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Johann
Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
Violin Concerto No. 2 in E major, BWV 1042 [17:39] Wolfgang
Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Violin Concerto No. 4 in D major, K. 218 [25:12] Felix
MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64 [27:26]
David Oistrakh
(violin)
Philadelphia Orchestra/Eugene Ormandy
rec. 24 December, 1955, Academy of Music, Philadelphia. ADD NAXOS 8.111246 [70:18]
With this disc, Naxos restores to the catalogue a marvellous
set of performances from this magnificent violinist. As
the blurb on the back of the CD proudly proclaims, “This
edition of the first American recordings by the great Ukrainian
violinist, David Oistrakh, takes us back to a golden age. Made
in one astonishingly long burst of creativity on Christmas
Eve 1955, they demonstrate a legendary violinist at his absolute
peak”. Quite so. More than that, this disc offers listeners
a snap shot of Oistrakh in concertos from three periods,
starting with the Baroque, and moving through the Classical
to the Romantic, and excelling in all three.
The Bach E Major receives a gorgeous performance here,
in the first of Oistrakh's three commercial recordings of
the piece. (Alas, I have not heard and cannot compare his
1959 recording with the Moscow Chamber Orchestra under Rudolf
Barshai.) Oistrakh is lighter-hearted here than in his 1962
stereo remake with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra on Deutsche
Grammophon (447 427-2). He is also a shade quicker in each
movement in this earlier recording. His tone here is full
and warm and though the Philadelphia Orchestra is not immune
from tuning problems, their support is warmly sympathetic. This
is a smiling reading, though the second movement is touched
by a sense of tragic intensity. This recording was first
released on Columbia ML 5087, along with Vivaldi's A Minor
Double Concerto, which Oistrakh and Isaac Stern recorded
at the very end of the same Christmas Eve sessions in a terrible
edition. Anyone who wishes to hear that performance can
do so here.
This recording of Mozart's fourth violin concerto is
the first of Oistrakh's two commercial recordings. The other
recording, with Oistrakh directing the Berlin Philharmonic
from his violin, dates from 15 years later (EMI 7243 5 74578
2 8). As much as I love the later recording, this earlier
account has a brightness and sense of fun that sometimes
is missing in the stereo remake. The precision of Oistrakh's
bowing here and his range of tone colour he draws from his
instrument make this 1955 recording one to treasure. Though
the orchestra is definitely balanced behind the soloist,
Ormandy coaxes some lovely sounds from his band, especially
in the second movement. As in his later recording, Oistrakh
uses the cadenzas by the 19th Century virtuoso,
Ferdinand David, and he plays them – and indeed the whole
concerto – with taste, sensitivity and a rapt sense of beauty.
The recording of the Mendelssohn concerto that closes
the disc is the second of Oistrakh's two commercial recordings. His
first was made in 1949 with the USSR State Symphony Orchestra
under Kondrashin, a performance which has done the rounds
of labels. I first acquired it on a Vox LP, and it has been
re-released most recently by Brilliant Classics in their Oistrakh
concerto box. This performance is very similar in conception
to that earlier one, though the violinist is a touch quicker
in the Soviet account. There is not much to choose between
the two recordings interpretatively, and Oistrakh is in fine
fettle in both. When it comes to sound, though, this recording
is the clear winner. He is closely recorded in the Soviet
recording and though his powerful tone penetrates the gauzy
atmosphere and Kondrashin extracts some sensitive wind playing
from his orchestra, the soupy acoustic takes some of the
edge off the performance. No such complaints here. Oistrakh's
violin is vividly caught and Ormandy's orchestra is warmer
and creamier. The Mendelssohn concerto was never the signature
work for Oistrakh that the Brahms, Tchaikovsky and Sibelius
concertos were, but his playing here is superb: full-blooded
and impassioned, but ever so stylish. And, oh, that tone!
Mark Obert-Thorn has remastered his source material
with care, achieving a lovely warmth and bloom, and a realistic
presence that more than offsets a little hiss in the background. Listening
to Oistrakh's gorgeous playing in such beautifully restored
sound, it is easy to forget that these recordings are 52
years old.
Oistrakh's admirers will definitely want this disc. Anyone
who cares about great violin playing should be queuing up
too.
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