BBC Music Magazine

Namin Centuria S-quark Symphony

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London Symphony Orchestra/

Lee Reynolds

Navona Records NV6200 47:14 mins

In its ambition to ref lect mankind on the brink of apocalypse, Stas Namin’s Centuria S-quark Symphony appears to echo Mahler’s view that ‘the symphony must be like the world, it must embrace everything.’ Indeed, Namin himself seems to embody such a principle; a self-described cult figure in Russia, his activities span rock music frontman, composer, producer, photograph­er, artist – and highly successful cultural entreprene­ur.

This is his first symphony, and follows an earlier classical piece: a symphonic suite, Autumn in St Petersburg. In one continuous movement, it’s a patchwork of dramatic themes and ideas in a post-romantic idiom, inspired by conversati­ons with astrophysi­cists and the question, ‘What dictates the rise and fall of civilisati­on?’ ★ints of Khachaturi­an, Shostakovi­ch, Glazunov and others peep through cinematic gestures, which range in mood from the rhetorical­ly serious to the piquantly ironic via the grandiose and the surreal with prominent use of vibraslap. There are some ear-catching motifs – the opening string-wind thrust and riposte, for example. But, with actor-composer Aleksandr Slizunov credited for ‘arrangemen­ts’, it’s the orchestrat­ion that scores highest; lending colour – and vivacity, thanks to the ever-slick London Symphony Orchestra under conductor Lee Reynolds

– to sometimes thin material.

Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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