[Machine Translation] The New World Symphony, a masterpiece that has been handed down through the ages! The entire movement is reproduced with overflowing emotion in a lively, intense, and powerful performance. This is the fifth CD project of Mizuho Tanaka's wonderful and masterful performances that color her half life. The piece alone has been viewed more than 540,000 times on Youtube, an unprecedented number. It is the most viewed masterpiece of the New World Symphony in Japan. Mizuho Tanaka conducts Dvo ak's masterpiece in this long-awaited CD release. It is a new standard of classical music that can be transmitted from Japan to the world. (Dvorak (1891-1904) was the greatest composer of the Czech and Bohemian National Music School. In 1891, he became a professor at the Prague Conservatory, but the following year he was invited to the U.S., where he remained until 1894 as director of the National Conservatory of Music in New York City. When he stepped on American soil in April 1892, the American press celebrated his arrival with great fanfare, reporting that he was "the savior of music" and that he had a "warm and sincere personality. This episode truly showed that the people of the new country, the United States, had a strong yearning for European music and strong expectations for the inheritance of traditional European music in the United States. Dvo ak responded by composing several masterpieces during his stay in the U.S., including the string quartet "America," the cello concerto, and the Ninth Symphony "From the New World. This piece was completed in December 1893. The title "From the New World" means "A musical letter from the New World to my native Behemia," as Dvo ak himself wrote on the door of the score. The music begins with a contemplative, quiet, and thoughtful bass section, and then develops into an energetic and lively emotional movement. It is as if images of the New World are pouring out one after another. After a short introduction, the famous "Home Road" music is played by a solo English horn. It is said that the name "Ie-roi" came from Dvo ak's disciple, who later added the lyrics on his own and marketed it as a song under the title of "Ie-roi". Scherzo. Molto v