DOWNLOAD NEWS 2015/8
by Brian Wilson and Dan Morgan
Reviews are by Brian Wilson unless otherwise stated.
Download News 2015/7 is here
and the archive of earlier editions is here.
Index 2015/8:
BACH Keyboard Concertos – Staier/Müllejans_Harmonia Mundi; Woolley_Chandos
- Organ Works – Suzuki_BIS
- Cantatas 93, 119 and 163 – Lenz_Bach-Stiftung
- Cantatas 29, 119 and 120 – Herreweghe_Harmonia Mundi
- Cantatas for Ascension, Whitsun and Trinity – Richter_DG
Archiv
BEETHOVEN String Quartets, Op.18 – Jerusalem Quartet_Harmonia
Mundi
BÖHM, KERLL, KUHNAU, MUFFAT, PACHELBEL – see Weichlein
CAPORALE and GALLIARD Homage to Handel – von der
Golz/Küppers_Raumklang
COMPÈRE Magnificat, Motets and Chansons – Orlando Consort_Hyperion
GALLIARD Homage to Handel – see Caporale
GLAZUNOV The Seasons – Wolff (+ PROKOFIEV Piano
Concerto 2)_Beulah
HAHN Le Bal de Béatrice – Corp (+ POULENC)_Hyperion
- Le Bal de Béatrice; Divertissement; Concerto Provençal
– Chavin_Timpani
HANDEL in Italy 1 (Gloria, etc) – London Early Opera_Signum
HAYDN Symphonies 31, 70 and 101 – Ticciati_Linn
MOZART Piano Concertos 10, 18, 20, 22, 25 and 26 (arr. Hummel)
– Sigawa_BIS
- Piano Concertos 18 and 20 (arr. Hummel) – Miucci (fortepiano)_Dynamic
- Piano Concertos 20 and 21 – Schoonderwoerd (fortepiano)_Accent
- Piano Concertos 20 and 21 (arr. Lachner) – Goldstein_Naxos
- Die Zauberflöte – Klemperer_EMI/Warner; Karajan_EMI/Warner
- Opera Arias – Watts_Linn
PARRY Symphonies – Bamert_Chandos
- I was glad, etc. – Westminster Abbey/O’Donnell_Hyperion;
Bamert, Hickox_Chandos
PROKOFIEV Piano Concerto 2 – Frager (+ GLAZUNOV Seasons)_Beulah
- Symphonies 4 and 5 – Karabits_Onyx
SCHUMANN Piano Concerto; Piano Trio 2 – Melnikov_Harmonia Mundi
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony 10; Passacaglia – Nelsons_DG
SIBELIUS The Tempest, Tapiola, etc. – Kamu_BIS
STRAUSS Richard Four Last Songs, etc. – Schwarzkopf_Warner
TALLIS Ave, Dei patris filia, etc – Cardinall’s Musick_Hyperion
TCHAIKOVSKY Tchaikovsky’s Art 1-4 – Various_Beulah
TIPPETT A Child of our Time – Hickox_Chandos
VENABLES Song of the Severn – Williams_Signum
WEICHLEIN Encænia Musices – Capella Vitalis Berlin_Raumklang
- excerpts – Ensemble Masques (+ BÖHM, etc.)_Alpha
WHITLOCK, Luke Flowing Waters – Honyebourne, etc._Divine
Art
American Intersections – TwoPianists_ TwoPianists Records
Morgen! Romantic Lieder – Schuster_Oehms
***
Beulah Extra Pricing
Last month I mentioned that the price of single tracks from Beulah Extra
seemed to have risen sharply. I’m told that they haven’t but that some
of the links from their website eavb.co.uk
appear to have been redirected and that the correct links will be restored.
***
Loyset COMPÈRE (c.1445–1518)
Magnificat, Motets and Chansons
HYPERION CDA68069 [68:20] from hyperion-records.co.uk
(mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, all with pdf booklet, or on CD.) Texts
and translations included
For full details of and my thoughts on this recording by the Orlando
Consort, please see my review
on the main MWI pages:
‘Not, perhaps, the ideal introduction for those wishing to become interested
in the music of this period … for that you might be better to turn to
one of the many recordings which Gothic Voices made for Hyperion, now
reissued on their budget Helios label – but well worthwhile for lovers
of Josquin who want to know what went immediately before’.
Thomas TALLIS (c.1505-1585)
The
latest volume in the series of Tallis recordings from The Cardinall’s
Musick and Andrew Carwood again combines some of his Latin masterpieces
with his more restrained compositions for the reformed Church. On HYPERION
CDA68095 [71:51] we have performances of the Marian Ave, Dei
patris filia, Honor virtus et potestas, Homo quidam fecit
cœnam and other shorter Latin works together with the English Venite,
Te Deum and Benedictus for Mattins, the English Litany,
the Easter sentences, Christ rising again from the dead, and
two pieces from Archbishop Parker’s Psalm Tunes. Download in mp3, 16-
and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet containing texts and translations,
from hyperion-records.co.uk.
This is the fifth release in what must now be seen as a complete set
of recordings to rival the Signum set with Chapelle du Roi and Alistair
Dixon, available singly, including Volumes 1-8 as mp3 and lossless downloads
from Hyperion,
with booklets, or in a budget-price box from Brilliant Classics. Both
the Signum and the Hyperion booklets are excellent and are provided
with the Hyperion downloads of both, whereas the Qobuz offerings of
the Brilliant Classics set and of the individual Signum volumes come
without booklet, leaving listeners in the dark unless thoroughly conversant
with the Sarum Missal and Breviary and the 1549 and 1559 English Prayer
Books.
Don’t pass this latest release by because it contains so many of the
English settings. They may not be as impressive as their Latin counterparts
– it was Tallis’s younger colleague, Byrd, who showed how the new liturgy
could be set – but when performed by teams as good as Carwood’s and
Dixon’s they’re by no means to be sniffed at. They even make the Litany,
Tallis’s setting of which became the Anglican norm for centuries, sound
interesting. If the Hyperion recordings have the edge it’s because
they are available – and not for too much extra – in 24-bit sound.
Very good it is, too, even if it’s surprising that it’s 24/44.1 rather
than 24/96. If, however, you prefer music from roughly the same period
in Tallis’s career together, for example, with all Archbishop Parker’s
tunes on one CD rather than interspersed, the Signum recordings are
the better bet.
Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
A
new (rec. 2013) recording of the concertos for solo keyboard and orchestra,
BWV1052-1058, comes from Andreas Staier (harpsichord) with the Freiburg
Baroque Orchestra/Petra Müllejans (Harmonia Mundi HMC902181.82,
2 CDs, from eclassical.com,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet). The discs are due
to sell at mid-price – at 111:53 they are hardly over-filled – but the
eclassical.com per-second pricing policy means that the download is
still competitive. It doesn’t appear that the physical discs will be
offered as SACDs, so downloading is your only way to obtain 24-bit sound.
The performances are very fine. If I say that they are not over-assertive,
that is not meant as a criticism, nor is my observation that the recording,
too, is good without drawing attention to itself. The 24-bit is good
but even the mp3 is not far behind.
Richard Egarr’s earlier Harmonia Mundi recording, which also offered
the Triple Concerto, BWV1044 (with AAM/Andrew Manze, HMC90283.84),
is now download only. At $30.55 the eclassical.com
version is rather expensive; prestoclassical.co.uk
have it at £11.99 (mp3) or £14.99 (lossless). Neither offers the booklet.
