September, 2009,
Download Roundup
DOWNLOAD
OF THE MONTH: Back Catalogue
Antonio Vivaldi (1678 - 1741)
The Four Seasons and other concertos
Concerto
for Violin and Strings in E, Op.8, No.1, R.269 ‘La Primavera’1
[11:20]
Concerto
for Violin and Strings in G minor, Op.8, No.2, R.315 ‘L’estate’
[11:17]1
Concerto
for Violin and Strings in F, Op.8, No.3, R.293 ‘L’autunno’
[11:23]1
Concerto
for Violin and Strings in F minor, Op.8, No.4, R.297 ‘L’inverno’
[8:35]1
Concerto
for 2 Oboes, Strings and Continuo in D minor, R.535 (Performing
Edition by Christopher Hogwood) [9:00]2
Bassoon
Concerto in A minor, R.498 (Performing Edition by Christopher
Hogwood) [11:39]3
Flautino
Concerto in C, R.443 (Performing Edition by Christopher Hogwood)
[10:55]4
Alan
Loveday (violin)1; Celia Nicklin, Neil Black, Christopher
Hogwood, Colin Tilney, Kenneth Heath2; Martin Gatt,
Christopher Hogwood, Colin Tilney, Kenneth Heath3;
William Bennett4; The Academy of St. Martin in
the Fields/Sir Neville Marriner
DECCA
THE ORIGINALS 475 7531 [74:12] – from passionato.com
(mp3)
The appeal of this
classic Argo recording of The Four Seasons, ground-breaking
in its day, has recently been greatly increased by the addition
of three other concertos, for bassoon, two oboes, and flautino,
in performances which are just as recommendable in their own
right. Some more recent recordings may be more athletic than
Marriner’s, but none has more to offer – I’m thinking especially
of the invocation of Winter in the first two movements of
L’inverno, which has never been bettered, but aspects
of other concertos are just as insightful in different ways.
Even
though I was very impressed with the recent versions of these
and the remaining Op.8 concertos by the Accademia Bizantina/Ottavio
Dantone on the Arts Blue Line label (SACD 47564-8 and 47565-8
– see review)
I retained the caveat that in some moods I would still prefer
this 1969 recording as a safer choice. The recording, though
currently available only in 320k mp3 format – flac version
to follow, I understand – still sounds well. Like other DG
and Decca Originals, this was on offer for an appealing £4.99
when I downloaded it; even at the regular price of £7.99 it
remains (just) competitive with the CD.
Those
who prefer the greater excitement of those Dantone recordings,
or their coupling of The Four Seasons with Op.8/5 and
6, with Op.8/7-12 on the second CD, will also find them available
as downloads in mp3 and flac formats from passionato.com,
though not, of course, in SACD format.
DOWNLOAD
OF THE MONTH: New Recording
Henry’s
Music - Motets from a Royal Choirbook; Songs by Henry VIII
John TAVERNER (c.1490-1545) Christe Jesu,
pastor bone [2:49]; Anonymous
King’s Pavan [1:29]; England be glad [2:03]; Henry VIII (King of England)
(1491-1547) Consort No. 12 [0:57]; Anonymous Madame d’amours
[3:44]; Henry VIII Tandernaken [2:12]; Richard Sampson (d.1554)
Salve Radix [2:17]; Psallite felices [10:00];
Benedictus de Opitiis
(fl.1516) Sub tuum præsidium [3:33]; Quam
pulcra est [4:23]; Anonymous
Hec est præclarum vas [2:48]; Jacotin (before 1479-1529) Beati omnes qui timent
Dominum [5:25]; Henry
VIII Consort No. 13 [0:47]; My hart and O my hart
[0:59]; Helas madam [1:12]; Though sum saith that yough rulyth
me [3:33]; Philippe Verdelot
(1480/5 – c.1530/2) Nil majus superi vident
[3:30]; Henry VIII Consort No. 8
[1:10] ; Adieu Madame [4:27]; En vray amoure
[1:05]; Robert Fayrfax
Lauda vivi alpha et oo [16:28] Andrew
Lawrence-King, medieval harp; Alamire; Quintessential/David
Skinner
OBSIDIAN
OBSID-CD705
[74:51] – from classicsonline.com
(mp3)
When, in my July
Roundup, I compared Sirinu’s recent recording of the music
of Henry VIII (Chandos CHAN0621) with the much older Decca/Argo
reissue of the Purcell Consort and Musica Reservata in Music
to entertain Henry VIII (475 8582), I found myself torn
between the scholarship of the new recording and the much
greater vitality of the reissue. Alamire and Quintessential
under the direction of David Skinner on the new Obsidian recording
square the circle: their scholarship is fully the equal of
Sirinu’s, extending to the inclusion of some material completely
new to the catalogue, and their performances have the vitality
and strength which I found lacking in the Chandos recording.
The recording is fully worthy of the performances and the
320k download presents a faithful reproduction.
This
download will be especially attractive to anyone who heard
the same programme live at the British Library or elsewhere
on tour. Otherwise, if you buy just one recording to celebrate
the 500th anniversary of Henry’s accession to the
throne, let it be this one.
If
you must have the texts and translations, go for the CD.
There’s
a 15-minute promotional video on the Alamire
website and the Folio Society has produced a colour facsimile
of MS Royal 11.e.xi, a collection presented to Henry in 1518
or 1519, from which the new material has been derived.
REISSUE
OF THE MONTH
Bohuslav MARTINů (1890-1959)
Cello
Concerto No.1, H196 (1930, 1939, 1955) [26:08]
Cello
Concerto No.2, H304 (1944) [36:05]
Concertino
in c minor, H143 (1924) [13:54]
Raphael
Wallfisch (cello); Czech Philharmonic Orchestra/Jirí Belohlavek
rec.
Spanish Hall, Prague Castle, 24-28 June 1991. DDD.
CHANDOS
CHAN10547X
[76:27] – from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
I recommended the
original full-price version of this recording as recently
as my March,
2009, Download Roundup: ‘For
the recording of Martinů’s Cello Concertos 1 and 2
and the Concertino recorded by Chandos [in 1991] in
Prague Castle, with Raphael Wallfisch, the Czech Philharmonic
and Jiři Bělohlávek, I need only refer you to Rob
Barnett’s recommendation of the CD as “the first choice for
the Martinů Cello Concertos” (CHAN9015 – see review)
and report that the lossless download from theclassicalshop
comes in sound to match the ample acoustic of the CD which,
this time, also remains available. The Supraphon recording
to which RB referred is available from eMusic, but its omission
of the Concertino relegates it to second choice.’
