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The Essential Julian Bream see end of review for track listing
Julian Bream
(guitar and lute)
Melos Ensemble/Malcolm Arnold ¹
George Malcolm (harpsichord) ²
Julian Bream Consort (Olive Zorian (violin), David Sandeman
(flute, alto flute piccolo), Joy Hall (bass viola da gamba),
Robert Spencer (tabor), Desmond Dupré (bass viola da gamba)) ³
rec. 1959-90 BMG-RCA RED SEAL
88697 214422 [67:29 + 77:01]
Julian
Bream has personally selected these recordings for this Essential tribute
from RCA Red Seal. Naturally you will note strong overlaps
between many of the items and other recent RCA restorations.
Those of you who bought the Music of Spain box set for example
(see review) – indispensable
for Bream-ites – will want to know that the following are
duplicated; the Tárrega Recuerdos de la Alhambra, Malats’ Serenata,
Turina’s Fandanguillo, Pujol’s Guajira, Rodrigo’s Invocación
y Danza, Aguado’s Rondo, Sor’s Mozart variations, and
Granados’ Valses poeticos. Further I should note that
that we only get the central movement of Malcolm Arnold’s
Concerto – there wasn’t room for the whole thing.
Apart
from this, it’s sheer pleasure of course. It’s perfectly
reasonable to open the two disc set with Recuerdos de
la Alhambra so evocative is Bream’s famous performance
of it. But the three Villa-Lobos Etudes, though perhaps less
well-known recordings, prove just as adeptly coloured; the
legato spun seventh contrasting well with the moderato eighth
with its profuse sense of introspection and romance. Bream
enjoys Malats – and the spicy rubati that inflect the Serenata
attest to the affinity. But then affinity is everywhere.
He has cannily – or someone at RCA has cannily – inserted
the Walton Bagatelles in this Iberian first disc. They emerge
suitably energised. The opening Allegro has an expressive,
rather brooding central panel around which the lissom outer
sections dance. The listless waltz is tinged with loss and
the espressivo fourth Bagatelle emerges as a concentrated
and refined core of Walton’s expressive gifts. Nor does
Bream stint de Falla’s languorous tribute to Debussy or the
guitarist’s own transcription of the Miller’s Dance from The
Three-cornered Hat. It would be quite wrong to overlook
the virile, toe-tapping delight of Pujol’s Guajira – a
bare minimum of “gym shoes” squeaks. I noted that the Walton
was an outpost of non-Iberia in this first disc but
actually the first disc ends, a touch incongruously, with
the Britten Gloriana Courtly Dances. Here, for the
only time, he plays the lute with well-known players from
his consort. I’d forgotten how beautiful the Pavan is.
The
second disc opens with the baroque inspirations of Sanz and
Guerau – ever vibrant and colourful, each piece characterised
and coloured with charm. The Bach trio sonata teams Bream
with George Malcolm – try the finale for brio. The harpsichordist
returns for the Boccherini arrangement – once more Bream’s – and
for more virtuosic élan. But it’s in the heart of Granados’ Valses
poéticos that we feel Bream most fully himself; playing
of ravishing texture, rhythmic ardour, judicious weight and
lyric control. To end we have the slow sardonic creep of
the slinky blues-tinged Arnold – and how well Bream responds
to the Shostakovich meets Bernstein animations of the middle
section.
Recorded
over many years these are all pretty much self-selecting
classics from the Bream recorded canon. It helps that he’s
done the selecting. The notes are basic, the remastering
unproblematic, the music making wonderful.
Jonathan
Woolf
Track listing Francisco TARREGA (1852
- 1909)
Recuerdos de la Alhambra [3:50] Heitor VILLA-LOBOS (1887 - 1959)
Etudes (12) for Guitar, W 235 (1929) Nos. 7 in E major [2:26]; 8 in C sharp minor
[3:40]; 12 in A minor [2:36] Joaquin MALATS (1872
- 1912)
Serenata andaluza [3:51] Joaquín TURINA (1882-1949)
Fandanguillo for Guitar, Op. 36 (1926) [4:49] Albert ROUSSEL (1869 - 1937)
Ségovia, Op. 29 (1925) [2:19] William WALTON (1902 - 1983)
Five Bagatelles for Guitar (1972) [13:21] Manuel de FALLA (1876 - 1946)
Homenaje "Le tombeau de Claude Debussy" (1920) [4:15]
El sombrero de tres picos: Miller's Dance "Farruca" (1919) [2:15] Emilio PUJOL-VILLARRUBI (1886
- 1980)
Guajira for Guitar [4:24] Joaquín RODRIGO (1901 - 1999)
Invocación y Danza for Guitar "Hommage a M de Falla" (1961) [8:56] Benjamin BRITTEN (1913
- 1976)
Gloriana: Symphonic Suite, Op 53a (1953) [10:23] ³ Gaspar SANZ (1640 - 1710)
Instrucción de música sobre la guitarra española: (1674) Gallarda [1:23] Canarios
[1:18] Francisco GUERAU (c17)
Poema harmónico: No 4, Villano (1694) [1:24]
Poema harmónico compuesto de varias cifras por el temple de le guitarra española:
No 1, Canario (1694) [1:15] Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
Trio Sonata for Organ no 1 in E flat major, BWV 525 (1727) [11:34] ² Dionysio AGUADO (1784
- 1849)
Rondo brillants (3) for Guitar, Op. 2: No 2 in A minor (1825) [6:11] Fernando SOR (1778
- 1839)
Variations for Guitar on a theme from Mozart's "Magic Flute", Op. 9
(1843} [8:27] Luigi BOCCHERINI (1743
- 1805)
Quintet for Guitar and Strings No 4 in D major, G 448: Introduction and Fandango
(1798) [5:58] ² Mauro GIULIANI (1781
- 1829)
Rossiniana for Guitar no 1, Op. 119 (1853) [15:13] Enrique GRANADOS (1867 - 1916)
Valses poéticos (1887) [12:26] Malcolm ARNOLD (1921 - 2006)
Concerto for Guitar, Op. 67 – second movement only (1959) [11:30]¹
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