Not all Kapell’s Concerto performances are entirely 
          unproblematic but these are amongst the very greatest of them. The Concerto 
          dates from 1950, the Rhapsody from almost a year later; the former with 
          the loyal and affectionate accompaniment of William Steinberg, the latter 
          boasting the gimlet-eyed and shatteringly good Fritz Reiner. It’s true 
          that Kapell was a virtuoso in the modern manner but his Concerto performance 
          is neither steely nor remotely over sentimentalised. Taking Horowitz 
          as his pianistic model and elevating clarity and precision brought its 
          own considerable rewards. There are numerous examples of Kapell’s balancing 
          of technique and intimacy. His gradients from piano to forte are properly 
          weighted and he gives considerable value to the rhythmic impulses of 
          the first movement of the concerto. He also ensures that his fabled 
          clarity is accompanied by audibility in his passagework. His left hand 
          brings out often-submerged detail but never incongruously or irrelevantly. 
          In the slow movement he employs some sharp accents at an unexceptional 
          tempo. He is sometimes cool, not cold and in the finale there is no 
          trace of brashness or vulgarity whatsoever. This is playing remarkably 
          respectful of its pianistic antecedents. 
        
 
        
In the Rhapsody he has the distinct advantage of Reiner’s 
          conducting of the Philadelphia Orchestra – called the Robin Hood Dell 
          Orchestra for contractual reasons and accompanists in the Concerto as 
          well. There are some glittering orchestral colours here: chattering 
          woodwind, Kapell’s skittering runs; in Variation 7 Reiner moulds the 
          rise and fall of the bass’s counter-theme with tremendous control and 
          with meltingly affecting violins at the close. Kapell is crystalline 
          in Variation 10 and in Variation 12 Reiner encourages beautifully entwining 
          clarinet figures and horn playing - a perfect example of Reiner’s sensitivity 
          and sagacity in matters of orchestral balance and momentum. Or listen 
          to Variation 22 with its string playing of the highest beauty of tone 
          at quite a fast tempo. The transition from Variations 27 to 28 is effervescent, 
          witty, sharp-edged, and precise. Whilst Naxos makes much of Kapell’s 
          "blistering intensity and electricity" what emerges from the 
          grooves of these recordings is rather his balanced virtuosity and a 
          musicality that never sacrificed sensitivity to sentimentality, bravura 
          to bombast. Whilst I wouldn’t necessarily prefer these recordings to 
          the classic Moiseiwitsch they are nevertheless memorable and necessary 
          additions to the catalogue. 
        
 
         
        
Jonathan Woolf