Now
the Chandos recording reappears 50 years after Martinů’s
death at a lower price and very welcome it is, too. In the
case of the original recording both the mp3 and lossless downloads
had a price advantage over the physical CD; this remains true
for the mp3 (£4.99) but the lossless download now costs a
few pence more than the CD (£7.99 against £7.83). Having
recently praised Hyperion for following the lead of Chandos
in making their booklets freely available, I’m disappointed
that the download originally came without the booklet – a
problem now rectified.
Highly recommended
Josquin des Prés (c.1440-1521)
Missa Malheur me bat [39:46] ; Missa Fortuna
desperata [35:41]
The Tallis Scholars/Peter Phillips
rec. Chapel
of Merton College, 2008. DDD.
GIMELL CDGIM 042 [75:27] – from gimell.com
(mp3, lossless and 24-bit)
Yes,
I know that I’ve reviewed and praised this before, in my February,
2009, Download Roundup and in detail in a full review
(see also review
by Mark Sealey).
Those
earlier reviews were based on the ‘ordinary’ CD-quality files.
More recently, having invested in Squeezebox, which allows
me to play 24-bit recordings, I have investigated the Studio
Master (24-bit, 48kHz) and Studio Master Pro (24-bit, 96kHz)
downloads and found the recording even more superb in those
formats. If you’re uncertain whether your system can cope
(and you certainly can’t burn the Studio Master Pro recording
onto CD), the Gloria from Missa fortuna desperata
is still available free; download it and try. Squeezebox
certainly copes with this and with Linn 24-bit 96kHz recordings,
but not with Linn’s 24-bit 88.2kHz downloads. If you haven’t
already bought the CD or downloaded, and your system can cope,
go for one of the 24-bit versions.
The
Golden Age - Volume 1: Europe
Tomas Luis de VICTORIA Ave Maria [4:45]
Francisco GUERRERO Ave Virgo Sanctissima [4:28]
Gregorio ALLEGRI Miserere [11:15]
Giovanni Pierluigi da PALESTRINA Stabat Mater [9:26]
Joao Lourenço REBELO Panis Angelicus [4:08]
Carlo GESUALDO O Vos Omnes
[3:00]
VICTORIA Versa Est In
Luctum [3:59]
Josquin DESPREZ Absalon Fili
Mi [4:12]
Orlando LASSUS Justorum
Animæ
[2:48]; Tristis Est Anima Mea [3:11]; Timor Et Tremor [3:59]
Magnificat/Philip
Cave
LINN
CKD052
[55 minutes] - from linnrecords.com
(mp3 and lossless)
Thomas Tallis (1505-1585) Te
lucis ante terminum
(ed. Simon Hill; OUP) [2:39]; Salvator mundi (ed. John
Milsom; OUP) [2:55]; Spem in alium (ed. Philip Brett;
OUP) [9:56]; In iejunio et fletu (ed. Peter le Huray
& David Willcocks; OUP) [4:40]; O Salutaris hostia
(ed. John Milsom; OUP) [3:16]; Lamentations I (ed. Philip
Brett; OUP) [8:04]; Lamentations II (ed. Philip Brett; OUP)
[12:14]; Miserere (ed. Sally Dunkley) [2:34]; Mass
for 4 Voices (ed. Philip Cave) [21:27] Magnificat/Philip
Cave rec. St Mary the Virgin, Buckland, January 2000 and at St Judeʼs
on the Hill, Hampstead, June and November 1995, June 1997.
DDD. – texts and translations included.
LINN
CKD233
[67.20] – from linnrecords.com (mp3, lossless
and Studio Master quality)
Though CKD052 was advertised as
Volume 1 of a series, I don’t think Magnificat ever made any
subsequent volumes, which is a shame, because what we have
here is very good – a wide-ranging anthology of Renaissance
music, good enough to serve as an introduction to the period,
in very fine performances and recording. The lossless (flac)
download sounds excellent, but there are no notes, which is
a serious deficiency for anyone coming to this music afresh.
No texts, either, though most of them are available on the
web in the original Latin and/or translation.
No matter that
the ‘Golden Age’ recording was not followed up; Magnificat’s
Tallis recording made an excellent sequel. If you’re looking
for a one-CD introduction to his works, you need look no further.
The singing is superb – fully on a par with performances of
Tallis’s music by The Tallis Scholars (Gimell) and Chapelle
du Roi (Signum) – and the recording is excellent. The Studio
Master download, played via the Squeezebox – it’s too large
to burn to CD – sounds excellent, but be sure that your system
will support 24-bit, 96kHz wma or flac recordings. Otherwise,
go for the ordinary CD-quality wma or flac version. If you
want surround sound, there are also 5.1 24-bit versions.
Don’t
forget, however, the inexpensive 2-CD distillation of Chapelle
du Roi’s splendid complete Tallis recordings which I reviewed
some time ago. (Portrait PCL2101, for around £8.50). And
don’t overlook Magnificat’s recording of the music of Rogier
which I recommended in the January, 2009, Roundup.
Josquin des PRÉS (c.1440-1521): Præter rerum
seriem [7:27]
Cipriano de Rore
(c.1515-c.1565) Missa Præter rerum seriem [29:28]
Infelix ego [12:15] ; Parce mihi [11:09] ;
Ave Regina caelorum [5:56]; Descendi in hortum meum
[5:35]
The Tallis Scholars/Peter Phillips
rec. St Peter and St Paul, Salle, Norfolk, UK, 1993. DDD.
GIMELL CDGIM 029 [72:10] – from gimell.com
(mp3 and lossless)
Cipriano de RORE Mon petit cueur [5:16] ;
Plange quasi virgo [5:10] ; Mia benigna fortuna
[4:00] ; Missa Præter rerum seriem [28:48] ;
Schiet’arbuscel [4:09] ; Calami sonum ferentes
[4:59]; Se ben il duol [4:32] ; Dissimulare
etiam sperasti [7:41]
Huelgas
Ensemble/Paul van Nevel HARMONIA
MUNDI HMC90 1760 [64:34]
– from emusic.com
(mp3, 12 credits)
In last month’s
Roundup I rashly undertook to compare the excellent Gimell
recording of de Rore’s Missa Præter rerum seriem with
its equally distinguished Harmonia Mundi competitor.
