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              Availability 
              CD: Orchestral 
              Concerts  
               
            
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            William WALTON 
              (1902-1983)  
              Scapino; overture (1940) [8:19]  
              Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)  
              Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major Op. 26 (1917-21) [28:37]  
              Miloslav KABELÁČ 
              (1908-1979)  
              Reflections Op.49 [15:13]  
              Maurice RAVEL (1875-1937)  
              Rapsodie espagnole (1907-08) [16:26]  
              Antonín 
              DVOŘÁK (1841-1904)  
              Slavonic Dances, op.72 (1887) - No.15 [3:05]  
                
              Peter Katin (piano)  
              Prague Symphony Orchestra/Zdeněk Košler, Václav 
              Smetáček (Kabeláč) 
              rec. live 8 February 1967, Royal Festival Hall (Walton, Prokofiev) 
              , 6 March 1968 Royal Festival Hall (Kabeláč), 13 February 
              1967, Albert Hall, Nottingham (Ravel, Dvořák)  
                
              ORCHESTRAL CONCERTS CD2/2008 [71:43]   
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                  Souvenirs of Czech and other orchestras’ visits to Britain 
                  in the 1960s are advancing in fascinatingly ardent ranks via 
                  this small outfit. One advantage is the opportunity thus accorded 
                  to the Brno or, as here, to the Prague Symphony, bands that 
                  toured frequently at the time but which were on a lesser known 
                  footing than the monolithic esteem garnered by the Czech Phil. 
                  If that addresses a historic wrong in this respect, well and 
                  good. Those who know these orchestras principally for their 
                  work with native music, on Supraphon and Panton, can now hear 
                  them on tour, stretching out, taking repertoirial risks - being 
                  an orchestra, in other words, and not the necessarily distorted 
                  ensemble one imagines from their recordings of Czech music. 
                  It’s not as if they played only Fibich and Dvořák 
                  all week long.  
                   
                  Take for instance the Royal Festival Hall performance of Walton’s 
                  Scapino presided over by Zdeněk Košler. This 
                  bristling, bustling curtain-raiser to the February 1967 concert 
                  announces an unabashed salute to the host’s own traditions. 
                  The cymbal swishes register powerfully as the band dips their 
                  collective tail into the vitality and caprice of Walton’s 
                  saucy opus. It’s a feature of the series that we cannot, 
                  in the main, hear whole concerts; that would involve two disc 
                  sets. But the Walton was followed by Peter Katin’s splendidly 
                  imaginative and digitally elevated performance of Prokofiev’s 
                  Third Concerto. Some Czech composers of the mid-century had 
                  a virtual obsession with Prokofiev, and this was partially at 
                  least reflected in performances, so it’s no surprise to 
                  find the Prague Symphony touring this work. In Katin they had 
                  a splendid exponent, whose legerdemain is matched by an acute 
                  structural sense, and whose tonal qualities are laudable. The 
                  ensemble between pianist and orchestra is pretty solid. The 
                  piano’s treble sonorities against the high winds are a 
                  notably successful feature of a recording that in no small degree 
                  manages to bring some warmth to the hall’s acoustic. Katin’s 
                  take on the slow movement is very different from the composer’s 
                  own laconic brilliance - but that’s true of almost all 
                  subsequent traversals. And as befits the man who so successfully 
                  brought us a famed Khachaturian concerto with Hugo Rignold for 
                  Everest, Katin and his Czech colleague play with dynamism and 
                  witty hauteur in the finale. The keen edge to the orchestra’s 
                  sound bites nicely.  
                   
                  Kabeláč’s Reflections was conducted by Václav 
                  Smetáček at the same hall, the following year. It’s 
                  a variational work, ranging from Bardic fanfares, to percussion 
                  militancy to rather more filmic inspirations. A piano is integrated 
                  into the sound spectrum. We hear a fusion of cool reflection 
                  and swirling advance. There’s certainly plenty of colour 
                  and incident, and it could even be the film music for some tough, 
                  black and white Czech historical epic, albeit one of a somewhat 
                  more radical caste of mind.  
                   
                  The Ravel is hardly Stokowskian in its sense of fantasy or colour. 
                  There’s a sound blip at 2:22 where things lose focus very 
                  briefly. Later at 14:27 the sound flickers and only really re-establishes 
                  itself a minute later. This is a notably well-drilled performance 
                  however, with the brass on strong, engaged form, the strings 
                  hardly evincing luxurious Philadelphian arch but offering instead 
                  their own more contained perspectives. The encore is Dvořák, 
                  from the same concert. Fizzy and exciting!  
                   
                  So ends another engaging entrant that offers an overture, a 
                  concerto, two symphonic works and an encore.  
                   
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                    
                 
                  
                  
                 
                
               
             
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