Johannes BRAHMS
(1833-1897)
Concerto for Violin, Violoncello
and Orchestra in A minor op.102: Allegro
[17:53]
Gidon Kremer (violin)/Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra/Leonard Bernstein
Luigi BOCCHERINI
(1743-1805)
String Quintet in E major op.11 No.5:
Tempo di minuetto con un poco di moto
[4:08].
Members of Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
Camille SAINT-SAËNS
(1835-1921)
Cello Concerto No.1 in A minor op.33
[18:28]
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY
(1840-1893)
Variations on a Rococo Theme op.33:
Variazione VI: Andante / Variazione
VII e Coda: Allegro vivo [5:13]
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
Edward ELGAR
(1857-1934)
Cello Concerto in E minor op.85: Adagio
- Moderato - attacca: / Allegro molto
[11:53]
Philharmonia Orchestra / Giuseppe Sinopoli
Richard STRAUSS
(1864-1949)
Don Quixote op.35: Variation V: Sehr
langsam - Don Quixote's Vigil [4:20]
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra/Zubin
Mehta
Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH
(1906-1975)
Cello Concerto No.1 op.107: Allegretto
[6:07]
London Symphony Orchestra / Michael
Tilson Thomas
Antonín
DVOŘÁK (1841-1904)
Cello Concerto in B minor op.104: Finale:
Allegro moderato [11:42]
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra/Zubin
Mehta
Johann Sebastian
BACH (1685-1750)
Cello Suite in G major BWV 1007: Prelude
[2:12]
Cello Suite in C minor BWV 1011: Sarabande
[4:15]
Franz SCHUBERT
(1797-1828)
Der Muller und der Bach from Die schön
Müllerin D795 [4:20]
Daria Hovora (piano)
Johannes BRAHMS
(1833-1897)
Liebestreu op.3 No.1 [2:38]
Immer leiser wird mein Schlummer op.105
No.2 [5:04]
Lily Maisky (piano)
Felix MENDELSSOHN
(1809-1847)
Song without words op.62 No.1 [2:42]
Song without words op.109 [5:15]
Auf Flugeln des Gesanges op.34 No.2
arranged Mischa Maisky [3:10]
Sergio Tiempo (piano)
Young-Sup CHOI
(b.1929)
Let me live amid nature arranged Mischa
Maisky [3:44]
Daria Hovora (piano)
Maurice RAVEL
(1875-1937)
Vocalise-etude en forme de habanera
[3:28]
Daria Hovora (piano)
Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH
(1906-1975)
Cello Sonata in D minor op.40: Allegro
[4:15]
Martha Argerich (piano)
Gabriel FAURÉ
(1845-1924)
Apres un reve op.7 No.1 arr. Pablo Casals
[3:20]
Daria Hovora
Peter KIESEWASSER
(b.1945)
Tango pathetique [2:19]
Gidon Kremer (violin)/Martha Argerich
(piano)
ANONYMOUS
Song of the Birds - Catalan Folksong
arr. Pablo Casals [3:09]
Pavel Gililov (piano)
Francis POULENC
(1899-1963)
Les Chemins de l'amour [3:40]
Daria Hovora (piano)
Robert SCHUMANN
(1810-1856)
5 Stucke im Volkston op.102: Mit Humor
'Vanitas vanitatum' [3:08]
Martha Argerich
Sergei PROKOFIEV
(1891-1953)
Waltz from the ballet Stone Flower [2:29]
Martha Argerich (piano)
Sergei RACHMANINOFF
(1873-1943)
Sing not to me, neautiful maiden Op.4
No.4 arr. Mischa Maisky [5:01]
How fair this spot Op.21 No.7 arr. Mischa
Maisky [2:11]
Vocalise Op.34 No. 14 arr. Leonard Rose
[6:29]
Lily Maisky (piano)
Elegie op.3 No.1 arr. Mischa Maisky
[6:20]
Sergio Tiempo (piano)
This is one of a series
of DG Portraits of the Artist
series – Kremer, Kissin, Pires and Terfel
are a quartet of other musicians covered
thus far. The booklets contain plenty
of discographical information and there
are a large number of colour and black
and white photographs for those who
appreciate such things. The booklet
note is written by Tully Potter who
covers the ground but has succumbed
to a surfeit of maestro-itis. Surely
Maisky is not a Maestro?
The selection consists
of "greatest hits." The first
disc gives us the first movement of
the Brahms Double with Kremer and Bernstein
– rather indulged by the conductor.
There are also the first two movements
of the Elgar with Sinopoli; a good performance.
There are
snippets from the Rococo Variations
– just two variations – and one variation
from Don Quixote. The first movement
from Shostakovich’s First Concerto is
here with Tilson Thomas and there’s
the finale of the Dvořák with Mehta
– a considerable improvement on
Maisky’s ponderous recording of it with
Bernstein, with whom the fault greatly
lay. All this bits-and-pieces of course
is very unsatisfactory from most perspectives
but it is the rationale of the series
and gives, at least, a partial view
of Maisky’s way with the concerto literature.
As if in compensation there’s a complete
Saint-Saëns Concerto in A minor
with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra.
The second disc is
devoted to smaller, chamber sized or
solo works. There’s evidence of his
rhythmically wayward and unstable Bach
– the Prelude from the G major suite
is unsubtle and the Sarabande from the
Fifth Suite is almost abstract. There’s
a pretty little song called Let me
live amid nature by Young-Sup Choi,
arranged by the cellist. Other things
include some collaborations with Argerich,
Daria Hovora, Sergio Tiempo as well
as Maisky’s own daughter, Lily. There’s
some Piazzolla, for those who like it,
and some finely phrased Rachmaninoff
arrangements. I don’t know why Casals’s
Song of the Birds isn’t identified
as such in the booklet – "Catalan
Folksong" is a bit vague – but
in any case Maisky over-vibrates it.
By its nature this
is more for the casual listener, the
neophyte or those who enjoy photographs
of late middle aged men with flowing
grey locks and flowery white shirts
exposing their chest hair. Maisky admirers
surely have the recordings from which
these excerpts have been extracted.
Less frivolously I should end by noting
that a number of the smaller items are
receiving disc premieres.
Jonathan Woolf