In many respects my benchmark for these keyboard concertos remains the
Chandos set with Richard Woolley as soloist, with the augmented Purcell
Quartet, complete with wonderful Brueghel covers, but that spreads the
music across four albums, with other concertos, and comes in download
form only:
- CHAN0595: BWV1054, BWV1056, BWV1062 (for two harpsichords)
and the alternative version of Brandenburg Concerto No.5, BWV1050 –
from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet)
- CHAN0611: BWV1053, BWV1058, with BWV1064 (for three
harpsichords) and BWV1065 (for four harpsichords) – from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 only, with pdf booklet)
- CHAN0636: BWV1055, BWV1057 (for harpsichord and two
recorders), BWV1060 (for two harpsichords) and BWV1063 (for three harpsichords)
– from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet)
- CHAN0641: BWV1044 (for flute, violin and harpsichord),
BWV1052 and BWV1061 (for two harpsichords) – from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet)
The problem with these concertos is how to make the harpsichord audible
in tandem with the accompaniment and the solo strings on Chandos solve
that problem; though the engineers unfortunately recessed the soloist
on the first volume, that’s better than having an over-prominent solo
clanging away and the balance is much better on the other volumes.
The Freiburgers mostly field slightly larger forces – 3 each of first
and second violins, two each of violas and cellos – but with single
strings plus double bass in BWV1053.
Those for whom the harpsichord recalls Beecham’s comments about skeletons
copulating are well served by Angela Hewitt (piano) and Richard Tognetti
on Hyperion. Even though I prefer the period instrument for Bach, I
gladly make an exception for Ms Hewitt (CDA67607/8).
If
you thought that there was no more for Masaaki Suzuki to do by
way of promoting Bach, think again: hard on the heels of volume 1 of
the Short or Lutheran Masses – review
– review
– his latest recording for BIS contains a selection of the organ
music: inevitably opening with THE Toccata and Fugue, BWV565, but
also containing some less standard repertoire, all superbly played and
very well recorded, especially as heard in 24/96 format from eclassical.com.
(BIS-SACD-2111, also available on SACD and in mp3 and 16-bit
downloads, all with booklet). I was going to write a fuller review
for the main pages but Dan Morgan beat me to it – review
– thus saving me the necessity to give the detailed listing, which he
gives.
Many scholars doubt the attribution of BWV565 to Bach but no-one has,
to the best of my knowledge, identified the true composer. Albert Clements
in the excellent notes believes that “there are no decisive reasons
for ascribing it to anyone but Bach. It seems to be a juvenile work,
full of energy and expression. Its form points to the North German tradition,
recalling … the style of Dieterich Buxtehude [and] Georg Böhm”. I suppose
that won’t be the last word on the subject, but it convinces me, especially
as Suzuki’s performance is something very special. Whether you are
looking for an entrée to Bach’s organ music or an old Bach hand,
this is about as good as it gets.
I
have only just caught up with a new series of live recordings of the
Bach Cantatas as late as Volume 14, containing Nos. 119: Preise
Jerusalem den Herrn, 163: Nur jedem das Seine
and 93: Wer nur den lieben Gott läßt walten. As a small
bonus, No.119 concludes with a repeat of the alto aria Zuletzt! da
du uns, Herr, and an extra version of the final chorale with wind
accompaniment, composed by Thomas Leininger. Soloists are Miriam Feuersinger
(soprano), Jan Börner (alto), Julius Pfeifer (tenor) and Markus Volpert
(bass) with the Choir and Orchestra of the J.S.Bach-Stiftung directed
from the harpsichord by Rudolf Lenz. (J.S.Bach-Stiftung BSSG-B347
[58:34] – from eclassical.com,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet containing texts but
no translations). The Swiss group aim to perform all Bach’s choral
works over a period of 25 years. Download only in the UK but CDs can
be ordered from http://www.bachstiftung.ch/shop/dvd-cd-mp3/cds/
Can performances like these compete with established series from Teldec/Warner
(Harnoncourt and Leonhardt, also still available as part of the USB
Complete Bach), Gardiner (SDG), Hänssler (Rilling) and BIS (the recently
completed Suzuki recordings) or with the super-bargain Brilliant Classics
(94365, 50CDs* or as downloads, around 15 hours each for around
£8.00 each in mp3 or £10 in lossless – sample/stream/download from Qobuz;
download from prestoclassics.co.uk: no booklet from either)?
I
compared No.119 with one of the recordings from the incomplete series
which Philippe Herreweghe made with Collegium Vocale: Nos. 29,
199 and 120 on Harmonia Mundi HMC901690 – from eclassical.com
or classicsonlinehd.com,
mp3 or 16-bit lossless, NO booklet from either. It can also be streamed
by subscribers from classicsonlinehd or Qobuz
– again, no booklet from the latter. Herreweghe’s soloists are Deborah
Yorke, Ingeborg Danz, Mark Padmore and Peter Kooy. Surprisingly, there’s
not much in it: in some respects the Bach-Stiftung capture the celebratory
tone of this cantata, composed for a municipal occasion, slightly better
than Herreweghe and his team, though the solo singing is more secure
on Harmonia Mundi. In very crude terms, Lenz paints in broad brush-strokes,
occasionally missing the details thereby, whereas Herreweghe gives us
the details sometimes at the expense of the bigger picture. Overall
I enjoyed both. Though the Harmonia Mundi comes without booklet and
the Bach-Stiftung without translation, for once that isn’t a major problem:
the texts and translations of the Bach cantatas are readily available
online.
I’ve only dipped into the Brilliant series, having been cautious
of the hype that it has received, but I enjoyed their recording of No.93
so much that I carried on listening to No.94.
I
also dug out the DG Archiv set of Ascensiontide, Whitsuntide
and Trinity Cantatas directed by Karl Richter. Deliberate tempi
apart, by comparison with modern recordings, there’s a great deal to
enjoy here: in fact, this is still my benchmark, not least for the solo
singing, especially that of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (4393802)**.
Once again I couldn’t stop after No.93: Richter’s account of No.147,
with the famous central chorale Jesus bleibet meine Freude (Jesu,
joy of man’s desiring), which follows is superb. Though Richter is
consistently slower than Lenz (7:48 against 6:00 in the first chorus,
for example) there is never any feeling that the music is dragging.
In fact even Lenz is comparatively slow in this chorus – 5:27 from Harnoncourt
on Teldec and 5:18 from Rilling (Hänssler). Indeed Lenz rather falls
between two stools here: if I prefer both the way that Harnoncourt moves
the music along without hurrying it and Richter’s way of caressing it
without dragging, however, that didn’t prevent me from liking Lenz’s
performance overall.
All the recordings that I have considered have their merits, then, not
least the new recording and if the coupling appeals there should be
no reason not to choose it except that the linguistically challenged
will find that the notes are in German only, as are the texts.
It will be apparent that I had something of a field day with the Bach
keyboard concertos and cantatas and enjoyed every minute of it. I could
have gone on and added Sigiswald Kuijken’s No.93, with Nos. 135 and
177 in another series that I like (Accent ACC25302) but, as Ecclesiastes
reminds us, ‘to every thing there is a season … and much study is a
weariness of the flesh’, so I shall leave that until another time, lest
I become as tedious as Ecclesiastes and start to enlighten you with
gems such as ‘a living dog is better than a dead lion’ (9.4).
* £66.50 from Amazon
UK
** I bought all the boxes in the DG Richter series when they were available
inexpensively: now they are download only and likely to be more expensive
in that format, without booklet, than they were in box sets. Prestoclassical.co.uk
offer mp3 and lossless and the set can be streamed from Qobuz.
Amazon
UK have a few sets left on CD at the time of writing. Snap them
up: Richter’s Bach is still well worth preserving. Sample his No.93
on YouTube.
Some dealers still have the DG Galleria release of Nos. 51, 93 and 129
(4271152).