In
fact, as I should have anticipated, both are so good that
I’m reduced to noting trivialities, not least of which is
that the Harmonia Mundi is deleted on CD – hopefully, to return
at mid price – and available only as a download from eMusic
or Amazon.
As
expected, The Tallis Scholars’ tempi are all slower than those
of the Huelgas Ensemble, with the exception of the Kyrie
where they are very similar and the Agnus Dei, taken
only once on Gimell instead of the usual three-fold repetition,
as on Harmonia.
Finally,
the couplings are very different and complementary. I wouldn’t
want to be without the Josquin motet which opens the Gimell
recording and is employed as the cantus firmus of the
mass – there would have been room to have included it on the
Harmonia recording – but I equally wouldn’t wish not to have
the wonderful setting of Dido’s verbal scourging of Æneas
in Vergil’s words from the Æneid, which ends the Harmonia
recording.
Claudin de SERMISY (c.1490-1562)
Si
bona suscepimus 4vv [5:37]
Dominique PHINOT (c 1510–before
1561) Pater peccavi 5vv [7:50]; Missa
Si bona suscepimus 4vv [23:51]; Tanto tempore 8vv
[3:57]; Iam non dicam vos servos 8vv [4:23]; O sacrum
convivium 8vv [4:33]; Incipit oratio Jeremiæ prophetæ
8vv [11:38]; Magnificat octavi toni 4/5vv [5:24]; Confitebor
tibi, Domine 4vv [6:56] The
Brabant Ensemble (Helen Ashby, Kate Ashby, Alison Coldstream,
Kate Semmens, (soprano); Emma Ashby, Sarah Coatsworth, Claire
Eadington, Fiona Rogers (alto); Alastair Carey, David Knight,
Andrew Mcanerney, Oliver Winstone (tenor); Christopher Borrett,
Will Dawes, Jon Stainsby, David Stuart (bass))/Stephen Rice
rec.
Chapel of Harcourt Hill Campus, Oxford Brookes University,
29–31 August, 2008. DDD.
HYPERION
CDA67696
[74:13] –
There were several
highly recommendable runners-up for the title of Download
of the Month and this new recording was certainly among them.
As
with the Victoria Missa Gaudeamus last month, I looked
on iTunes to download it at the first opportunity when it
was released on August 1st but didn’t find it.
It transpires that Hyperion are preparing their own download
facility and they kindly supplied me with the mp3 tracks which
will constitute the download of this recording. I understand
that they will also be offering lossless versions, but the
variable-bit-rate mp3 tracks (averaging around 240k) certainly
sound fine – as good as most 320k versions. As with other
recordings of the Brabant Ensemble, you will probably want
to turn up the volume a couple of dB; once that is done, even
the very keen-eared should be happy with the sound.
I’m
glad that the Sermisy motet on which the Mass is based is
placed first – I can never understand why Nimbus don’t do
the same with their recordings of Christ Church Choir, e.g.
on the Lassus recording reviewed below – but I’d have preferred
to have had it immediately before the Mass.
Phinot’s
music fully deserves to be better known; only short pieces
have found their way onto anthology recordings in the past.
The performances do him full justice; they are every bit as
good as the earlier recordings by the Oxford-based Brabant
Ensemble that I have reviewed: Crecquillon Missa Mort m’a
privé (CDA67596 – see review);
Gombert Tribulatio et angustia (CDA67614 – see review); Manchicourt Missa Cuidez vous que Dieu (CDA67604
– see review)
and Morales Magnificat, Motets & Lamentations (CDA67694
– see review). As I’ve said before, The Tallis Scholars
and The Sixteen have some serious competition on their doorstep.
Only their most recent recording, of music from the Chirk
Castle Part-books, (CDA67695 – see review)
disappointed me slightly.
As
always, the artwork and notes are available to all on the
Hyperion website. The artwork – de la Tour’s painting of
Job ‘comforted’ by his wife – and the notes are, as usual,
first-rate. There’s just one problem with the translation
of the Prayer of Jeremiah from Lamentations (track
11): ligna nostra precio comparavimus actually means
‘we purchased our wood at [high] cost’, not ‘our wood we have
likened to money.’ The classical scholarship of Hyperion’s
translation for once is not an advantage in translation ‘low’
Latin.
Hyperion
have promised to let me know when their download site is up
and running and I’ll publicise it as soon as I know. In the
meantime, please don’t bombard them (or me) with queries.
Orlando Lassus (1532-1594) Masses and Motets
Missa Qual donna attende à gloriosa fama [20:56];
Tristis est anima mea [5:02]; Exaltabo te Domine
[2:01]; De profundis clamavi [11:10]; Missa Venatorum
(Jäger) [10:50] Cipriano De Rore (1515/16-1565) Madrigal:
Qual donna attende à gloriosa fama [4.17] Christ Church Cathedral
Choir/Stephen Darlington rec.
Dorchester Abbey, Oxfordshire, 16-17 May 1988.
DDD. NIMBUS
NI5150
[54:08] – from classicsonline.com
(mp3)
Recordings of renaissance
polyphony by professional groups must not be allowed the field
entirely to themselves when performances as good as this are
available. Last month I recommended a Christ Church recording
of Victoria on Nimbus NI5434. This Lassus recording was made
some years earlier but still sounds very well, with the bright
recording adding spice to the performance. The Jäger
or Huntsmen’s Mass is very short but attractive – but why
was the Credo omitted? I know that this section was
sometimes sung to chant, even when the other sections were
sung polyphonically, but, as Lassus set the movement and there
was plenty of room on the CD, its omission seems inexplicable.
My
other small reservation concerns the decision to place de
Rore’s madrigal which provides the cantus firmus for
the longer Mass at the end of the recording – surely it would
have been more helpful to place it first. With a download,
of course, it’s quite feasible to rearrange the order of the
tracks.
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) Concerto
for violin and strings in a minor BWV 10411 [13:14]
Concerto
for two violins and strings in d minor BWV 10431,2
[15:10] Concerto
for violin and strings in E major BWV 10421 [16:28]
Concerto
for three violins and strings in D major (arr. from BWV 1064
by Simon Standage)1,2,3 [16:21] Simon
Standage (violin)1; Micaela Comberti (violin)2;
Miles Golding (violin)3; Collegium Musicum 90/Simon
Standage rec.
