Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35 (1878) [35:00]
Carl NIELSEN (1865-1931)
Violin Concerto, Op. 33 (1878) [36:36]
Vilde Frang (violin)
Danish National Symphony Orchestra/Elvind Gullberg Jensen
rec. 29-31 August 2011, DR Koncerthuset, Copenhagen
EMI CLASSICS 6025702 [71:48]
Two years ago - how time does fly! - I reviewed
here the young Norwegian violinist Vilde Frang’s first disc for EMI,
coupling the Sibelius concerto with Prokofiev’s First. I have returned
to that disc several times, when rediscovering how very individual the playing
is always adds to the pleasure. It might seem perverse, therefore, and it is
certainly disappointing for me, that it is the very individuality of the playing
in Tchaikovsky’s celebrated concerto that makes this performance less
satisfying. Let us note the programming though, once again, a big romantic concerto
coupled with one less frequently heard and less of a crowd-puller.
The first movement of the Tchaikovsky is a gloriously lyrical outpouring, and
Frang is not short on that, but hers is clearly a no-nonsense view of the concerto,
fully supported by conductor Elvind Gullberg Jensen. We can hear this straightaway
in the short orchestral introduction, which is rather straight and unyielding,
though the recorded sound is remarkably rich. Frang’s first entry follows,
a mixture of very individual phrasing - holding back here, pushing forward there
- mixed with a directness of approach that sometimes misses, just slightly,
the sentimental heart - and I have chosen the adjective with care - that is
surely part of this music. Her singing tone is put to marvellous use during
this first passage, lasting some six minutes, and this is followed by the first
big orchestral tutti which is brisk rather than broad, and which really puts
the stamp on the whole performance. The orchestra plays marvellously well -
a lovely first flute just after the cadenza - but much of the orchestral writing
in this concerto really is accompaniment, and I have heard more made of it in
other performances. And talk of the cadenza allows me to draw attention to the
many points therein, as well as elsewhere in the movement, where the soloist
has clearly thought afresh about such matters as pace and phrasing, leading
to numerous individual touches that many may find spontaneous, but which sometimes
come across to this listener, in a way that the same soloist’s way with
Sibelius did not, as calculated and studied. Other examples of this young artist
“putting her mark” on the work include more than usually differentiated
moods in the main theme and interludes of the slow movement, though the overriding
melancholy of this movement is very well communicated. The finale is brilliantly
played, though a little hard driven for my taste. Although I was listening without
a score - I’m quite convinced I used to have one! - it seems to me that
at least some of the little cuts from the bad old days in this movement are
back in place, rather contrary to current, and preferable, practice.
The performance of the Nielsen concerto is very fine indeed. I first heard this
piece in my teens, probably at pretty much the same time as I first heard the
Tchaikovsky, but near-constant exposure to the Russian’s concerto means
that one knows it off by heart, which one can’t say for the Nielsen. This
is perhaps why the soloist’s undoubted individuality of approach disturbs
me less in the Nielsen than it does in the Tchaikovsky. There are some fiendish
passages in the work - as there are in the Tchaikovsky - which this astonishing
young player throws off with aplomb, and she is very expressive indeed in the
gentler passages. Whilst finding her performance totally convincing I also listened
to two much older performances, by Dong-Suk Kang on Bis,
accompanied by Myung-Whun Chung, and Cho- Liang Lin with Salonen on a 1988 CBS
Masterworks disc (reissued on Sony
Classics). To my surprise I preferred both the older readings to the newer
one, and for the same reason. The two movements of Nielsen’s concerto
make up a rather unorthodox layout, and both earlier violinists maintain a sense
of the work’s architecture better than Frang manages here. We are in no
doubt, for example - especially with Lin - that the arrival of the playful final
rondo melody is the continuation of the second movement and not, as Frang’s
performance tends to give the impression, the beginning of quite a separate
one.
Vilde Frang is a magnificent young violinist and these are two magnificent performances.
I was bowled over by the earlier disc mentioned above, and I think any listener
coming to this one with fewer preconceptions than mine will be bowled over by
it too. The recording is sumptuous, and the booklet carries a helpful article
by David Fanning.
William Hedley
Two very individual and magnificent performances.