George Friderick HANDEL (1685-1759)
Handel
in Italy: Volume 1 is the first of a planned series of six releases,
including a second Italian volume and two each of Handel in Vauxhall
and Handel in Ireland. On the evidence of this first release,
it should be a series well worth following. Sophie Bevan, Mary Bevan
(soprano), Benjamin Bevan (baritone) with London Early Opera/Bridget
Cunningham (Signum SIGCD423 [43:00] – from
hyperion-records.co.uk mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet).
Though Signum’s publicity material suggests otherwise, the main item
and the principal interest here lies in the Gloria which Handel
composed in Italy and then, most uncharacteristically for someone who
preserved all his own music, lost. It was not until 2000 that the work
was rediscovered – 2009 edition of score available
free here – and, soon afterwards, received its first recording from
Emma Kirkby with the Royal Academy Baroque Orchestra and Laurence Cummings
(BIS-CD-1235). On that CD the Gloria was somewhat mismatched
with an earlier recording with different forces of Handel’s Dixit
Dominus: it remains a half-success – review
– DL
News 2013/8.
Emma Kirkby re-recorded the Gloria, again for BIS, this time
coupled with Neun Deutsche Arien – a less logical coupling in
terms of content but preferable in offering an all-Kirby programme (BIS-CD-1615
– DL
News September 2011/2). That second recording remains my benchmark
for the Gloria, one which, for all the virtues of the new recording,
remains unassailed.
I should also mention another Emma Kirkby recording which I reviewed
at the same time as her second take of the Gloria: though it’s
entitled Handel in Italy, there is no overlap with the new Signum
CD of the same title. Ms Kirkby’s enticing earlier recording of cantatas
which Handel composed in Italy – again, no overlaps – remains available
at lower-mid-price on Australian Decca Eloquence 4767468 – review.
Subscribers to Qobuz can stream all these recordings and others can
sample – but don’t pay £11.56 to download the Eloquence recording there
when the CD sells for around £7.50.
There’s yet another highly recommendable recording with the Handel
in Italy title, this time featuring Roberta Invernizzi (soprano)
with la Risonanza directed by Fabio Bonizzoni (Glossa GCDP10002,
2 CDs, mid-price, a 2011 reissue of earlier recordings from 2005 and
2006 –DL
Roundup March 2009 and DL
News 2013/13). There are some overlaps with the Kirkby recordings,
but none with the new Signum.
The new Signum recording is an all-Bevan-family affair, with Sophie
Bevan bearing the heat of the day in the Gloria. She gives a
very fine account of herself and is very well supported. If the Signum
programme – and price: see below – appeals, I see no reason not to go
for it. Confirmed Kirkby-ites, however, of whom I am one – see my recent Seen and Heard review – will certainly prefer her brighter,
purer sound.
If you wish to do the comparison for yourself, both versions are available
on Qobuz – here
and here
– ignore the information given there that the Gloria is from
Missa Sapientiæ, HWV245, a work ‘formerly attributed to Handel’,
a piece of misinformation which I see perpetuated on some other websites.
HWV245 actually refers to a Kyrie and a different Gloria
once attributed to Handel but actually by Lotti.
Those in search of a budget alternative may be tempted by a Naxos CD
which duplicates the repertoire of the second Emma Kirkby recording:
Dorothea Craxton with a small ensemble (8.572587 – review).
There’s much to enjoy there but I cannot recommend economising when
the BIS/Kirkby recording is so good. The same is true of a recording
of theGloria on the Lyrichord label with Julianne Baird and The
Queen’s Chamber Band (LEMS8055, with Mi palpita il cor,Pastorella
vaga bella and Keyboard Suite No.3) which, in any case, seems not
to be generally available in the UK except streamed from Naxos
Music Library, with booklet. (Amazon UK have one used copy).
Mary Bevan features in only two short pieces. Though attractively sung,
they hardly affect the issue and there are alternative recordings of
the keyboard sonata on all-Handel or mainly-Handel recordings. It was
apparently intended to be played by two harpsichords or on a two-manual
instrument, though these were rare in Italy at the time.
The Hyperion download takes account of the rather short playing time:
mp3 and 16-bit cost just £4.99 and even the 24-bit is only £7.50. Ignore
the iTunes purchase button: why pay more there for mp3 than you would
for 24-bit lossless from Hyperion? Similarly, though subscribers to
Qobuz can
stream and others can sample from there, I don’t recommend paying £7.99
for their download, which appears to come without booklet.
My Discovery of the Month is a new album from Raumklang
(RK3302) entitled Homage to G F Handel: it contains
not his own music but that of two contemporaries who were associated
with him in London, the Italian Francis Caporale and the Saxon
Johann Galliard. The stylish performers are Kristin von der
Golz (cello) and Andreas Küppers (harpsichord and organ). The music
may not have the last degree of genius of Handel – Dr Burney rather
unfairly called Caporale ‘no deep musician’ – but it’s certainly in
similar style. Caporale even followed Handel’s example in changing
his first name from Francesco to its English equivalent and some of
his sonatas were interpolated in the latter’s Parnasso in Festa.
With good recording, especially in 24-bit, the only thing missing from
the eclassical.com
download or the streamed version from Qobuz
is a booklet.
Another recent Raumklang release earned Recording of the Month
status from David Barker: Romanus (Andreas) WEICHLEIN Encænia
Musices (1695). The performers, Capella Vitalis Berlin, demonstrate
that this music is a light unfairly hidden under a bushel. (RK3401
– review).
From eclassical.com
(mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless) whence, in this case, we have the all-important
booklet, also available with the streamed version from Qobuz.
The word encænia means ‘celebration’ – it’s a pseudo-Graeco-Latin
name given at Oxford to the award of honorary doctorates and to the
ensuing slap-up High Tea, but Weichlein seems to intend it to mean ‘dedication’
or ‘offering’. If Emperor Leopold I’s musicians played as well as capella
vitalis – their preferred lower-case spelling – he would have been well
served at his celebrations and banquets.
By one of those coincidences, like London buses there’s another new
recording of four of the sonatas from Encænia Musices, together
with music by Kuhnau, Böhm, Pachelbel, Kerll and Muffat, from Ensemble
Masques/Olivier Fortin, with assistance from Skip Sempé, on Alpha.
At the time of writing only Qobuz
were offering this – it’s due for release on CD in September 2015 –
doubtless eclassical.com will have it in due course (ALPHA212).
With two very fine recordings to his name, now it’s time that some of
Weichlein’s sacred choral music was recorded.
Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
We
may no longer think of Haydn as the Father of the Symphony but he was
the first great exponent of the form and there’s nary a dud in all his
output of 104+ symphonies. Robin Ticciati and the Scottish Chamber
Orchestra bring us three selected works in D from this vast output,
all of them well worth hearing and, since they mark several stages in
his development, forming a first-class introduction to his symphonic
output. (CKD500 [77:04] due in late September 2015 – from hyperion-records.co.uk
in mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless and from linnrecords.com
in these formats plus SACD and vinyl. Pdf booklet included).
No.31, nicknamed Hornsignal for good reasons, belongs to his
middle Sturm und Drang period, though it’s not the fieriest example
of the style. No.70 was composed for the rebuilding of the burned-down
Esterháza Opera House and No.101, the Clock, belongs to the second
set of the symphonies composed for Salomon, usually known as the London
symphonies. The performances are very good and the recording, made
as recently as February 2015, is of Linn’s usual high standard, as is
the booklet, included with the download: I didn’t know, for example,
that Eisenstadt, the home of Haydn’s employers, also had a Hungarian
name, Kismarton.