St Jude on the Hill, Hampstead, London, 23-25 May 1995. DDD.
CHANDOS
CHACONNE CHAN0594
[61:39] – from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
When
I recommended the recent reissue of the versions of BWV1041,
1042, 1043 and 1060 by Catherine Mackintosh, Elizabeth Wallfisch,
The King’s Consort/Robert King (Hyperion Helios CDH55347),
I made a brief mention of this version and promised to give
a fuller account in this Roundup.
Simon
Standage’s earlier version on Archiv remains in the catalogue
at full price and as a download from passionato.com; as I
said in the Hyperion review, I shall continue to listen to
that recording with enjoyment. Some have, however, found
his Andante of BWV1041 (much) too slow; though his
time of 7:15 worries me less than others, his 6:01 here is
much closer to the consensus for this movement and will, I’m
sure, please the majority of listeners. (Paradoxically, despite
the faster tempo, I did find the playing here to drag a little.)
Elsewhere, just about everything is as it should be and, with
good recording, especially in lossless format, the download
is recommendable.
Instead
of the usual BWV1060, as on the Hyperion CD, Standage here
concludes with his own, effective, arrangement of the 3-Keyboard
Concerto, BWV1064.
Unlike
the Hyperion CD, this Chandos recording remains at full price,
so even the mp3 download, at £7.99, is more expensive than
its rival, at around £6.
Highly recommended
Johann Sebastian BACH Orchestral
Suites for a young prince Overture
(Suite) No. 1 in C (BWV 1066) [20:33] Overture
(Suite) No. 2 in a minor (after Overture in b minor, BWV 1067;
reconstruction: Gonzalo X. Ruiz) [17:45] Overture
(Suite) No. 3 in D (after BWV 1068) [17:20]Overture
(suite) No. 4 in D (BWV 1069) [17:31] Ensemble
Sonnerie/Monica Huggett rec.
21-25 September 2007, Saint Silas Church, Kentish Town, London,
UK. DDD AVIE
AV2171
[73:45] – from classicsonline.com
(mp3)
This
version of four old favourites in new guise is another of
the recordings which vied for the title of Download of the
Month. Johan van Veen had some small reservations about repeats
– see review
– which didn’t prevent his awarding the recording a Thumbs
Up. I had even fewer reservations than JV so, with a 320k
download which does pretty full justice to the recording,
my recommendation is secure.
This
wouldn’t be prime recommendation, since it presents the music
not in its familiar, final form, but in a putative earlier
state, but it makes a very enjoyable alternative for anyone
who already has a conventional recording. Avie now have another
feather in their cap to join that earned for Trevor Pinnock’s
remake of the Brandenburgs last year.
Highly Recommended
George Frideric Handel (1685 - 1759)
Alexander’s
Feast (HWV75,
1736) Nancy
Argenta (soprano), Ian Partridge (tenor), Michael George (bass);
The
Sixteen; The Symphony of Harmony and Invention/Harry Christophers
rec.
All Hallows Church, Gospel Oak, London. DDD Originally
released on the Collins label in 1991.CORO
COR16028
[69:42 + 46:04] from
classicsonline.com
(mp3), with texts, translations and notes.
George Frideric Handel (1685 - 1759) Solomon (HWV67, 1749) Nancy
Argenta (soprano - Solomon’s Queen); Barbara Hendricks (soprano
- Queen of Sheba); Carolyn Watkinson (mezzo - Solomon); Joan
Rodgers (soprano - first harlot); Della Jones (soprano - second
harlot); Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor - Zadok); Stephen Varcoe
(bass - a Levite); The Monteverdi Choir, English Baroque Soloists/John
Eliot Gardiner First
released 1985. Reissued March, 2006. DDD. DECCA
THE ORIGINALS 475 7561 [68:41 + 67:34] from
passionato.com (mp3)
When I recently reviewed the reissued Harnoncourt version
of Alexander’s Feast (2564 69056-2), I found it somewhat
let down by its omission of any of the orchestral music associated
with that work and by a less than ideal bass singer, whose
account of Revenge, Timotheus cries, though well sung,
just isn’t powerful enough.
The
Sixteen include two of the three associated orchestral pieces,
the Harp Concerto, Op.4/6 and the Organ Concerto,
Op.4/1, played within the performances as they originally
were, but not the Concerto Grosso nicknamed Alexander’s
Feast, though there would have been room for this, too,
to have been included, as it was in the interval of the original
performance.
If
you must have the Alexander’s Feast concerto, it’s
included on the Gardiner performance on Philips, and that,
too, is available as a download, from passionato.com
(Philips 422 0532, £15.99). The classicsonline and passionato
downloads are at 320k; the Decca Originals reissue of Gardiner
is available at the slightly lower bit-rate of 256k at £8.99
from amazon.co.uk,
who also have the CDs for £9.57.
That
may sway the choice to the Gardiner performance for you, as
I thought it might for me, but it’s Michael George’s voice
that eventually makes me prefer the Coro version.
The
320k mp3 sound is good and you get the booklet of notes and
texts to download, but at £15.99 it’s actually a few pence
more expensive than some dealers charge for the CDs.
By way of compensation,
it has to be Gardiner in Solomon. When first issued,
this recording ran to three LPs/cassettes/CDs, so its reissue
on two CDs is a real bargain, especially as passionato are,
as I write, offering 2-CD Originals for £9.99. The performance
is excellent, as is the recording, sounding much more than
adequate in its mp3 guise.
Following
the advice of Winton Dean, Gardiner omits some of the less
interesting music, a decision which has been warmly welcomed
in some quarters and deprecated in others. I’m not about
to disagree with two such eminent Handelian authorities as
Dean and North, but, if it matters to you to have every last
note, Passionato also offer the DG/McCreesh version on 3CDs.
You
won’t get the libretto with the download, but that’s widely
available on the web.
Discovery
of the Month
Ferdinando Bertoni (1725-1813) Orfeo (1776) Delores
Ziegler (mezzo - Orfeo); Cecilia Gasdi (soprano - Euridice);
Bruce Ford (tenor - Hymen); Ambrosian Opera Chorus; I Solisti
Veneti/Claudio Scimone rec.
