Arco Diva have been
steadily building an impressive catalogue.
This collection operates as a sampler
built from excerpts, a company calling
card as well as a satisfying recital
in its own right.
There’s a buoyant and
muscular version of the Bartered
Bride overture. This is followed
by the regal introduction to the Janáček
Glagolytic Mass conducted
by Leoš Svárovský. It’s
a strong contender and the complete
disc quite properly caused quite a stir
when first issued. Husband and wife
team Kristine Kasiková and label
mainstay Martin
Kasik give a rafter-rattling Slavonic
Dance No. 1 but can be heard in aristocratic
gentle mode in the Op. 72 No. 10 dance
later on. Svárovský again shows his
mettle with a flighted and flaming Dvořák
Serenade scherzo. The Czech Trio are
then unleashed on the Presto
finale of the Smetana Piano Trio with
its Bruch-like lyricism and Bartered
Bride vigour.
Janáček’s subtle In the
Mists - Andantino is given over
to Martin Kasik. In this case the recording
is too close to allow the haze and mist
to work its full
magic. By the side of the Janáček
we have Suk’s Longing/Spring
which
is more salon Grieg than anything else.
The third movement Scherzo of the Dvořák
Piano Quintet op. 81 is brilliantly
done by the Wihan Quartet (currently
touring widely in the UK). Kasik is
again in fine form - a bell tower to
the robust work of the quartet. Sergej
Koptchak (baritone) and organist Aleš
Bárta then provide an extract from the
Dvořák Biblical Songs
- all rather dense and thickly accented
for my taste but recorded with spectacular
verity. Arco Diva end the collection
well with a swashbuckling Why Shouldn´t
We Be Happy which by its stamp and
boisterousness must have gone down well
in the Soviet heyday as well. There’s
some lovely echo-and-dialogue passages
and gratifying spatial effects as there
are also in the overture.
At 48:56 its not exactly
generous which is a pity.
There are some generalised
notes on the last page of the double-fold
insert.
Recommendable, if you
can find it inexpensively, as an entrée
into the world of Czech music; even
if it is limited to the nineteenth century.
Rob Barnett