The SCO play as well as they did for Sir Charles Mackerras, whose performances
of the late Mozart symphonies have become modern classics of the recorded
repertoire, and for Elizabeth Watts and Christian Baldini on their recent
album of Mozart arias*, while Robin Ticciati has a sure sense of the
music.
Only those insisting on period instruments need look elsewhere and even
they should not be too disappointed.
The next stop for those discovering Haydn symphonies from this selection
should be a complete set of the London symphonies, Nos. 93-104
– of those listed in MWI
Recommends my own favourites are Beecham (EMI/Warner, two 2-CD sets:
first half in mono, but still sounding well), Colin Davis (Philips,
two 2-CD sets) and Jochum (DG, download only, with Nos.88 and 91 and
two versions of No.98).
* Recording of the Month : CKD460 – review.
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Mozart himself made scaled-down versions of some of his piano concertos,
for domestic performance. No.20 (K466) and No.21 (K467) were
not among them, but Ignaz Lachner did the honours for these two works
and Alon Goldstein has recorded these arrangements with the Fine Arts
Quartet.
These would not be my prime recommendations but I very much enjoyed
hearing them and recommended the CD as an adjunct to the originals –
review. (NAXOS 8.573398 – stream or download from
classicsonlinehd.com or Qobuz:
both offer 16- and 24-bit and come with pdf booklet. Non-subscribers
can sample from each of these sources.
If you wish to explore further chamber-scale arrangements of Mozart’s
Piano Concertos, BIS offer Hummel’s arrangements of Nos. 10 (for two
pianos), 18, 20, 22, 25 and 26 and Symphony No.40 for piano, flute,
violin and cello, with Fumiko Sigawa as soloist. These are available
separately or the four-disc set is on offer as a bundle for $18.69 (BIS-CD-9043
from eclassical.com
– mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet). Sample or stream from Qobuz.
More
recently Dynamic have released performances of Hummel’s arrangements
of Nos. 18 and 20 with the title Mozart after Mozart.
Leonardo Miucci plays the solo parts on a fortepiano. (CDS7723
[64:22] – from eclassical.com,
mp3 and 16-bit lossless). Sample/stream/download from Qobuz. No booklet
from either.
The use of a fortepiano means that there is no danger of the keyboard
instrument being over-prominent in these stylish performances.
There is another recommendable pair of performances of Nos. 20 and 21
with fortepiano, performed by Arthur Schoonderwoerd with Cristoferi:
Byzantion made this Recording of the Month – review
(Accent ACC24265 – from eclassical.com,
mp3 and 16-bit lossless, NO booklet, or classicsonlinehd.com,
with pdf booklet). Cristoferi are a small group – one each of first
and second violins, cello and bass, two violas, etc., so not much larger
than the Hummel and Lachner arrangements.
Reviewing the recent Opus Arte blu-ray release of the 2013 Salzburg
Festival production of Così fan Tutte – review pending – started
me thinking which of the mature Mozart operas would be my Desert Island
choice.
Having
decided that it would have to be die Zauberflöte, the
choice of recording was easy, though I’m surprised that none of my colleagues
chose it for MWI
Recommends – Otto Klemperer with a cast so starry that it even extended
to the minor roles of the Three Ladies. (Warner/EMI 9667932)
This remains my benchmark whatever other versions I like: the direction
is sure, the singing ideal, the recording still sounds well and the
excision of dialogue ideal for an audio production. It’s available
to stream or download from Qobuz
and it even comes with the 50-page booklet, albeit without the libretto:
even on the CD set that comes not in print but on a bonus disc. Non-subscribers
can sample from Qobuz. If you’re happy with 320kbs mp3, 7digital.com
have this for £8.99, also with pdf booklet and
sainsburysentertainment.co.uk for £7.49 without booklet.
Many years ago I owned Herbert von Karajan’s 1950 mono recording. If
anything that’s even better cast than the Klemperer and it also comes
complete on two CDs without dialogue. The sound is dated – the suggestion
in the last complete edition of the Penguin Guide that it has worn well
is egging the pudding, though the voices come over well – but I enjoyed
rehearing this from Qobuz. At £15.20, however, their download price
is not competitive when the CDs can be obtained in plain packaging for
around £8 – less than £7 from one dealer as I write (Warner/EMI Historical
3367692).
Incidentally, that Salzburg Così might not be your benchmark
choice, but it’s well worth considering: don’t be put off by reports
of under-rehearsal or of the first night audience booing Christoph Eschenbach
because they had originally expected Franz Welser-Möst to conduct.
The whirligig of time has made Welser-Möst as justifiably loved in Austria
as he was unjustly disliked in London a few years ago.
For those in search of a more modern recording – not that the Klemperer
is too dated – Claudio Abbado on DG has generally received more praise
than
it did from Robert J Farr – review.
As I wrote in DL
Roundup August 2010, this is an excellent modern alternative to
the Klemperer. Ignore the passionato.com link – they are no longer
in the download business: 7digital.com
have it in 320kbs mp3 for £11.99 from and amazon.co.uk
for £10.39 at, I presume, 256kbs.
A recording of Mozart Opera Arias and Overtures sung by Elizabeth
Watts (soprano) with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Christian Baldini
was my Recording of the Month on the main MWI pages: Linn
CKD460 – review.
My only reservation is that there is nothing here from Zauberflöte
– perhaps Ms Watts will give us that later.
The download from hyperion-records.co.uk
comes in mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless formats, complete with pdf booklet,
and from linnrecords.com
in the same formats plus SACD and 24/192.
Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
The
six String Quartets, Op.18 (1801), were among the earliest indications
that here was a composer speaking in his own voice. He was only just
beginning to grow away from Haydn and Mozart but there were already
aspects of these quartets that puzzled his contemporaries. Later puzzlement
would turn to perplexity with the middle-period quartets and sheer bafflement
with the late masterpieces and it’s easy for modern listeners who have
heard and absorbed these later works to miss the novelties of Op.18.
A new recording from the Jerusalem Quartet (Harmonia Mundi
HMC902207/08 [153:07] – from eclassical.com,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet) comes up against strong
competition: Quartetto Italiano (Quartets 1-16, Philips 4540622,
10 CDs or Op.18 only E4758252, download only), Takács Quartet
(Decca 4708482, 2 CDs), Endellion Quartet (Quartets 1-16, Warner
2564694713, 10 CDs) and an earlier Harmonia Mundi release from
the Tokyo Quartet (HMU907436/37, 2-for-1). There are more details
about the competition in my review
of the Wihan Quartet on Nimbus Alliance, a set which I liked but
didn’t think quite got the point that Beethoven was seeking to out-Haydn
his erstwhile mentor.
The Jerusalem Quartet have won prizes for their Haydn and Mozart and
the similarities to those composers are apparent in their playing, but
they also deliver the extra that Beethoven put into these works to differentiate
himself from his predecessors. What gives them the edge over the other
recordings mentioned is the availability of (very good) 24-bit sound,
but only as a download – sadly, it appears that Harmonia Mundi and Chandos
are beginning to back away from offering all their new releases on hybrid
SACD. With that 24/96 advantage, the new recording is likely to become
my benchmark for these quartets.
At the time of writing 24-bit is available at no extra cost from eclassical.com
– one of their short-term offers which are well worth checking out.
Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
Most
of the recommended recordings of the Schumann Piano Concerto in a
minor, Op.54, couple it with the Grieg or Tchaikovsky, so it’s refreshing
when one is released with more music by Schumann, like that of Angela
Hewitt and Hannu Lintu (Hyperion CDA67885 –
review –
review – DL
Roundup August 2012/1: Recording of the Month).
