Much of this material 
                was once available on SYD Records in 
                the mid-1990s but if you blinked you 
                missed it. Aulos has released its own 
                Sitkovetsky volume, the promised first 
                in an edition that has yet to appear. 
                Given the existence of this new Artek 
                five disc set, all available singly, 
                there’s little likelihood, or indeed 
                necessity for Aulos to continue -review. 
                There is duplication between that single 
                Aulos disc and Artek in all except the 
                Sibelius Concerto – which may yet appear 
                in this new series if more volumes are 
                to be forthcoming. 
              
 
              
This new survey bears 
                the name of Dmitry Sitkovetsky as co-producer. 
                Special thanks are offered to his mother 
                and Yulian’s widow, Bella Davidovich, 
                as well as Vitaly and Larissa Sitkovetsky 
                and Susan Roberts. This carries with 
                it the imprimatur of the family. The 
                transfers have been carried out with 
                care and skill, though none was the 
                subtlest examples of Soviet recording 
                techniques, even for the time. Most 
                are very blowsy and close up to the 
                microphone. Don’t look for - or expect 
                - any sophistication from the 1950s 
                set-ups. 
              
 
              
Collectors however 
                will be interested in the performances 
                of the tragically short-lived Sitkovetsky. 
                Volume 1 gives us his Tartini Devil’s 
                Trill where we find Sitkovetsky the 
                thorough going Romantic. His sound can 
                be raw, gutsy and masculine and intensely 
                exciting. He tends to preen in the double 
                stops, and is fatally metrical in Kreisler’s 
                cadenza. He also lacks his older compatriot 
                David Oistrakh’s balancing of classicist 
                restraint and tensile projection. The 
                Bach sonata is digitally impressive 
                but rather deliberate and again afflicted 
                with a certain metronomic approach. 
                Lower strings are sometimes slow to 
                sound. In the Chaconne he indulges extremes 
                of dynamics and is highly subjectivist 
                in approach. Phrasing however remains 
                dull and accelerandi sound unnatural. 
                A disappointing performance. The Mozart 
                sonata is better by far. He’s occasionally 
                trenchant and fully lyrical; there’s 
                plenty of emotive vibrato and warmly 
                phrased generosity in the slow movement, 
                though he overindulges accompanying 
                figures to a damaging degree. 
              
 
              
Volume II is something 
                of a violinistic playground. Vieuxtemps’s 
                baroque leaning opus is discharged with 
                gallantry and vigour, though Sitkovetsky 
                does sometimes slide up under the note. 
                Saint-Saëns’s Concerto, 
                the Konzertstuck, in the Spiering arrangement 
                is rather a brittle performance and 
                heavy handed despite the advantage of 
                Kogan’s accompanist Mitnik. Ysaÿe’s 
                Sixth solo sonata is quite fast and 
                just a little flat dramatically. The 
                Sarasate Habanera is full of 
                rich and explicit voicings from husky 
                to whistling and well-characterised, 
                though very over-emoted in places. The 
                recording of the Moszkowski is 
                rather hollow but Sitkovetsky plays 
                it with lissom articulation. 
              
 
              
The close up perspective 
                rather robs the otherwise excitingly 
                played Glazunov Concerto of 
                a certain aristocracy of utterance. 
                But the throaty tone convinces and there’s 
                plenty of raw succulence here, albeit 
                occasionally rather blowsy lower string 
                work in the cadenza. It’s neither as 
                quick or as elevated as Milstein’s traversals. 
                The Lyapunov Concerto is written 
                in fully romantic-rhapsodic style. The 
                recording is typical Soviet era vintage; 
                trumpets to shrivel your insides, the 
                hairs of Sitkovetsky’s bow just inside 
                your ear canal. But how gorgeously he 
                caresses the second subject of the first 
                movement and how much beauty he finds 
                throughout. He takes a high tensile 
                approach to the slow movement which 
                because of it – and the recording – 
                can sound somewhat over vibrated. There’s 
                certainly no floating of tone here, 
                a la Franco-Belgian players. Still, 
                one can but admire his stupendously 
                commanding technique in the ripely overlong 
                cadenza. 
              
 
              
Lehman’s Concerto 
                is couched in Soviet folkloric style. 
                It sounds like it was written in the 
                late 1940s – this recording was made 
                in 1951. There are touches of what sounds 
                to British ears like Vaughan Williams 
                along the way – plenty of folk themes 
                and sweetness, lightly orchestrated 
                with a string gauze of great transparency 
                and warmth. The finale lets things down, 
                a rather predictable vivo of vacuous 
                excitement with a whopping great edit 
                or join at 4.04. Magnetically played 
                though. 
              
 
              
Paganini’s First 
                Concerto suits Sitkovetsky’s virtuoso 
                status and silvery tone in the higher 
                positions. Though he’s so far forward 
                in the balance, which makes the orchestral 
                contribution somewhat tenuous, we can 
                that much better listen to his coruscating 
                gymnastics and effortless projection. 
                His finale is exceptional. The Moses 
                Fantasia bears witness to his high standing 
                as a Paganinian – and with lashings 
                of husky tone he displays remarkable 
                technical address allied to exciting 
                colouristic shading. He manages the 
                Ernst with cavalier bravado and 
                tosses off the Bazzini with nonchalance 
                if not quite, say, Příhoda 
                or Perlman’s blistering brilliance. 
                 
              
 
              
The final disc unearths 
                Shostakovich and Khachaturian 
                concertos, both highly auspicious additions 
                to the discography. In the latter, with 
                the composer conducting, he is grittier 
                and with a less intensely focused core 
                sound than his contemporary Kogan, who 
                was also recorded in this work with 
                the composer conducting, but five years 
                earlier (see Kogan’s Brilliant Classics 
                ten disc box). It’s instructive to hear 
                the differences – how Sitkovetsky gives 
                us a wispy gauze of sound in the slow 
                movement but ultimately lacks Kogan’s 
                subtle shadings across all four strings 
                as well as his eloquence and control. 
                Kogan is notably more relaxed in the 
                opening movement as well. 
              
 
              
Shostakovich 
                No.1 provides another study in contrasts. 
                Kogan is invariably, in all his performances, 
                more malleable in terms of tempo and 
                colour than Sitkovetsky. He’s also decidedly 
                quicker in the great Passacaglia, quicker 
                even than Sitkovetsky – these in the 
                days before this movement became stretched 
                to ever more giant proportions. Sitkovetsky 
                has Gauk on the platform and he is suitably 
                gaunt and powerful if a bit ragged at 
                times. Kogan is a steelier presence 
                in this work, Sitkovetsky more openly 
                expressive. 
              
 
              
This then is the province 
                of the violin collector. With unbalanced 
                recordings and unvarnished sound the 
                casual listener will want to look elsewhere. 
                That much is obvious. But Sitkovetsky 
                admirers, of whom there are a good number, 
                will want to snap these up because his 
                discs have, historically speaking, seldom 
                stayed around very long. His was a wonderful, 
                comet-like talent. My reservations are 
                there to alert listeners who may not 
                know just what sort of a player he was. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf