The Golden Age 
 Erik SATIE (1866-1925) 
 Satiesfaction
    (Gymnopédie No.1, arr. Stephan Koncz, b.1984)  [4:31]
 Fritz KREISLER (1875-1962)
 Syncopation  [2:03]
 Manuel PONCE (1882-1948)
 Estrellita
    (arr. Jascha Heifetz)  [3:31]
 Max BRUCH (1838-1920)
 Violin Concerto No.1 in g minor, Op.26 [25:44]
 Claude DEBUSSY (1862-1918)
 Clair de lune
    (arr. Koncz) [Suite bergamasque, L.75]  [4:13]
 Fritz KREISLER 
 Schön Rosmarin  [2:17]
 George GERSHWIN (1898-1937)
 Summertime / A Woman is a sometime thing (arr. Heifetz) [Porgy and Bess]  [1:55]
 Cyril SCOTT (1879-1970)
 Lotus Land (arr. Kreisler)  [5:09]
 Traditional
 Waltzing Matilda (arr. Koncz)  [3:16]
 Ray Chen (violin) 
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Robert Trevino (concerto)
 Ray’s Quartet ‘Made in Berlin’
 Julien Quentin (piano)
 rec. 2017, Henry Wood Hall, London (concerto); Kulturkirche Nikodemus, 
		Berlin
 DECCA 4833852
    [53:23]
	I wonder what the title ‘Golden Age’ evokes in your mind? For me, it’s the
    classical legend of the first age of mankind when greed was unknown and
    before we descended into the Silver and Iron Ages. At the end of time the
    Age of Gold will be restored, and Astræa, the goddess of innocence and
    justice, will return to earth. It’s a regular theme of renaissance poetry
    and of baroque opera, though Ronsard used it rather cynically in addressing
    a poem on the subject to the treasurer of the French court and ending by
    asking for a pay rise. (Laumonier XII 87.) In another poem he excuses the
    love of money on the grounds that ‘Si l’argent nous défaut, nostre
    indigente main / Ne sçauroit rien donner aux pauvres morts de fain.’ (If we
    have no money, our beggarly hand couldn’t give anything to the poor who are
    dying from hunger.)
 
    Shostakovich composed a ballet entitlted The Golden Age.  That was about a football team, but that’s not what Decca mean either; the title refers to the ‘golden age’ of
    arrangements by Kreisler and Heifetz, which open and close the programme,
    not a usage that I’ve come across before. At the heart of this recording,
    however, is a splendid performance of Bruch’s Violin Concerto No.1 
	from prize-winning violinist Ray Chen. Though Chen is hardly old enough to 
	be credited with his own Golden Age, it’s at
    least as good as, or even better than the recent Sony recording with Joshua
    Bell as soloist and director of the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields
    (19075842002, with Bruch’s Scottish Fantasy).
 
    So why is this not a Recording of the Month? Because overall I 
	prefer
    the Sony as an all-Bruch experience, alongside the classic Kyung-Wha Chung 
	account
    of the two Bruch works plus the Mendelssohn concerto on an earlier Decca
    recording (Legends 4609762, mid-price – see my
    
        review of the Bell). The new Decca album has no clear identity: is it a recording of the Bruch
    concerto with trimmings fore and aft or an album of music from the ‘Golden
    Age’ arrangements by Heifetz and Kreisler with the Bruch concerto thrown in
    for good measure. (And not exactly good measure, either, at 53 minutes for
    a full-price release, but the same is true of the Sony CD at 55 minutes.)
 
    This would be an excellent first recording of the Bruch, but buyers would
almost certainly want to go on to add a recording of the Mendelssohn Violin 
	Concerto or the Bruch    Scottish Fantasy, or both, thereby almost 
	certainly obtaining another recording of the
    Bruch concerto in the bargain.
 
    That said, I shall certainly return to this recording of the Bruch and
    often. If you want to hear a warhorse you need a whole-hearted performance
    and Ray Chen certainly throws himself and his violin into the work.  He
    is very well supported by the LPO and Robert Trevino, while the recording,
    made in the Henry Wood Hall, is more naturally balanced than Bell’s on
    Sony where the soloist is a little too forwardly placed. Working from the CD, I haven’t had a chance to hear the high-res
    24-bit version, but that can be obtained from
    
        Presto
    
    for £17.21.
 
    The heart of the Bruch is in the central adagio and it’s so easy 
	either to
    go over the top or to be afraid of doing so and underselling the music.
    Chen uses plenty of heart-wrenching vibrato, but he, the LPO and Trevino
    get it just right here, as they do in the outer movements where shimmering
    strings again stop just short of sounding hammy.
 
    I’ve been grumpy about the hybrid nature of this album, but the other works
    receive whole-hearted performances too, in which Chen is very ably abetted
    by his own quartet ‘Made in Berlin’ and pianist Julien Quentin. Had this
    been just an album of these shorter pieces, it would have been
    recommendable in its own right. This is the sort of music that Yehudi
    Menuhin and Stéphane Grappelli, together or separately, used to do so well.
    (Try Grappelli in Beulah’s St Louis Blues, my Jazz Reissue of the Month in
    
        Winter 2017/18_1). To mention Chen and his partners in the same paragraph as these
    luminaries of the fiddle is praise indeed.
 
    The booklet has the usual shortcomings of offerings of young stars’
    recordings from the Universal stable: lots of pictures of Ray Chen in
    various moods but too little information. With Tully Potter writing, we
    could have had a really authoritative set of notes. And with 77-year-old
    eyesight, I could have done with something more legible than the pale yellow 
	and white on
    brown track and recording details. The online version from
	
	Naxos Music Library is actually more legible.
 
    If you are looking for a performance of the Bruch into which heart and soul
    have been poured, this could be what you are looking for. If you want an
    evening of Kreisler and Heifetz arrangements very well presented, it’s that
    too. I just wish it had been one or the other, not both. Perhaps Decca
    might consider recording Chen in the Scottish Fantasy and the
    Mendelssohn Violin Concerto and re-coupling the Bruch concerto with them.
    That could be an outright winner.
	He has already recorded the Mendelssohn for Sony, but Brian Reinhardt was 
	not convinced by the Tchaikovsky coupling -
	
	review - and Paul Corfield Godfrey had some reservations about the 
	Mendelssohn -
	
	review.
 
    Brian Wilson