Harmonia Mundi have been teaming violinist Isabelle Faust, pianist Alexander
Melnikov and cellist Pablo Heras-Cassado for a series of three recordings
of Schumann’s concertos and piano trios: each disc contains a different
soloist with all three in a trio. On the second in the series it’s
the turn of Alexander Melnikov to star in the Piano Concerto with the
Piano Trio No.2 in F, Op.80, as the coupling. Melnikov plays the fortepiano
and his partners also perform on period instruments, while the support
is provided by the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra (Harmonia Mundi HMC902198
– from eclassical.com,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet). Sample or stream from
Qobuz.
I’ve never been quite persuaded by the virtuoso performances of this
concerto, which is one reason why I enjoyed Hewitt’s more thoughtful
approach so much. Like her, Melnikov adopts a slow tempo for the finale
(12:14, even slower than Hewitt’s 11:38 and much slower than Leif Ove
Andsnes’ 10:13*) but both make their slightly understated accounts seem
very effective. If I hadn’t had other recordings to compare, I might
well have thought this joyful account the only way to play it. If you
want power, there’s that, too, in the right places – try the end of
the first movement. Fortepiano haters need not worry – this 1837 Erard
makes a mellifluous sound but blends with the orchestra most satisfyingly.
With a fine account of the Piano Trio No.2 and very good recording to
match, this is a most welcome follow-up to the Violin Concerto in Volume
1 (HMC902196 – review:
also available from eclassical.com
in mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless).
* EMI/Warner. Qobuz offer this at £12.73 and £7.14. The CD can be
had for under £7. Logic?
Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Four recent releases from Beulah, entitled Tchaikovsky’s Art,
restore some vintage recordings to the catalogue:
- 1PDR16: Capriccio Italien (RCA SO/Kondrashin,
stereo 1958), Marche Slave (Chicago SO/Reiner, stereo 1959) and
Symphony No.4 (Paris Conservatoire O/Wolff, 1959 stereo) – from
Amazon UK or iTunes
- 2PDR15: Piano Concerto No.1 (Katchen; LSO/Gamba, mono
1955), Manfred Symphony (LSO/Goossens, stereo 1959) – from
Amazon UK or iTunes
- 3PDR16: Serenade for strings (BBCSO/Boult,
78s, 1937), Sérénade mélancolique (Kogan; Philharmonia/Kondrashin,
stereo 1960), Violin Concerto (Oistrakh; Dresden Staatskapelle/Konwitschny,
mono 1954) – from
Amazon UK or iTunes
- 4PDR16: 1812 Overture (Morton Gould and Orchestra,
stereo 1960), Romeo and Juliet (NBCSO/Toscanini, 78s, 1946),Nutcracker
and Swan Lake Suites (RPO/Weldon, stereo 1960) – from
Amazon UK or iTunes
Some
of these are available elsewhere, but less conveniently coupled: for
example, the David Oistrakh Violin Concerto forms part of a DG
Originals 2-CD set with Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. Here that classic
recording receives the usual excellent Beulah transfer. There’s no
hiding its dated source: it doesn’t open out as recordings of only a
few years later did, but that didn’t interfere with my enjoyment of
this old friend. I compared the DG transfer from Qobuz – where, incidentally,
the asking price of £16.50 is about £5 more than you would pay for the
CDs – and though the sound is slightly lighter there, overall there’s
little to choose between the two.
If the Beulah coupling appeals, go for it. I was particularly interested
to hear Sir Adrian Boult’s lively account of the String Serenade
because I’ve just been listening to Antal Doráti’s 1958 version with
Philharmonia Hungarica (The Doráti Edition ADE048, with Dvorák
Symphony No.9 – review).
Both are lighter-toned than I recall Barbirolli’s rather more impassioned
but not over-done account (with Arensky, sadly no longer available in
any format) and both are enjoyable in their own terms. Sometimes I
think Boult is a little too fast – I see that the anonymous reviewer
in Gramophone in 1940 thought so, too – but that’s better than a wallowing
over-emotional approach to Tchaikovsky; this is a serenade after all,
not a symphony and the Elegy receives plenty of emotional weight. The
1937 78 sound has transferred very well – thinner than the Violin Concerto
but perfectly tolerable: can it really be that old? Together they make
Volume 3 well worthwhile.
Less
worth reviving was Albert Wolff’s recording of Symphony No.4.
The sound is not especially good considering its later provenance than
the Violin Concerto and Serenade, with very wavery brass at the opening
getting us off to a hesitant start – perhaps that’s the fault of the
players rather than the recording. I was surprised to see Wolff even
being chosen to record Tchaikovsky – he was much more at home in Glazunov,
below – and I fear that the gamble didn’t pay off, so it’s a shame that
this was coupled with Kondrashin’s fine Capriccio Italien
– much better value here than when paired with just the Rimsky Capriccio
Espagnol on an RCA LP – or Reiner’s idiomatic Marche Slave
which, fortunately, remains available on RCA/Sony Living Stereo 88697700732.
The Capriccio was till recently available on RCA Living
Stereo, with Khachaturian and Kabalevsky, now download only – from Qobuz
but somewhat pricey at £10.29. If you are happy with 320kb/s mp3, sainsburysentertainment.co.uk
have the Kondrashin for £6.99 – here – and the Reiner for the same price – here.
Decca chose the Clifford Curzon recording of Piano Concerto No.1
rather than Julius Katchen and Pierino Gamba for their Decca Sound box
set of The Analogue Years 1954-1968 but I enjoyed 2PDR15
particularly for the sheer exuberance of the solo playing. The recording,
though over-shrill when the orchestra are at full blast, still sounds
well enough not to spoil the enjoyment.
The
performance of the Manfred Symphony by Sir Eugene Goossens,
recorded by Everest, has been in and out of the UK catalogue over the
years, mostly out, so the Beulah reissue is very welcome. It stems
from the bad old days when less popular works like this – and I’ve never
understood why even the composer under-rated this symphony – were treated
to wholesale cuts* but, that apart, it receives a fine performance.
The alternative, which Toscanini followed, was to touch up the orchestration;
Goossens’ cuts are preferable to that and the performance makes a very
good case for the work in a recording that still sounds well.
* 41:19 as against 57:46 from Petrenko with the RLPO (Naxos) and 59:02
from Jurowski (LPO). Surprisingly there are 39 CD available recordings
of the Manfred Symphony now.
Morton
Gould’s RCA 1812 Overture was not the first to be recorded
with bells and cannon – Mercury and Antal Doráti got there first, in
mono and later in stereo – but it was hailed at the time as possibly
the noisiest LP ever made, the aural equivalent of those Sunday evening
performances in the Albert Hall complete with soot and smoke. On Mercury
the cannon were synchronised with the music and did not override the
reprise of the Marseillaise which marks the French response –
it may have been futile but it deserves to be heard. On the other hand,
Gould’s bells sound more ‘Russian’.
The Deems Taylor commentary on the Doráti recording is tedious after
the first hearing and should have been excised from the Mercury CD,
as it was from the ClassicFM budget transfer of the recording, with
Dutoit’s Capriccio Italien and Francesca da Rimini – sample/stream/purchase
from Qobuz.
Both Gould and Doráti are exciting and both still sound well, with the
Beulah transfer satisfying, as usual.
I’m pleased to have the Toscanini Romeo and Juliet, vigorous
but also yearningly beautiful and in surprisingly good sound for its
age, though what I take to be the last 78 side sounds harsher than the
rest.