3-7 July, 1990, Olympic Theatre, Vicenza, Italy. DDD. ARTS
MUSIC RED LINE 47118-2 [65:02] passionato.com
(mp3 and flac)
This is a real
discovery – an opera on the story of Orpheus and Eurydice,
using the text which Gluck had employed for his first, Italian,
version – indeed, intended for the same castrato singer.
Some of the music comes close enough to Gluck to be accused
of plagiarism, but there are some interesting differences,
with Bertoni harking back much more to the opera seria
tradition. The performances are good and the recording is
more than adequate, especially in its lossless flac version.
At the time of writing, Arts Red Line mp3s were on offer for
a mere £3.99 but Passionato’s normal download price is competitive
with the CD equivalent. There are no texts or notes, but
the Gluck text, which differs only slightly, is easily to
be found on the web. I strongly recommend giving this a try.
There’s
more (sacred) music by Bertoni on a CD of Galuppi (Messa
per San Marco, 1766, Chandos CHAN0702 and downloads) which
I hope to explore.
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Piano Concerto No. 9 in E flat, K291 (1777) [34:35]
Piano Concerto No. 23 in A, K488 (1786) [27:19]
Northern Sinfonia/Imogen Cooper (piano)
rec. live, The Sage, Gateshead, 18-20 October 2005. DDD
AVIE AV2100 [61:54] from
passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless) or classicsonline.com
(mp3) See
Musicweb review by Colin
Clarke.
Like
Colin Clarke, I retain a great deal of affection for Alfred
Brendel’s performance of the Jeunehomme Concert, K291,
not least for his first recording of it which I recently reviewed
as reissued on the super-budget Alto label (ALC1047, with
No.14, K449). I do think, however, that his erstwhile student
Imogen Cooper has a slight edge in this live recording, coupled
with K488, which has a strong claim to be the pinnacle of
Mozart’s concertos. Though K488 is placed first here, the
earlier work comes as by no means an anti-climax and, as CC
rightly says, the applause after each is strongly deserved.
Whatever other version(s) you may have – for example, Kovacevich
in K488 – this Avie recording is almost mandatory.
It’s
worth paying a little extra for the passionato flac version,
as against the 320k mp3s from either provider, though you
may have some trouble getting your computer to recognise the
three tracks of K271; the trick is to shorten the filename
after the ‘No.9’ and add the extension ‘.flac’ (or ‘.mp3’
for the mp3 version).
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) Complete
Symphonies
CD
1 [72:57]
Symphony
No. 1 in c minor, Op. 11 [32:16]
Symphony
No. 3 in a minor ‘Scottish’, Op. 56 [40:34]
CD
2 [72:57]
Symphony
No. 2 (Lobgesang) in B flat, Op. 52 [72:57]
CD
3
Symphony
No.4 in A, Op.90 (Italian) [29:41]
Symphony
No.5 in D, Op.107 (Reformation) [32:37]
Overture:
The Hebrides, Op.26 [10:03]
Cynthia
Haymon (soprano I)*; Alison Hagley (soprano II)*; Peter Straka
(tenor)*; Philharmonia Chorus*; Leslie Pearson organ; Philharmonia
Orchestra/Walter Weller
rec. St Jude on
the Hill, Hampstead, London, 6-7 February 1991 (Symphonies
Nos.3 and 4), 10-11 April 1991 (Symphony No. 2); 5-6 May 1992
(Symphonies Nos.1 and 5). DDD.
CHANDOS
CHAN10224(3)X
[3 CDs: 72:57 + 72:57 + 72:36]
from
theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
On CD and as an
mp3 download, these three discs come as a package, for £15.64
and £9.99 respectively, but the lossless downloads may be
purchased separately at £4.99 each, which would be useful
if you followed my recent recommendation of the Naïve/Krivine
recording of Nos. 4 and 5 (V5069 – see June,
2009, Roundup and MG’s review
of
the CD) and simply wish to complete a set of Mendelssohn symphonies.
Weller’s performances are very good and the recording to match,
especially in the form of the lossless download – go for the
.flac version for preference, unless you intend to listen
and/or burn to CDR via iTunes, in which case the .wav version
will be preferable.
Weller’s
version of the Italian symphony is also available with
excellent Howard Shelley performances of the First Piano Concerto
and Capriccio Brillant on an inexpensive Chandos Introduction
to Mendelssohn (CHAN2025)
which I recommended
a year ago.
Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921)
Le Carnaval des animaux (ed. Durand) [22:23];
Fantaisie pour violon et harpe Op.124 [12:53]; Romance
pour violoncelle et piano Op.36 [3:20]; Prière pour
violoncelle et piano Op.158 [5:15]; ‘Mon coeur s’ouvre
à ta voix’ extract from Samson et Dalila [2:55];
Septet in E flat Op.65 [16:04]
Renaud
Capuçon, Béatrice Muthelet, Esther Hoppe (violins); Gautier
Capuçon (cello); Emmanuel Pahud (flute); Paul Meyer (clarinet);
David Guerrier (trumpet); Frank Braley, Michel Dalberto (pianos);
Janne Saksala (double bass); Marie-Pierre Langlamet (harp);
Florent Jodelet (percussion) – rec. 2003. DDD.
VIRGIN
CLASSICS 5 45603-2 [63:00]
from
passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless)
There are many
recommendable versions of The Carnival of the Animals
on CD and as downloads but none, I think, which captures the
fun of the music as well as this – just listen to the glorious
hash which the pianists make of their scales (track 11) to
take just one example. With attractive couplings, especially
the Septet, which also receives a splendid performance,
and fine recording, especially the lossless flac version,
this deserves a strong recommendation as a bit of fun among
some mostly serious music in this month’s Roundup. Both the
320k mp3 and flac versions, at £7.99 and £9.99 respectively,
are competitive economically with the full-price CD.
Mily Alexeyevich BALAKIREV (1837-1910)
Piano Concerto No. 1 in F sharp minor, Op. 1 (1855-56) [14:17]
Piano Concerto No. 2 in E flat major (completed by Sergei
Lyapunov) (1864/1906) [36:41]
Grande Fantaisie on Russian Folksongs, Op. 4 (1852)
[18:32]
Anastasia Seifetdinova (piano); Russian Philharmonic Orchestra/Dmitry
Yablonsky
rec. 25-30 November 2006, Studio 5, Russian State TV &
Radio, Co KULTURA, Moscow, Russia
NAXOS 8.570396 [69:27]
from
classicsonline.com
(mp3) or
passionato.com (mp3 and lossless)
See
Musicweb reviews by Dan
Morgan and Colin
Clarke.
