Latest Release
- OCT 4, 2024
- 36 Songs
- Bruckner: Symphony No. 7 · 2024
- Hansel and Gretel Overture (Recorded Live on January 1, 2008) - Single · 2008
- Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker · 2019
- Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker · 2019
- Holst: The Planets · 2010
- Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker · 2019
- Tchaikovsky: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 6 · 2009
- Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker · 2019
- Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker · 2019
- Holst: The Planets · 2010
Essential Albums
- Beethoven’s colossal contribution to music resulted in every form he tackled being extended, developed, and re-invented—and these two works are proof. His most famous piano concerto, No. 5, the Emperor Concerto, crowns his so-called Middle Period, and his Piano Sonata No. 28 (of 32) belongs to a group that transformed the piano sonata into something epic and exploratory. French pianist Hélène Grimaud offers performances marked by delicacy, power, drive, and a sense of inevitability: a very modern-sounding Beethoven.
- This epic Planets suite gains extra power in thrilling Spatial Audio.
- These live recordings demonstrate the quality Jurowski and his London Philharmonic Orchestra have achieved over years of working their way through Tchaikovsky’s symphonies in concert. Jurowski finds an ideal balance between the classical and the romantic, and he can manage sudden shifts of mood with apparent ease. He respects the letter of the score and doesn’t pull the music around, but it never feels straitjacketed. Everything sounds natural and organic, and often very intense. It’s a convincing and powerful approach.
Artist Playlists
- One of today’s great conductors, Jurowski displays brilliance and perception in a wide range of music.
Singles & EPs
About Vladimir Jurowski
It was in Ireland and England that the Russian-born conductor Vladimir Jurowski first showed his exceptional abilities both as a conductor and an orchestral trainer. His interpretations—whether in opera or in symphonic repertoire—are never predictable but always fresh reconsiderations of the work at hand, demonstrating his orchestra’s superb responsiveness to his flexible tempos. Born in Moscow in 1972, he initially studied at the Moscow Conservatory (1987-90), though arguably his greatest experience was the culture shock of hearing touring West German orchestras play avant-garde works by Stockhausen, Rihm, Henze, and Zimmermann. Fortuitously, his family then moved to Germany where he completed his music education. His successful 1995 debut at Ireland’s Wexford Festival, conducting Rimsky-Korsakov’s May Night (1879), led directly to his debut, aged 23, at London’s Covent Garden conducting Verdi’s Nabucco (1841). Appointed Music Director of the Glyndebourne Festival Opera (2001-13), he also had a long and successful relationship with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, becoming its principal guest conductor in 2003, then its principal conductor (2006-21). Most of his recordings have been with that orchestra, although he has also recorded Beethoven with the Staatskapelle Dresden and Strauss with the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. While he has mostly recorded Russian repertoire, he has also recorded some contemporary works, including an album devoted to the British composer Julian Anderson (rec. 2013) and the world premiere of Utopia (2019) by the Russian composer Vladimir Martynov.
- HOMETOWN
- Moscow, Russia
- BORN
- 1972
- GENRE
- Classical