The bulk of this reissue, almost 44 minutes, is taken up with George
Weldon’s stylishly directed Suites from Nutcracker and Swan
Lake, which filled a whole LP when first released and costing 22/6
on HMV Concert Classics (£1.23 – a budget label, but around £30 in modern
terms)*, so it’s well worth having the Beulah reissue for these alone.,
especially as the Swan Lake selection offers a little more than
the standard Suite. The recording is a little bright but has come up
well.
* when the stereo was released a year later, the price had risen to
28/3 (£1.42). Though the Gramophone reviewer deemed that ‘excellent
value for money’, as an undergraduate even buying a ‘cheap’ LP represented
a significant outlay.
Another
Beulah release deserves the Reissue of the Month accolade
– 7PD11: Russian Masters 6 – features Malcolm Frager (piano)
with the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra and René Leibowitz (stereo 1960)
in Prokofiev Piano Concerto No.2 and Albert Wolff, again with
the Paris Conservatoire, in Glazunov The Seasons (stereo
1956).
Frager had a reputation for his Prokofiev, but this recording of Piano
Concerto No.2 seems not to have been released in the UK, though recorded
by Decca engineers for RCA and nominated for a Grammy. Cyprès released
a 12-CD set of winners of the Queen Elisabeth Competition which included
this same concerto, differently accompanied.
I understand that the transfer was made from a mint copy of a US LP;
it certainly sounds good and does justice to one of the best performances
ever of this concerto.
The Seasons is delectable music and Wolff and the PCO are much
more at home here than in Tchaikovsky. There’s a Decca Eloquence reissue
but that’s tied up in a 2-CD set and the Beulah transfer of the John
Culshaw recording has been well made. Hitherto my favourite version,
also Decca, has been the Ansermet which I was pleased to re-encounter
on Decca Eloquence (4800038 – review)
but I rather think that Wolff has a slight edge, especially as you may
not want everything on that 2-CD Eloquence set. Only those seeking
an all-Glazunov coupling or a more energetic performance, slightly at
the expense of the charm, need turn to Neeme Järvi on Chandos CHAN8596,
with the SNO and Oscar Shumsky in the Violin Concerto – from theclassicalshop.net (mp3
and lossless).
Recording of the Month
Sir (Charles) Hubert PARRY (1848-1918)
A
new recording from Westminster Abbey Choir and Onyx Brass directed by
James O’Donnell contains I was glad (arr. Grayston Ives), the
CoronationTe Deum (arr. Ives), the Evensong canticles from the
Great Service in D, Jerusalem (arr. Wicks), Dear Lord and
Father of mankind,Blest pair of sirens and the Fantasia and
Fugue in G, performed by Daniel Cook (organ). (HYPERION CDA68089
[78:52] – from hyperion-records.co.uk,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless with pdf booklet containing texts.)
With Parry’s music at the heart of the Anglican musical tradition and
the Westminster Abbey Choir one of its major exponents, this latest
co-operation between the Abbey, James O’Donnell and Hyperion is virtually
self-recommending for those to whom the repertoire appeals. I could
almost have recommended this unheard and the result is just as good
as I expected. Of many fine recordings this month I’ve selected this
as my first choice. The 24-bit recording does splendid justice to these
uplifting performances – who said that Parry was boring?
Don’t overlook two other valuable Parry recordings from Hyperion and
one from Chandos, unfortunately involving some duplication, which I
reviewed in September
2012/2.
Another
Chandos recording of Parry well worth considering, a 2-for-1 offer contains:
Invocation to Music; The Soul’s Ransom; The Lotos-Eaters; Blest pair
of Sirens and I was glad. The performers are: Anne Dawson,
Arthur Davies, Brian Rayner Cook, Della Jones, David Wilson-Johnson,
London Philharmonic Choir, London Philharmonic Orchestra/Matthias Bamert
and London Symphony Chorus, London Symphony Orchestra/Richard Hickox
(CHAN241-31 [79:55 + 74:19] – from the classicalshop.net, mp3
and lossless, with pdf booklet).
This is the only recording of The Soul’s Ransom and The Lotos-Eaters;
the performances – mostly from Bamert – are idiomatic and the DDD recordings
from 1988, 1991 and 1992 are excellent. Just one reservation: the two
Hickox items, Blest pair of Sirens and I was glad, also
appear on the recent 2-for-1 reissue of Elgar’s Gerontius (CHAN241-46
– review).
Matthias Bamert’s 3-CD Chandos set of the Parry Symphonies is another
essential purchase for lovers of a composer whose music has begun to
come into its own (CHAN9120 – from theclassicalshop.net,
mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet – DL
Roundup July 2011/2).
Jean SIBELIUS (1865-1957)
The Tempest (1925, arr. 1927) [46:02]
Overture, Op. 109 No. 1 [7:12]
Suite No. 1, Op. 109 No. 2 [22:18]
Suite No. 2, Op. 109 No. 3 [16:10]
The Bard, Op. 64 (1913) [7:01]
Tapiola, Op. 112 (1926) [17:36]
Lahti Symphony Orchestra/Okko Kamu
rec. January 2011, Sibelius Hall, Lahti, Finland
Pdf booklet included
BIS BIS-1945 SACD [71:41] – from eclassical.com
(mp3, 16- & 24-bit lossless)
With
Okko Kamu waiting in the wings with his second recording of the Sibelius
symphonies what better curtain raiser than his fairly recent accounts
of The Tempest, The Bard and the late masterpiece Tapiola?
The first was written for a new production of Shakespeare’s play in
Copenhagen. Here we have the abridged version, in the form of an overture
and two suites that Sibelius put together in 1927. All the incidental
music, with the Lahti orchestra under Osmo Vänskä, is available on BIS
581.
This score, one of the composer’s last substantial works, is also considered
to be among his best. And listening to this characterful performance
it’s not hard to see why. Kamu is not one to overplay his hand, and
that’s just what this delightful, often airy, music needs. The overture
and storm are judiciously done, but that doesn’t mean they want for
drama. The Lahti band is in fine form, and while the recording is more
than adequate it sounds warmer and more soft-edged than I’d expected
from this venue.
Despite its title The Bard, composed in 1913, has nothing to
do with our esteemed playwright; as Andrew Barnett points out in his
succinct liner-notes some believe the piece is based on a poem by Johan
Ludvig Runeberg (1804-1877). Whatever its inspiration Sibelius’s tone
poem has some lovely, diaphanous things in it; chief among these is
Leena Saarenpää’s gorgeous harp playing. However, I’m less enthusiastic
about Kamu’s Tapiola. Those big, distinctive tunes are boldly
drawn and there’s real sinew here, but taken in toto Kamu’s reading
feels somewhat fitful. This isn’t a bad performance; it’s just not a
memorable one.
The first two pieces fare best; Tapiola is a tad disappointing.
Dan Morgan
(Even the slight disapppointments in Kamu’s Sibelius are well worth
hearing - and I didn't find Tapiola too much below par. One extra
plus point: the eclassical download is inexpensive, even in 24-bit format.
Please see also January
2012/2 and review
by Rob Barnett. [BW])
Reynaldo HAHN (1875-1947)
We
already had a fine recording of Le Bal de Béatrice d’Este from
the New London Orchestra and Ronald Corp (Hyperion Helios CDH55167
– DL
Roundup September 2011/1) but that’s coupled with music by Poulenc
– Aubade and Sinfonietta. There are only a few copies
of the CD left and the download from hyperion-records.co.uk
(mp3, alac or flac with pdf booklet) has gone up, like the whole series,
to £7.99. That’s still decent value if you want the excellent Poulenc
coupling, though I’m sorry that Hyperion have had to abandon their budget-price
Helios series, with the last reissues on that label appearing in Spring
2015. If you hurry, some dealers still have Helios releases for around
£6.50.