Dan Morgan could
muster only one cheer (out of three), though he still recommended
purchasing the CD for the sake of the youthful Grande Fantaisie.
Colin Clarke was much more enthusiastic: ‘This is a fascinating
release well worthy of investigation.’
I
must admit that I’ve been a sucker for Balakirev ever since,
years ago, a friend played me the Beecham recording of the
First Symphony; I rushed out and bought it, on the HMV Classical
favourites label, the next day and I snapped up the CD reissue
as soon as it became available.
My
wife has always been more ambiguous about Balakirev, alleging
that vast swathes of his music go nowhere. She’s right, of
course – and the same is true of these concertos – but the
journey is much more interesting than the (non-)destination
in that classic Beecham performance and on this new Naxos
recording. The performance is more than adequate and the
recording is very good, especially in passionato’s first-rate
lossless flac version, as played directly via Squeezebox.
The 320k mp3 from Naxos’s own classicsonline.com is also very
good of its kind, but I’m very much looking forward to the
promised time (soon) when they, too, issue flac downloads.
As
for the First Symphony, I’m afraid that Beecham’s EMI Studio
CD has been deleted, but there are decent alternatives from
Svetlanov on Regis (RRC1131) and Golovschin on Naxos (8.550792
and download), both at super-budget price. Hyperion and Chandos
also have recommendable 2-for-1 sets containing both symphonies
(CDD22030 and CHAN24129 and download, respectively).
Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904)
Piano
Quintet in A, Op.81 [39:00]
String
Quartet No.10 in E flat major, Op.51 - B.92 [32:02]
Andreas
Haefliger; Takács Quartet
rec.
Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk, November 1998. DDD.
DECCA
466 1972 [71:02]
from
passionato.com
(mp3)
My allegiances
still lie with the Clifford Curzon/Vienna Philharmonic Quartet
performance of the Quintet; though that’s currently available
only on a 4-CD set or download from Universal classicsandjazz.co.uk
(475 0842) you do also get his version of the Franck Quintet,
his superb accounts of Schubert’s last Piano Sonata, D960,
the Grieg Piano Concerto, Mozart Piano Concertos 23 and 24,
etc., so there are plenty of compensatory riches for the inconvenience.
The
Haefliger/Takács version is my preferred alternative among
more recent single CD recordings; though that, too, appears
to be currently unavailable on CD, passionato’s 320k download
offers a much more than acceptable substitute. The performance
achieves just the right blend of power and affection, with
even a touch of Schmaltz in the right places and the
Quartet, B92, makes a good coupling – it’s not eclipsed by
its proximity to the wonderful Quintet, though I would have
preferred the playing order to have been reversed, with the
Quartet first. (See Michael Cookson’s review
of this version as part of a box set.)
If
you must have lossless sound, go for the Chandos recording
with Jeremy Menuhin and the Chilingirian Quartet (CHAN9173).
Gustav MAHLER (1860–1911)
Symphony No.6 (1903-4, perf. 1906) [83:53]
London Philharmonic Orchestra/Klaus Tennstedt
rec. live, Royal Albert Hall, London, 1983. BBC
Recording. ADD.
LPO LPO-0038 [52:56 + 30:57]
from classicsonline.com
(mp3)
This
is the perfect antidote for those who don’t like Gergiev’s
hard-driven account on the LSO Live label which I reviewed
last year (LSO0061 – see review).
Not that this is too soft-centred – far from it – or that
Mahler’s music doesn’t lend itself to a variety of approaches;
I certainly shan’t be ditching Gergiev, but it has to be admitted
that Tennstedt’s Mahler, with eight more minutes to breathe,
will probably have a wider appeal. Those for whom it matters
should note that Tennstedt places the Andante third;
I tend to prefer it in second place, but I’m not going to
go to the stake over it.
The BBC recording is not at all bad for its 1983 date, though it’s
not as immediate as some modern versions. I made the mistake
of listening to this immediately after a bright Chandos recording
in their Contemporaries of Mozart series; the contrast
made the LPO sound seem dry at first, but the ear soon adjusts.
Classicsonline’s price of £9.99 for the two CDs takes into account
the short playing time – Gergiev, of course, fits the whole
symphony on one CD. Playing the new recording via Squeezebox,
of course, alleviates the need to change CDs between the third
and fourth movements. Like John Quinn, I thought this rather
special – see review.
Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov (1865-1936)
The
Seasons:
Ballet, Op.67 [35:34]
Concerto
for Violin and Orchestra in a minor, Op.82 [20:48]
Oscar
Shumsky (violin); Royal Scottish National Orchestra/Neeme
Järvi
rec.
Henry Wood Hall, Glasgow, 28-29 October 1987. DDD.
CHANDOS
CHAN8596
[56:32]
from
theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
Järvi takes The
Seasons at quite a pace, but all the lyricism is there,
too. With the Violin Concerto as an apt coupling,
in an equally fine performance, you need look no further for
Glazunov’s two most popular works; indeed, I don’t think that
anyone else has offered them together. This is music to wallow
in and these performances certainly allow you to that. The
recording is good, if a little reverberant, and the lossless
download sounds very well. See below (the Bacewicz review)
for a way to avoid having your player follow track 1 with
track 10.
Lord Berners (Gerald
Hugh Tyrwhitt-Wilson) (1883-1950)
The
Triumph of Neptune [43:16];
L’uomo dai baffi (The man with the moustache) [15:52];
Valses bourgeoises (orch. P. Lane) [7:43]; Polka (orch.
Philip Lane) [2:37]
English
Northern Philharmonia; Royal Ballet Sinfonia/David Lloyd-Jones
rec.
1998. DDD. MARCO
POLO 8.223711
[69:23] from
passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless) and classicsonline.com
(mp3)
This recording
is no longer available on CD which, I hope, means that it
will be transferred to the less expensive Naxos label. I
can’t pretend that it’s the greatest music ever – most will
probably be content with the more familiar Suite from The
Triumph of Neptune – but it is attractive and it does
deserve this, its only outing on record in its full form.
