Weill: Symphony No.2, Seven Deadly Sins etc.
Kurt Weill made his name in 1920s Germany with the satirical theater shows he composed with the playwright Bertolt Brecht, most famously The Threepenny Opera. In 1933, Weill, who was Jewish, left Nazi Germany for Paris. There he composed Die sieben Todsünden (The Seven Deadly Sins)—a ballet that’s both sung and danced—before moving to America and successfully reinventing himself as a composer of Broadway shows. Weill’s unique musical style combines mastery of classical technique with a brilliant flair for popular song-writing. Both aspects reach a pinnacle in The Seven Deadly Sins, where Simon Rattle’s conducting unerringly conveys the feeling of tragedy that lies just below the music’s surface irony. Weill’s Second Symphony, composed in the same year, is masterfully performed by the Berlin Philharmonic and conductor Mariss Jansons. And there’s also a selection of songs from The Threepenny Opera and other shows, with Robyn Archer an incisive vocalist.