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              There
                    were three great commercial recordings of the Sibelius Concerto
                    by women violinists in the decade between 1943 and 1952.
                    The first was by Anja Ignatius in wartime Berlin (Symposium
                    1310). The second followed two years later when Ginette Neveu
                    made her celebrated recording, one that has been multiply
                    available over the years. And this is the third of the great
                    triumvirate, happily restored to circulation. The slightly
                    earlier 1940 Guila Bustabo traversal with the Berlin State
                    Opera Orchestra and Fritz Zaun was on A Classical Record
                    ARC37 and is also a stunner. Talking of which the hair-raising
                    1943 and very male Kulenkampff/Furtwängler on Music & Arts
                    CD799 - try to hear it - was a live broadcast.
 
 Wicks’s
                    Sibelius is the stuff of legend. Absence from the catalogues
                    has only increased enthusiasm for its return. And all three
                    of these recordings bring powerfully different approaches
                    to bear; the cool reserve of Ignatius, the fiery, digging-into-the-string
                    passion of Neveu and Wicks’s expressive but not overblown
                    drama, architecturally magnificent in its completeness.
 
 She
                    had the advantage of collaboration with Sixten Ehrling, with
                    whom she gave numerous concerts. Ehrling also proves an adept
                    and highly accomplished pianist in their more intimate recordings
                    here. In the Concerto, with Ward Marston’s transfers that
                    seem successfully to have stabilised pitch problems on earlier
                    issues, we can savour their commanding strengths. The opening
                    is full of the subtlest tonal colour. Orchestral counter
                    themes register with naturalness and surety. The agitated
                    little string figures that are often subsumed are here present
                    as part of the living fabric of the orchestral life force
                    of the music. In the slow movement we find Wicks melancholic
                    without ostentation – no overtly externalised finger position
                    changes or timbral disparities. She remains unaffectedly
                    direct, and strongly moving. Power and momentum characterise
                    the finale. Wicks is no metronome, of course, and her rubati
                    are finely judged and thoroughly convincing. Personalised
                    phrasing adds immeasurably to a performance that remains
                    as laudable now as the day it was recorded.
 
 Now
                    Valen’s pocket concerto of 1940 is a real rarity. I’m not
                    aware that it’s been reissued since 1949. A work of concision
                    and immense power it owes a strong debt to the Berg in its
                    accommodation with serialism. Only thirteen minutes in length,
                    and that includes a cadenza, it manages to coalesce a tense,
                    slightly clotted feel with more openly sprung lyric sections.
                    The reappearance of the chorale-like them – finally on the
                    brass – is a deeply moving one and adds to a feeling of lament
                    and loss. For an up to date disc Arve Tellefsen has recorded
                    the Valen on Sony Classical SK 89621, coupled with the 1997
                    Nordheim concerto.
 
 The
                    violin and piano pieces divide into the commercial HMV recordings
                    with Ehrling recorded between 1949 and 1951 and unpublished
                    Columbias with an unknown accompanist made in 1951. I assume
                    this latter collection – five pieces – derives from Wicks’s
                    own archive but as usual with Biddulph these days we get
                    minimal discographic information.
 
 Nigun has a burnished reserve – not as full
                    of Hebraic fervour as many. Her Kabalevsky Improvisation is
                    excellent at underscoring alternately its brittle and more
                    reflective elements. The
                    Shostakovich Preludes are in the familiar Tziganov arrangements – hear
                    her silvery wit in the Tenth.
 
 The
                    unpublished pieces are a notable bonus. They’re in very slightly
                    muffled sound but otherwise very presentable indeed. Her
                    Sarasate is suave rather than dashing, and the pieces associated
                    with Heifetz show a laid back charm. This represents a cache
                    of real significance for the Wicks collector.
 
 Talking
                    of which collectors should not overlook a CD devoted to rare
                    Wicks material - Music & Arts 1160 which contains a broadcast
                    performance of the finale of the Sibelius, coupled with a
                    splendid Bruno Walter directed Beethoven Concerto. There
                    are other important things here as well, including Nigun.
 
 As
                    noted above Ward Marston’s transfers are top class, with
                    the pitch question in the Sibelius happily resolved, to my
                    ears. Notes are by Nathaniel Vallois and equally classy.
                    In fact this is a class act all round.
 
 Jonathan
                        Woolf
 
 
 AVAILABILITY
 Biddulph  
                 
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