Ilja Hurnik (b.1922)
Four Seasons-Chamber Suite (1952)
Ondrá-Ballet Music (1951)
Jan Kapr (1914-1988)
In the Soviet Country-Cantata (1950) 3
Julius Kala (1902-1967)
The Nightingale and the Rose (1956)
Viktor Kalabis (1923-2006)
Violin Concerto #1 (1958-59) 4
Jan Seidel (1908-1998)
Oboe Concerto #2 (1955) 5
Ivan Jirko (1926-1978)
Piano Concerto #3 (1958) 6
Petr Eben (1929-2007)
Piano Concerto (1961) 7
Pavel Bořkovec (1894-1972)
Symphony #2 (1955)
Václav Dobiá (1909-1978)
Build Up Your Country to Reinforce the Peace-Cantata (1947) 2
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra (1946) 1
1 Eric Schilling, narrator
2 Jan Soumar, baritone
4 Václav Snítil, violin
5 Josef Shejbal, oboe
6 Viktorie vihlíková, piano
7 Frantiek Rauch, piano
2 Prague Philharmonic Choir
2 Kühn Children's Choir
3 Prague Radio Choir
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra/Karel Ančerl
Supraphon SU3944-2 4CDs 258:17
Volume 43 of the Karel Ančerl Gold Edition apparently collects a number of short works left over from the mainly single-CD releases which make up the rest of the series. Apart from the Britten, the remaining works are by composers of what was then Czechoslovakia, Ančerl having left his homeland for Canada in 1968, the year of the Soviet suppression of the Prague Spring. This set gives an interesting insight into the sort of music being written during the fifteen or so years after the war.
Most of the music is upbeat, some even jaunty. The two vocal works remind me of such pieces as Prokofiev's Summer Day, but the words are best avoided! Of the concertos, the standout for me is the Kalabis, but all are worth getting to know. Some of the recordings are in mono but the transfers have been very well done. The set is attractively priced. Recommended for those who like to explore the byways of the byways.