Having recorded the Cello Symphony and the Cello Sonata for Signum
Classics, Jamie Walton here concentrates his focus on Britten’s three
solo cello suites. He proves a most persuasive and sensitive interpreter,
varying his bow weight and colour as the individual movements and moods
demand. He is attentive to the dynamic shaping of the multi-movement suites,
and characterises them strongly without losing sight of the greater
architectures involved, not least in the towering Op.87 work.
Thus he evokes the veiled melancholy of the opening of the First
Suite and its ensuing intensity with finely-calibrated control. The
Fuga is especially well done, but the pizzicati in the
Serenata no less so. Expressive though he is in the
Canto
terza, there is a determined quality that marks out the concluding
movement. The matter of dynamics is especially noticeable in the slow
movement of the Op.80 suite where a disquieting sense of incompletion is
suggested in the concluding
Ciaccona.
I had never thought of that well-worked trope, ‘Orpheus and
the Beasts’, in relation to Britten’s suites, but in the
Canto of the Third Suite Walton evokes this contrast between abrasive
determinism and yielding pliancy with great sensitivity. It seems, in his
hands, a microcosmic refraction of the similar moment in the slow movement
of Beethoven’s Fourth Piano Concerto. Indeed his playing of this
suite, whilst not as richly characterised as that of its dedicatee
Rostropovich, is nevertheless very fine indeed. What is especially
impressive is that he finds the interrogative nature of the music so well,
that he delves deep to the self-questioning of the
Passacaglia, for
instance.
Tema ‘Sacher’ was Britten’s last work
composed for a solo instrument, and written in his last year.
Acknowledging that Rostropovich’s are benchmark recordings,
Walton’s still pack a real punch. They are more visceral than the
recent recording by Antoine Pierlot on Transart TR169. Pierlot doesn’t
include the little
Tema ‘Sacher’, and is rather more
lyrical than Walton’s darker reading of the suites.
Jonathan Woolf
Previous review:
Dominy Clements
Britten discography & review index:
Cello suites