The ENP and Royal Ballet Sinfonia make good cases for it and
the recording is good, even in plain mp3 format. If it’s
just the 25-minute Suite from Neptune that you want,
classicsonline can offer the classic 1952 Beecham recording,
coupled with Arnell’s Punch and the Child, for £1.99
on Naxos Classical
Archives 9.80798. L’uomo
dai baffi
certainly doesn’t deserve its (otherwise total?) neglect on
record. Philip
Lane’s excellent notes are available to all-comers on the
classicsonline web site.
Francis Poulenc (1899-1963)
Concerto
for Organ, Strings & Timpani in g minor (1938) [21:24]
Pierre Petit (1922-2000)
Concertino for Organ, Strings & Percussion (1958) [20:49]
Samuel Barber (1910-1981)
Toccata Festiva Op. 36 (1960) [16:20]
Gillian
Weir (organ); English Chamber Orchestra/David Hill; Raymond
Leppard
First
released 2001. DDD.
LINN
CKD 178
[59:00]
from
linnrecords.com (mp3 and lossless)
With Gillian Weir
as organist and two such experienced conductors, this recording
could hardly go wrong. I have seen it suggested that the
balance in the Organ Concerto over-favours the solo
instrument – indeed, it does, but that didn’t worry me at
all. The couplings are so little known that this recording
might well be recommended as Discovery of the Month on
their behalf alone; neither is overwhelmed by being juxtaposed
with the much more famous Poulenc work. Apart from the noted
imbalance – which, as I say, was not a major problem for me
– the recording is excellent. I listened via Squeezebox to
the lossless version (available as .wma or .flac for £10)
but Linn’s 320k mp3 (at £8) downloads have always been more
than adequate in my experience.
I
tried the 24-bit Studio Master versions but, while other Linn
and Gimell 24-bit recordings are compatible with Squeezebox,
it reported that the 88.2kHz sample rate of this particular
download was incompatible. Make sure that your system is
compatible before you try the .wma or .flac Studio Master
version, then; otherwise stick with one of the normal CD-quality
versions.
Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975)
String
Quartet No.7 Op. 108; String Quartet No.4 Op.83; Piano Quintet
in g Minor Op.57*
Ian
Brown (piano)*; Schidlof Quartet (Ofer
Falk; Rafael
Todes (violins); Graham Oppenheimer (viola); Oleg Kogan (cello)) – first
released 1997. DDD.
LINN
CKD065
[69:26] – from linnrecords.com
(mp3 and lossless)
The critical response
to this recording in 1997 was pretty dire, with one reviewer
opining that pretty well any other recording of the Quartets
would be preferable and that even Ian Brown’s contribution
was not enough to keep the Piano Quintet afloat. It’s true
that other recordings find a greater degree of passion in
these Quartets, notably the Shostakovich Quartet, who couple
them with Nos.1-3 and 5 on a very inexpensive 2-CD Regis set
(RRC2028), but I didn’t find the performances quite as bland
as those 1997 reviews imply – perhaps I’m ‘filling in’ what
is missing here from memory of other performances, or I’m
carried away by the immediacy of the sound?
The
Piano Quintet is certainly well worth hearing, with all the
passion that is missing in the Quartets, and the recording
is excellent throughout in the lossless .flac version.
Grażyna Bacewicz (1909-1969)
Concerto
No. 7 for Violin and Orchestra, dedicated to Agustin León
Ara (1965) [21:57]
Concerto
No. 3 for Violin and Orchestra (1948) [23:08]
Concerto
No. 1 for Violin and Orchestra (1937) [12:22]; Uwertura
(Overture) (1943) [5:51]
Joanna
Kurkowicz (violin); Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra/Lukasz
Borowicz
rec.
Witold Lutoslawski Concerto Studio, Polish Radio, Warsaw,
21-24 October 2008 and 2-6 February 2009. DDD.
CHANDOS
CHAN10533
[63:47] – from the
classicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
Yet another centenary
to celebrate in 2009 – that of the birth of Polish violinist
and composer Grażyna Bacewicz. Full marks to Chandos
for spotting the occasion and celebrating it in this way.
There’s no doubting violinist Joanna Kurkowicz’s enthusaiasm
for the music and I’m sure that this recording offers the
best possible advocacy, but I’m afraid that I wasn’t at home
with Bacewicz’s idiom. My wife complains of Balakirev’s music,
which I love, that it’s intermittently beautiful but ultimately
that it goes nowhere; I’m afraid that I’d say the same of
Bacewicz. I preferred the Adès concerto (below). Excellent
recording and very good transfer. Like all downloads from
theclassicalshop, you may find yourself playing track 10 after
track 1, followed by track 2. This is due to a quirk in programmes
such as Squeezebox – the solution is to rename ‘tk1’ as ‘tk01’,
etc. Better still would be for the boffins at Chandos to
do this with future downloads. I’m assured that, when they
revamp their site soon, they will bear this in mind.
Thomas Adès (b.1971)
Violin
Concerto: Rings [04:01]; Paths [10:45]; Rounds [05:20]
Anthony
Marwood (Violin); Chamber Orchestra of Europe/Thomas Adès
rec.
2007? DDD
EMI
Download only 5002712
[20:08 ] – from passionato.com (mp3 or lossless)
or iTunes
A
friend who came round the other day brought the new recording
of Adès’s The Tempest. I liked what I heard at least
well enough to download it when it becomes available online
and, meanwhile, it encouraged me to listen to his Violin Concerto,
released in 2008 as a download only until EMI have a suitable
pairing for it on CD.
It’s
not easy to say why I find this more approachable than the
Bacewicz Concertos – it’s certainly not neo-romantic or neo-classical
music and the opening Rings is quite angular.
The second movement, the longest, Paths, sets a lyrical
solo against a stormier orchestral accompaniment. The finale,
Rounds, is, for me, the most attractive: think of the
Berg Violin Concerto or K A Hartmann’s Concerto funèbre,
and you will be somewhere in the right area. Which is not
to suggest that the music is at all derivative: in fact, it’s
not easy to describe what it’s ‘like’. Though not a
lover of most contemporary music, I am rapidly warming to
the very individual voices of Adès and Macmillan.
As
with all new music, I’ll have to let it grow on me for a while
before I give a definite answer, but my interim position is
favourable. The iTunes version comes in 256k mp3 sound; the
passionato is a little more expensive, but it’s offered at
320k mp3 or as a flac lossless download, in which form the
recording sounds excellent.