Now Timpani, who have been bringing us a good deal of fine recordings
of French repertoire of the twentieth century, have recorded Le Bal
de Béatrice in an all-Hahn album, with Divertissement pour une
fête de nuit, Sérénade and Concerto provençal. The performers
are Julien Vern (flute), François Lemoine (clarinet), Frank Sibold (bassoon),
Julien Desplanque (horn), Ensemble Initium and the Orchestre des Pays
de Savoie/Nicolas Chavin. (1C1231 [69:42] – from eclassical.com,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless: NO booklet). The lack of a booklet presents
a problem: it’s not available with the 16- and 24-bit versions from
classicsonlinehd.com, either, but subscribers to Qobuz
will find it there. Normally the problem stems from the record label
but in this case one web site offers the booklet, so why not all?
I’d be hard pressed to choose between the performances and recording.
As the Hahn couplings, so redolent of warm nights in the Midi some time
in an idealised past – think of Respighi’s Ancient Airs and Dances
– are just as enticing as the Poulenc works on Helios I’m going to be
unhelpful and suggest that you need both.
Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)
The third volume of Kirill Karabits’ recordings of Prokofiev brings
the contrasting Symphonies Nos. 4 in C, Op.47, and 5 in B-flat, Op.100,
together with the short Dreams, Op.6. (ONYX4147
[77:22] – from eclassical.com,
mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, NO booklet). Earlier instalments offered
Nos. 1 and 2 (Onyx4139 – review)
and 3 and 7 (Onyx4137 – review
– review).
Like John Quinn I enjoyed this latest release – review
– which makes me inclined to investigate the rest of the series.
I had already out together my thoughts about this recording when Dan
Morgan sent me his quite different take on it:
Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)
Symphony No. 5 in B flat, Op.100 (1944) [43:59]
Symphony No. 4 in C, Op.47 (1930) [23:17]
Dreams, Op.6 (1910) [9:50]
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra/Kirill Karabits
rec. 2014, The Lighthouse, Poole, Dorset, UK
No booklet
ONYX 4147 [77:28] – from eclassical.com
(mp3, 16- & 24-bit lossless)
BIS
supremo Robert von Bahr is one of the very few record bosses who contribute
to online forums and respond to listeners’ queries and criticisms. One
of the latter concerned this new Prokofiev release, which first appeared
on eclassical in mp3 and 16-bit form only. Sure enough the 24-bit files
soon appeared. That’s the good news; the bad is that there’s no booklet,
which is unforgivable. I’ve been banging away about such omissions for
ages, so it’s dispiriting that most labels still couldn’t be bothered
to include notes with their downloads. Onyx are just plain arbitrary
about this, as they offer a booklet with Symphonies 3 and 7 but not
with Nos. 1 and 2.
Now that’s out of the way let’s concentrate on the music. John Quinn,
who has been following the Karabits series on the main site, was pretty
positive about this latest instalment (review).
Most recently I had the pleasure of hearing Andrew Litton’s BIS recording
of the Fifth, which I compared with Sakari Oramo’s for Ondine (review).
Karabits starts with the Fifth, but I want to kick off with the Fourth;
he opts for the original version, although he may well add the 1947
revision at a later date.
Seconds into this symphony, which Prokofiev composed concurrently with
his Diaghilev ballet The Prodigal Son, and it’s clear Karabits
is in no hurry; that’s particularly true of the first movement. The
music has just enough impetus, but I yearned for more definition and
colour. Indeed, the recording seems rather diffuse – the bass drum in
particular – and the soundstage is quite narrow. The third movement
has welcome lift, but both here and in the finale there’s a hint of
routine – of blandness, even – that I really didn’t expect from this
much-lauded maestro.
This is not an auspicious start, which is why I approached the Fifth
with some trepidation. As I was constantly reminded in that Litton/Oramo
review there are many ways to skin this particular cat. Karabits certainly
gets the necessary heft from his players, but otherwise there’s a curious
anonymity to this performance that’s most frustrating. Listeners may
prefer Litton’s Fifth to Oramo’s, for example, but there’s no denying
that both conductors take a very personal view of this symphony; Karabits
is comparatively reticent in this regard.
As I suggested earlier the sound isn’t ideal either; it’s certainly
not in the same class as that provided for Litton. Still, the big climaxes
of the first movement are impressive, and the Allegro marcato
is reasonably well caught. Karabits brings an appropriately seditious
glint to this movement, but then blots his copybook with a fitful, rather
unwieldy Adagio. Where is the clarity, the subcutaneous tic that
others find in this score? Previn, Järvi and Kitaienko all dig so much
deeper; also, their respective orchestras leave the scrappy BSO in the
shade.
True, Karabits is intermittently exciting, but such isolated flares
simply won’t do. Also, I miss the melting lyricism that both Litton
and Oramo find at the start of the symphony’s last movement. Even this
extended clickety-clack of a finale isn’t as crisp or as propulsive
as it should be. Indeed, it all passes with little or no impact or sense
of purpose. As for the playing in Dreams it strikes me as pretty
approximate, with poor detail and hard, overbearing tuttis.
Frankly I’m perplexed, for this series has garnered so much praise elsewhere.
Then again the same is true of Vasily Petrenko’s Shostakovich cycle;
I wasn’t part of that love-in, either.
Routine performances and variable sound; look elsewhere.
Dan Morgan
Michael TIPPETT (1905-1998)
The
Chandos reissue of A Child of our Time, directed by Richard
Hickox (CHAN10869X), coincides with the impending reissue of
Colin Davis’s recording (Decca 4788351), whose LSO Live recording
also competes at around the same price (LSO0670).
On the whole I’m inclined to agree with Dominy Clements – review
– in making this my overall choice, especially at the new price. Download
from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet). A word of caution – that old problem
of illogical pricing: the CD can be found for around £6.50 but the lossless
download from theclassicalshop.net costs £7.99. Only mp3 at £4.99 is
competitive. Can anyone please explain the logic? Even less logically
Amazon UK, who offer the CD for £6.99, are asking £7.49 for the mp3
download which, presumably, comes at a considerably lower bit-rate than
theclassicalshop.net’s 320kbs: costing half as much again for lower
quality? Even less logically, if you buy the CD from Amazon the mp3
comes free!
Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH (1906-1975)
If
you heard the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Andris Nelsons perform Symphony
No.10 in e minor, Op.93, at the Proms, you may well wish to obtain
his recent recording, also recorded live, coupled with the Passacaglia
from Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk (DG 4795059 [64:50]). Stream
or download from Qobuz
(16- and 24-bit, with booklet) but you may be able to find the CD for
less than the 16-bit (£11.56) and certainly for less than the 24-bit
(£15.56). Those happy with 320kb/s mp3 will find it with booklet for
£8.49 from 7digital.com
but their 16- and 24-bit versions are more expensive than from Qobuz.
Dan Morgan liked the performances though he thought the sound too close
– review
– but I felt that added to the attractions of this recording: this is
music that needs to be heard up close. Indeed, it seems to have been
the fact that Stalin was sitting too close to the brass section at a
performance of Lady Macbeth that resulted in the withdrawal of
that opera until it was revived in a different form many years later,
For fear of further disapproval, the Fourth Symphony, then nearing completion,
had to be sat on also for a long time.
The Tenth Symphony marks the other end of the arc which connected Shostakovich
with Stalin. By the time that he completed it in 1953 the monster was
dead and though at first the outside world was fearful that somebody
even worse might take over – I recall the anxiety in the Western media,
who still to some extent swallowed the idea of ‘Uncle Joe’ our wartime
ally – a degree of thaw set in and it became possible even to denounce
Stalin. Shostakovich at least lived to experience that whereas poor
old Prokofiev, another victim of the regime’s control of music, died
the same day as Stalin.
