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MUSICWEB INTERNATIONAL
Recordings Of The Year 2014
This is the twelfth year that Musicweb International has asked its reviewing team to nominate their recordings of the year. Reviewers are not restricted to discs they had reviewed, but the choices must have been reviewed on MWI in the last 12 months (December 2013-November 2014).
The
141 selections have come in from 26 members of the team, the choices this year reflecting as usual, the great diversity of music and sources.
Of the selections, one received three nominations • Walton's first symphony & violin concerto
with Tasmin Little & Edward Gardner on Chandos
and eight have received two nominations:
• Gershwin's Porgy & Bess from San Francisco on Euroarts
• Sullivan's On sea & shore on Dutton
• Corelli's concerto grossi
by Gli Incogniti on Zig-Zag Territoires
• Beethoven
concertos from Maria Joao Pires on Onyx
• Fantasy trios on Champs Hill
• Richard Strauss tone poems from Manfred Honeck on
Reference • Bax orchestral works
from Sir Andrew Davis on Chandos • Schumann and Brahms piano
quintets on Foghorn
The nominated recordings come from 77 different labels,
the leading labels being Naxos with nine and Chandos with seven.
Click on the cover image to read the full review.
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text version (no links)
MUSICWEB INTERNATIONAL RECORDING OF THE YEAR
Choosing one recording from
all those reviewed in the last months is an impossible task, yet
pick one we must. Does one look at the multiply-nominated
recordings above? If so, how does one pick between the nine? It
is certainly not possible to listen to all the options, for the
practical reasons of time and availability, but also one's own
personal preferences. What might be unlistenable for one
person is the best recording ever for another.
Therefore,
it seems appropriate to take as read the quality of the
recordings and to look beyond that to some greater significance.
This led me to considering some of the outstanding recordings
featuring composers with birth or death anniversaries. The
150th anniversary of the birth of Richard Strauss is probably
the most prominent, but I have gone for the combination of an
anniversary of his birth in 1914, the culmination of an
eight volume set of his orchestral works, and an appearance as
BBC Radio 3's Composer of the Week. I am, of course,
referring to the Polish-British composer Andrzej Panufnik and
the CPO set.
Andrzej
PANUFNIK Symphonic Works Vol. 8: Violin Concerto, Cello
Concerto, Piano Concerto - Alexander
Sitkovetsky (violin) Raphael Wallfisch (cello) Ewa Kupiec
(piano) Konzerthaus O Berlin/Łukasz Borowicz rec. 2013
CPO 7776872
This final volume featuring three concertos
follows on from those containing his ten symphonies and
many orchestral pieces. It may be that this is not the
best place to start your collection of his works - my suggestion
would be Volume 2 - but the overall quality of the music is
undeniable.
CLASSICAL EDITOR'S RECORDING OF THE YEAR
British
Cello Concertos by John Joubert, Robert Simpson &
Christopher Wright - Raphael Wallfisch (cello)
BBC Ntl O Wales/William Boughton rec. 2013 LYRITA
SRCD344
Lyrita has been, as they say, part
of the soundtrack of my life since the 1970s when classical
music began to take its hold on me. I welcome this disc for
various reasons. It's among a small group of truly newly
recorded Lyritas - the first to appear in decades. It upholds
the label's finest traditions. The music is worthwhile: I was
especially gripped by the Wright and Joubert; the Simpson may
take longer. It's a no-compromise CD with long playing time and
three substantial concertos never previously recorded
commercially. Wright and Simpson are new to Lyrita but are
better than a good fit. There's no mainstream sweetener; no
concession to simple-minded commercialism. As for Raphael
Wallfisch his freshness and inspiration is a match for his
appetite for mapping out new cello concerto boundaries. The
performances, documentation and recording sides are exemplary.
The label's adherence to exploring and adventures in repertoire
is admirable and to be celebrated as is its continuing avoiding
of the obvious and the mainstream. We are sorry that Richard
Itter is no longer there - he died earlier this year - but on
this showing Lyrita has new energy and may well have agreeable
surprises in store.
Declaration of Interest: Recently I have been
acting as a repertoire sounding-board for Lyrita but have had no
role in relation to the present disc. RB