These classically familiar Geminis are from the Sony/CBS
vaults. The CD is part of the Essential Classics bargain price range
- a response to the Naxos, CFP, Apex, Arte Nova onslaught. No recording
dates or locations are given in the booklet. However the Piano Concerto
must be from a 1980s live concert if the sprinkling of coughs is anything
to go by. Other sources confirm the recording venue as the Carnegie
Hall. Gilels always makes an event out of anything he plays and so it
proves here with his usual blend of passionate intellect and resounding
bravura on display. The sound lacks nothing in immediacy but it is not
very refined. For a concert performance try Petukhov's Buenos Aires
coupling of the first two concertos on Pavane. Gilels is magisterial
however.
The Oistrakh is in analogue from the 1960s and dates
from the earliest days of hesitant rapprochement between the USSR and
the USA. Oistrakh is scintillating and voluptuous of tone and he is
partnered by an affluently upholstered orchestra which is kept on its
toes by Ormandy. If the performance lacks the radiant intensity of the
BMG-Melodiya recording with Oistrakh and the Moscow RSO/Rozhdestvensky
it is no slouch either.
A good coupling with two characterful giants of the
USSR partnered by American orchestras in weighty performances. If you
want a budget coupling of these two works you could easily do a lot
worse.
Rob Barnett