Ragin, whom some 
                  will better know as Ragin Wenk-Wolff, has made some innovative 
                  recordings and her coupling for Centaur of the Concertos of 
                  Johan Kvandal and Ragnar Söderlind was particularly exploratory 
                  and commendable.
                This disc of Gypsy and Jewish music was recorded 
                  back in 1996. She takes an interesting approach but not I think, 
                  at least to me, an especially convincing one. Her way is to 
                  underline the gypsy elements with a battery of devices, both 
                  left and right hand, which leave little room for stylistic compromise. 
                  The Monti Czardas is, to use Gerontius’ phrase, “done to death” 
                  through a sickly application of constant portamento, and the 
                  ceaseless swellings and bulges that attend to the Brahms Dances 
                  sound smeary, the elastic approach to rhythm far too uncontrolled; 
                  she’s also sometimes flat in the second Dance. Her quivery bowing 
                  in the Hubay is a novelty – but a mincing, surely inappropriate 
                  one. Hubay made a number of records and this sounds nothing 
                  like his style.
                On Jewish territory 
                  her Bloch is decent but can sound rather earthbound and her 
                  Elli Elli, which is here ascribed to Mischa Elman but 
                  which was an arrangement by him of a well-known song, is a touch 
                  rushed and lacks opulence. She seems to conflate the two musics 
                  in the Tzigane, which emerge as distinctly Semitic-sounding; 
                  not in the sense that E J Moeran put down Heifetz’s Elgar Concerto 
                  – that was just a vulgar jibe. This is perhaps not altogether 
                  inappropriate. Incidentally this may be the first performance 
                  on disc of the Tzigane with luthéal – it far predates the Daniel 
                  Hope and Philippe Graffin discs. It’s certainly neither as colouristic 
                  nor as engaging as either of those discs but I commend Ragin 
                  and De Silva for their enterprise. 
                The Achron, judged 
                  against the Miriam Kramer-Simon Over ASV all-Achron disc lacks 
                  mystery and is simply too loud and fast and there are some dubiously 
                  frivolous touches in the Sarasate. But I enjoyed the Vladigerov.
                Not a disc that 
                  I felt comfortable with. 
                Jonathan Woolf