Christian BALDINI (b.1978)
 Elapsing Twilight Shades (2008 Rev. 2012) [7:26]
 Witold LUTOSŁAWSKI (1913-1994)
 Chain 2 (1985) [17:52]
 György LIGETI (1923-2006)
 Violin Concerto (1989 Rev. 1993) [28:57]
 Edgard VARÈSE (1883-1965)
 Amériques (1918-21 Rev. 1927) [23:26]
 Maximilian Haft (violin) (Lutosławski) 
Miranda Cuckson (violin) (Ligeti) 
		
UC Davis Symphony Orchestra, Munich Radio
    Orchestra (Baldini) /Christian Baldini
 rec. live Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts, UC Davis 2-5 November
    2019 (Lutosławski) 5 May 2018 (Ligeti) 2 May 2015 (Varèse); 29 April 2012 Felsenreitschule, Salzburg 
		(Baldini)
 Reviewed as a digital download from a press preview
 CENTAUR RECORDS CRC3879 
    [77:41]
	It is a very pleasing thing to see the Ligeti violin concerto maintain a
    foothold in the repertoire in both the concert hall and the studio. To a
    lesser extent, the same can be said of Lutosławski’s scintillating Chain 2.
    Whilst they are very different works, both combine modernistic techniques
    with a capacity to communicate powerfully to the non specialist listener.
    There is a real danger that a lot of the music written in the second half
    of the 20th century, whether it be Boulez or Robert Simpson,
    gets left behind. Many contemporary composers complain that the lack of
    repeat performances means that audiences do not get a chance to become
    properly familiar with often complex scores. All the performers on this
    record need to be commended, not just for their excellent performances but for
    their commitment to keeping this music alive.
 
    The two concertante works are bookended by orchestral works that have a lot
    more in common than might seem the case at first glance. Varèse’s work
    Amériques is probably as notorious as it is famous. A startlingly prophetic
    work, as much as more celebrated pieces such as the Rite of Spring, it
    anticipates a lot of the course of musical modernism over the one hundred
    years that followed its premiere. It is still hard to believe the early
    date of its composition. My personal issue with it is that I have never
    found that it is a work that lives up to its billing. The Rite of Spring or
    the Miraculous Mandarin may have been ferociously modern in their day but
    they are also wonderful pieces of music. Amériques has never seemed to add
    up to more than the sum of its avant garde parts to me, even when given as
    persuasive and committed advocacy as on this recording.
 
    I had almost the opposite issue with the Baldini score that kicks things
    off. No modernist cliché is left unused, leaving me with the distinct
    feeling that I had heard all this before, and done better. Indeed, a lot of
    it was done by Varèse rather a long time ago. I haven’t heard any of
    Baldini’s other music and I don’t want to be excessively harsh, as it is
    never less than professionally done. I will file it away, somewhat
    ruefully, under the heading ‘Not for me’.
 
    Baldini as conductor is the glue that holds this album and, in this regard,
    I can be unreservedly enthusiastic. He is a very positive presence in both
    the concertante works and gets playing of real conviction from both the
    orchestras featured here. The Munich Radio Orchestra is one of the two
    orchestras of Bavarian Radio, the other, of course, being the Bavarian
    Radio Symphony Orchestra. The main band on this disc, the UC Davis Symphony
    Orchestra, are new to me. A student orchestra specialising in the work of
    living and under-represented composers, they sound anything but a scratch
    band. Their playing throughout is characterised by passionate commitment to
    getting the music across. Their success at doing so is evidenced by the
    great roars of approval that greet the Lutosławski and the Ligeti.
 
    The Lutosławski was written specifically for Anne Sophie Mutter who
    recorded it with the composer on the podium for DG. It is claimed that he
    had to limit himself to more conventional violin techniques given the then
    tender years of his chosen soloist. If true, it was a happy accident, as
    the combination of the experimental with the traditional is a happy one,
    avoiding the pitfalls of blandness or experimentation by numbers that
    afflicts many crossover pieces today.
 
    I confess I find Mutter’s recording somewhat starchy. I always imagine that
    what Lutosławski had in mind was that kittenish Mutter of her sensational
    debut with Karajan playing Mozart concertos. Haft has much more of a spring
    in his step and everyone involved sounds like they are having a fun
    time. You would never suspect that this piece has as much humour in it from
    the Mutter version. Under normal circumstances, Haft would be the undoubted
    star of this particular show but even he is eclipsed by the scintillating
    Miranda Cuckson in the Ligeti.
 
    Ligeti’s violin concerto burst into my consciousness thanks to a
    Boulez-directed disc of the Ligeti concertos on DG with the work’s
    dedicatee, Saschko Gawriloff, as soloist. I always assumed that recording
    pretty much closed the book on how to perform this gleefully crazy piece,
    but that was until I heard this performance. This is a piece that teems
    with ideas, wonderful, weird and wacky (ocarinas anyone?) and Miranda
    Cuckson’s enthusiasm is utterly infectious. She makes complete sense of the
    many disparate elements in an absolute tour de force reading. The energy
    levels of soloist and orchestra match those of the indefatigable Ligeti at
    his most unbuttoned. If you have yet to make the acquaintance of this
    masterpiece, then this is now the performance to go for.
 
    The work isn’t all capers and extravagance. The Passacaglia is full of
    pathos and great solemnity, reminding us that some of the most profound
    lines in King Lear come from the mouth of the Fool.
 
    This is the first recording of hers I have listened to, though she has
    amassed a considerable discography which I shall now be checking out. It is
    a real pleasure to hear a musician of such charisma taking on contemporary
    music instead of yet another Sibelius or Tchaikovsky concerto.
 
    After all this excitement, I found Amériques even greyer than usual, so
    this generously filled disc is a bit of a mixed bag, but more than redeemed
    by top-notch Lutosławski and a very special account of the Ligeti.
    Cuckson’s is a name I will be keeping an eye and an ear out for!
 
    David McDade