Two Milstein recitals from The Library of Congress 
          have been issued by Bridge, documents of value and significance. This, 
          the earlier, dates from 1946 and is a programme of the Old School with 
          the Vitali Chaconne and a Milstein speciality, solo Bach, sharing space 
          with a piano accompanied Mendelssohn Concerto and some scintillating 
          morceaux. The later 1953 recital is a standard post-War Sonata programme 
          – Beethoven op 24 and Brahms op 108 along with the Bach Partita in D 
          Minor. In a sense then this brace of recordings documents the changing 
          patina of the violin recital as it moved from the predictable but still 
          relatively elastic traditions of Baroque opener, Romantic Concerto and 
          lighter sweetmeats to the heavyweight three Sonata line-up. 
        
 
        
The 1946 recital found Milstein in his early forties 
          and approaching his peak. Though his longevity – almost unique amongst 
          violinists in retaining sovereign technical command into his eighties 
          – has served to elongate and extend his career the forties saw his real 
          emergence into a position of international eminence. Nominally an Auer 
          pupil, he had first studied with Oistrakh’s teacher, Stolyarsky, but 
          Milstein was characteristically contemptuous of his teachers and seems 
          to have been, to a degree, self-taught. A mutual antipathy also bedevilled 
          some of his Concerto engagements in which Milstein could duel unceremoniously 
          with a conductor he despised, a trait he shared with Heifetz. As his 
          colleague and admirer Piatigorsky remarked Milstein’s natural metier 
          was solo Bach and after that a Sonata recital with an alert pianist. 
          In 1946 Milstein was partnered by Joseph Blatt, Viennese born in 1906 
          and Milstein’s junior by a few years. Composer, conductor, administrator 
          and pianist Blatt is too distantly recorded and has too little to do 
          to prove his musical value; he provides staunch if not especially imaginative 
          or quicksilver support. 
        
 
        
The recital begins with the Vitali. There are some 
          scuffs on the discs but the sound here is generally good. Milstein is 
          attentive to dynamics but unusually for this stellar musician small 
          patches of poor intonation intrude. Blatt is lumpy as well and the performance 
          rather limps along, not yet fully warmed up, with the violinist cool, 
          pressing ahead somewhat unflinchingly, and to be frank, sounding only 
          superficially engaged. Low-level rumble/hum afflicts the Bach but if 
          you can listen past that – and it’s quite possible – you will be rewarded 
          with a performance that gains in stature the more it develops. He is 
          a little stiff still in the second movement fugue but the Siciliano 
          has all the expected Milstein virtues and the presto finale is magnificently 
          accomplished. His own outrageous and disgraceful Paganiniana is enormously 
          entertaining and boldly delineated with some slashing attacks whereas 
          his lyric persuasiveness is exemplified by another of his arrangements, 
          this time the Chopin C Sharp Minor. The Wieniawski demonstrates a cast 
          iron technique and an invincible musicality. The piano-accompanied Mendelssohn 
          Concerto sits at the heart of the recital. As I said this is an example 
          of days when the Concerto literature was routinely presented in this 
          way by soloists to audiences, many of whom would never otherwise have 
          heard them; indeed by soloists who may never otherwise have found many 
          opportunities to play them with an orchestra. In the opening movement 
          we can appreciate Milstein’s subtle bowing and rubato, his limited but 
          expressive portamanti – though I think it would have been better if 
          Bridge had edited out the audience applause, vigorous and enthusiastic, 
          after the movement’s end. The slow movement sounds rather unrelieved 
          however, finger intensity from the violinist aside, and whilst it is 
          again more than instructive to hear the nature and complexity of his 
          vibrato usage and how he transmits lyric intensity through dynamic shadings, 
          there is still rather too much insistence not helped by Blatt’s rather 
          leaden contribution. The finale goes reasonably well but it’s not a 
          performance commensurate with the best of Milstein’s admittedly outstanding 
          Mendelssohn. 
        
 
        
Whilst uneven interpretatively and in inconsistent 
          sound – hums, rumbles, scuffs, bumps, nothing majorly problematic though 
          – these are performances that both expand and reflect upon Milstein’s 
          existing commercial discography. At their best they show us how, of 
          all the Auer or putative Auer pupils, he was the leading Bach player 
          and quite probably the most complete and impressive chamber player. 
          As such this disc, and its companion, Bridge 9066, is full of enlightenment 
          and interest. 
        
 
        
        
Jonathan Woolf