly place it in the first rank of his works. Strauss was too much the professional to shirk a contractual obligation but he procrastinated, raided an earlier, discarded ballet and generally dragged his feet over this one as he felt little sympathy - modern materialist as he was, despite the yearning transcendence of his best music - with the biblical subject matter. Yet he had managed to do a fine job with "Salome"; perhaps that is why we hear frequent sub-"Salome" echoes and more than a hint of what was to come in "Die Frau Ohne Schatten". This is sub-par Strauss, containing some wonderful moments - particularly the theme allotted to Poptiphar's Wife - but generally lacking inspiration and requiring the listener to endure some longueurs. I still take it down from the shelves occasionally to here Sinopoli's masterly direction of a great orchestra - and a great, big orchestra, at that, this music requiring an orchestra as large as that needed for the "Alpine Symphony" - but it's probably one of those "justly neglected" pieces that Strauss himself was not especially proud of. After its premiere in 1914 it was revived in 1947, but hardly since, and Sinopoli and DG have done us a favour by giving it the best advocacy possible in this excellent recording of a live, concert performance. Remember, Strauss dubbed himself a "first-rate second-rate composer". At his best, he's better than that but this work conforms to the self-deprecatory category he describes. Having said all that, the climax is powerful and effective because Strauss was always a theatrical animal. The Santa Fe listener is a little harsh in entitling his review "a gem of banality", but I know what he means... even if (to paraphrase Beecham) I still derive pleasure from the sheer noise this music makes."