Three gifted Czech composers grace this latest Supraphon disc. Kraft
and Stamitz were Bohemian - the latter was actually born in Mannheim of
Bohemian diaspora parents - and Vranický was Moravian, born in a town
due south of Jihlava - where Mahler was born.
Antonín Kraft was strongly influenced by Haydn and
that’s immediately audible from his concerto’s introduction.
Indeed it’s one reason why some of Kraft’s works have been
mistaken for those of Haydn. Deft passagework, and an ear for the dramatic
possibilities of punctuation ‘pauses’, mark out just two of
Kraft’s compositional skill. Then, too, he likes little military turns
of phrase alternating with considerable phrasal warmth. He takes the cello
up high in the second movement Romance before launching an energetic,
rather insouciant ‘Cossack’ finale. As one can gather from this
brief description, Kraft’s concerto is full of verve and variety and
it’s played with attention to detail and fine tonal qualities by
Michal Kaňka whose scalar ascents in the finale are especially fine.
Though he’s better known for his violin music, indeed as
leader of the Vienna violin school, Vranický did write a single
concerto for the cello. It’s fluently written with a fine slow
movement which plumbs the expressive depths that composers such as Haydn and
Monn had plumbed earlier. He writes a charming Rondo finale too,
which sports a wide-ranging cadenza written by Jiří Rajniš,
who has also written a cadenza for the Stamitz concerto. Talking of whom,
the prolific Carl Stamitz, about whom Mozart was extremely rude, contributes
perhaps the least interesting of the three concertos, if we are ranking them
in order. It’s proficient, and warmly textured, but not especially
distinctive. It certainly lacks the quixotic zest of the Kraft, for example.
Stamitz did write too much, so that may explain it.
There are no concerns about either performances or recording
quality, both of which are excellent. Michal Kaňka is better known as a
chamber player than as a soloist but he deals with matters with aplomb. I
take it, given there is no conductor, that the two named leaders of the
modern instrument Prague Chamber Orchestra direct the band from the first
desk.
Jonathan Woolf
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