Yet the symphony is not full of new-found optimism: the shadow was still
there, especially in the second movement, often seen as a portrait of
the dictator himself. There is, however, an up-side, especially noticeable
in the repeated, almost desperate references to the composer’s own name
in musical notation: D-S-C-H. As Harlow Robinson puts it in the rather
sparse notes, it’s as if Shostakovich is saying to Stalin that he is
still alive despite all that was thrown at him, but the theme often
sounds awkwardly hesitant to join in, sounding like Shostakovich mouthing
defiant as he is beaten by the playground bully. The best recordings
of the symphony give us both the shadow and the tentative emergence
from it and the new DG is no exception. If anything, having heard the
CD first, I was slightly disappointed by the Proms broadcast but that
may be because the BBC sound (on FM) seemed less immediate.
Dan mentions the three Karajan recordings and the historic Svetlanov,
recorded at the Proms on the very day that Soviet tanks rolled in to
end the Prague Spring, a one-off to own alongside other versions – DL
News March 2012/2. As well as the Karajans, Neeme Järvi, with Ballet
Suite No.4 (Chandos CHAN8630) and Vladimir Ashkenazy (Decca
4758748, complete symphonies, etc. – review)
are well worth considering alongside the new recording – an embarrassment
of riches, indeed.
American Intersections
Samuel BARBER (1910-1981)
Souvenirs, Op. 28 (arr. for two pianos by Arthur Gold & Robert Fizdale)
William BOLCOM (b. 1938)
Recuerdos [21:58]
Aaron COPLAND (1900-1990)
El Salón México (arr. for two pianos by Leonard Bernstein) [8:44]
Frederic RZEWSKI (b. 1938)
Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues (version for two pianos) [9:24]
John ADAMS (b. 1947)
Hallelujah Junction [14:36]
TwoPianists – Nina Schumann, Luis Magalhães (pianos)
rec. 2009/14, Endler Hall, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa
Pdf booklet included
TWOPIANISTS RECORDS TP1039220 [62:49] – from eClassical.com
(mp3, 16- & 24-bit lossless)
I’m
partial to this kind of repertoire; recently I reviewed
a download of two-piano pieces by Martinu, Poulenc, Shostakovich and
Stravinsky, played with great virtuosity and character by sisters Lidija
and Sanja Bizjak. Michael Cookson and Rob Barnett were most taken with
husband-and-wife team Luis Magalhães and Nina Schumann’s previous album,
Two Pianists (review);
this new one looks just as enticing, not least for Bolcom’s homage to
Gottschalk – the second part of Recuerdos – and Bernstein’s two-piano
arrangement of Copland’s louche and loose-limbed El Salón México.
(Incidentally, the latter was also included in the duo’s previous collection.)
The liner-notes make much of cultural confluences in 20th-century America,
its music swelled by diverse styles and idioms. The neo-Romantic Samuel
Barber’s Souvenirs for piano four hands is recorded here in the
two-piano version by Arthur Gold and Robert Fizdale. The piece certainly
represents a number of contrasting dance traditions; the waltz is delectably
sprung, the Schottische has plenty of energy and the Pas de deux is
wistfully done. The Two-Step and Hesitation Tango aren’t quite so evocative,
but the concluding Galop has spontaneity and style.
As its title suggests William Bolcom’s three-movement Recuerdos
is about memories of people and places. Alas, these pieces are despatched
with more efficiency than affection, and the Paseo sounds rather superficial.
Gottschalk really isn’t the vacuous virtuoso on show here; not surprisingly
the piece emerges with little charm or sense of conviction. As for the
rather brash Venetian waltz it’s eminently forgettable. The duo’s previous
album has far more substance than this one; also, I just don’t feel
nearly as engaged by the duo’s playing as my colleagues were last time
around.
The Copland is even more of a let-down. As good as these players are
they simply don’t capture the rhythmic vitality of the piece; the outlines
are there, but the riotous detail is harder to discern. In short, the
performance is just too literal. As for Rzewski’s highly virtuosic Winnsboro
Cotton Mill Blues this two-piano version looks too much like overkill,
especially when it sounds this rough and relentless. For a superbly
articulated account of the one-player version do seek out Marc-André
Hamelin (Hyperion). And finally, putting Adams’s note-spinning Hallelujah
Junction right after the Rzewski is just bad planning.
Spirited but uneven performances; bright, rather shallow sound.
Dan Morgan
Ian
VENABLES (b. 1955)
The Song of the Severn
Roderick Williams (baritone); Carducci String Quartet; Graham J. Lloyd
(piano)
SIGNUM CLASSICS SIGCD424 [70:08] – from hyperion-records.co.uk
(mp3, 16- and 24-bit lossless, with pdf booklet).
Please see the joint
review of this recording by John Quinn – ‘I would urge
all those who appreciate English songs to investigate this excellent
CD’ – and myself.
The Naxos recording of Venables’ On the Wings of Song, to which
I refer there (8.572514) can be streamed or downloaded from classicsonlinehd.com
or Qobuz,
both with booklet. Non-subscribers can sample from both.
Luke WHITLOCK (b.1978)
Asked to name a composer called Whitlock, most of us would go for Percy
Whitlock, composer of organ works and light music. The name of Luke
Whitlock caught my eye probably for that reason, but I almost didn’t
investigate further when I saw ‘b.1978’.
I need not have worried: this is attractive music which even a crusty
old conservative (with small c) like myself can enjoy – and I did so
to the extent that I’d like to hear more. Entitled Flowing Waters,
the Divine Art release offers piano music performed by Duncan Honeybourne
and two very enjoyable chamber works performed by Anna Stokes (flute),
James Meldrum (clarinet), Vicky Crowell (bassoon) and Wai-Yin Lee (piano).
(DDA25121 [72:10] – from theclassicalshop.net,
mp3 and lossless, with pdf booklet). Please see also reviews by John
France and Paul
Corfield Godfrey.
Don’t
be put off by the less than flattering photo of Michaela Schuster (mezzo)
on the cover of Morgen! I imagine that we are meant to
believe that she has been ‘sent’ by the music. She’s accompanied by
Markus Schlemmer (piano) in a varied programme of Romantic lieder by
BRAHMS, REGER, SCHUMANN and Richard STRAUSS, ending with
Strauss’s Morgen. She gets off to a hesitant start in Brahms’
Da unten im Tale, but everything goes well thereafter. Just a
touch of mezzo plumminess – Brahms’ Wiegenlied sounds twee, but
could it ever be otherwise? – and a preference for the orchestral version
of the title song make me less enthusiastic than the review – not MusicWeb-International
– which gave this a Recording of the Month accolade. (OEHMS OC1833
[70:27] – from eclassical.com,
mp3 and 16-bit lossless, with pdf booklet). The texts of the songs are
included but no translations. Qobuz
– sample or stream – also have the booklet but minus
the odd-numbered pages.
Incidentally, I see that Warner have just re-re-reissued the wonderful
Elizabeth Schwarzkopf-George Szell recording of Strauss’s Vier letzte
Lieder and other lieder, including Morgen! And with the original
cover, too. (2564607591, the CD costs £6.99 from Amazon
UK). Even Soile Isokoski (Ondine ODE9822 – review)
is not quite in that league.
NB: without booklet and at £9.09, how did Qobuz expect their
download to be competitive with the CD? Even worse, they are asking
£11.82 for the older plain-jacket Schwarzkopf-Ackermann recording which
you may still find available on disc at budget price. The same applies
to 7digital.com where you can save nothing at all by buying the mp3
and pay £8.99 for lossless, again without booklet.