Brief recommendations with links to Musicweb reviews:
(Franz) Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809) String Quartets (Volume 2)
String
Quartet No. 23 in F minor, Op. 20, No.5, Hob.III:35 [22:55]
String
Quartet No. 32 in C major, Op. 33, No.3, Hob.III:39, ‘The
Bird’ [20:05]
String
Quartet No. 64 in D major, Op. 76, No.5, Hob.III:79 [19:29]
The
Jerusalem Quartet – rec. 2008/9? DDD.
HARMONIA
MUNDI HMX296 2030
[62:30]
f
rom classicsonline.com
(mp3)
The
Quartet’s earlier recording of Op.64/5, Op.76/2 and Op.77/1,
described by Colin Clarke as ‘a magnificent disc’ – see review
– has recently been reissued at mid price on HMX296 1823 as
‘Volume 1’ in what I hope is a projected series. As before,
we have a selection of quartets from different periods, which
some will prefer to having three related quartets, in excellent
performances – no matter that CC thought the players better
on record than in the flesh. The classicsonline transfer
(320k) is very good and, though the CD is at mid price, the
download is still (just) competitive unless you require the
notes.
Ruperto CHAPÍ (1851-1909)
la Corte de Granada: Fantasía Morisca (1873 rev. 1879)
[22:18]
Symphony in d minor (1877 rev. 1879) [34:29]
Orquesta de la Communidad de Madrid/José Ramón Encinar
rec.
rehearsal hall, Orchestra and Chorus of the Communidad de
Madrid, Teatro Isabel Clara Eugenia, Spain, 25-29 June and
15-17 October 2007
NAXOS
8.572195 [56:49]
from passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless) or classicsonline.com
(mp3)
“[H]ere is a very enjoyable but inexpensive disc of
two very worthwhile pieces by a composer who clearly ought
to be better known beyond his own country.” (John Sheppard - see review.)
Be prepared to find the music unusual for its date, in neo-classical
(or, in the Fantasía, neo-galant) manner, with prominent
organ parts and a harpsichord in the finale of the Fantasía.
The flac download is especially good, though slightly more
expensive than the mp3 versions from both websites (both at
the maximum 320k). The classicsonline site offers the booklet;
passionato don’t, but you can get the notes from the Naxos
site.
John IRELAND (1879-1962)
Trio in D for clarinet, cello and piano (ed. & reconstr.
by Stephen Fox) (1912-3) [23:15]
Fantasy Sonata for clarinet and piano (1943) [13:33]
The Holy Boy for clarinet and piano (1913) [2:44]
Sextet for clarinet, French horn and string quartet (1898)
[26:52]
Robert Plane (clarinet); Sophie Rahman (piano); Alice Neary
(cello, Trio); David Pyatt (French horn, Sextet); Maggini
Quartet
rec. 20-21 April 2008, Potton Hall, Westleton, Suffolk (trio
& fantasy); 25 April 2008, St. Silas Church, Chalk Farm,
London (sextet & Boy). DDD
NAXOS 8.570550 [66:25]
from
passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless) and classicsonline.com
(mp3)
“This
CD is a must for all Ireland enthusiasts – however
many recordings of the Fantasy Sonata there are (9); there
is always room for one more – and this present CD is a great
one!” (John France – see review).
The passionato .flac transfer is excellent and I’ve no reason
to doubt that the classicsonline and passionato mp3 transfers
(both at 320k) are also good.
Joseph CANTELOUBE (1879–1957)
Chants
d’Auvergne
(selection) [23:19]; Triptyque (1914) [16:04];
Chants de France (selection) [17:35]
Véronique Gens (soprano); Orchestre National de Lille-Région
Nord/Pas-de-Calais/Serge Baudo
rec. Auditorium
du Nouveau Siècle, Lille, 6-9 January, 2007. DDD.
Texts available online.
NAXOS 8.570338 [56:58]
from
passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless) and classicsonline.com
(mp3)
‘A most welcome
addition to the catalogue.’ (Hubert Culot: Bargain of the
Month – see review).
The download is equally desirable and, for once, there’s little
advantage in buying the CD, since the texts and translations
are not included in the booklet – both CD purchasers and downloaders
can obtain these online. Classicsonline
offer the booklet as a pdf.; passionato don’t. On other
hand, passionato offer a lossless (flac) version, which many
will prefer, albeit at about the same price as the CD. Both
providers offer 320k mp3 versions, which will be more than
adequate for most listeners. Both also offer the first volume,
completely devoted to those Chants d’Auvergne not included
here, a must for those who missed it. (8.557491: another
Bargain of the Month – see review.)
Aram Il’yich KHACHATURIAN (1903-1978)
Concerto-Rhapsody
for Violin and Orchestra (1961) [25:41]
Violin
Concerto on d minor (1940)
Nicolas
Koeckert (violin); Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/José Serebrier
rec.
The Colosseum, Town Hall, Watford, UK, 10-11 April, 2008.
DDD.
NAXOS
8.570988
[64:05]
from
classicsonline.com
(mp3)
“Nicolas
Koeckert effortlessly rises to Khachaturian’s technical demands.”
(See review
by John-Pierre Joyce). The mp3 transfer is good but suffers
from the same backward balance of the orchestra as the CD.
If, like me, you still find the 1954 Oistrakh recording with
the Philharmonia and Khachaturian, with its faster tempi,
your benchmark, classicsonline have that, too, for £1.99 in
their Classical Archives series (9.80275).
Alan HOVHANESS (1911-2000)
Cello Concerto Op. 17 (1936)1 [31.13]
Symphony No. 22 City of Light Op. 236 (1971)2
[29.43]
Janos Starker (cello); Seattle Symphony/Dennis Russell Davies1;
composer2
rec. 19 March 1999, Benaroya Hall, Seattle1; 19
May 1992, Seattle Center Opera House. DDD
NAXOS 8.559158 [60.49]
from
passionato.com (mp3 and lossless) and classicsonline.com
(mp3)
“A
contrasting couple of works, stunningly recorded and well
annotated by Steven Lowe. The spare and rare Cello Concerto
[is] played by the world renowned – and rather breathy – Starker
and the composer-directed Symphony No. 22, an artefact of
his lush-plush mystical 1970s.” – see Rob Barnett’s review,
with links to further reviews by John France and Ian Lace.
The
passionato lossless download is very good but comes at a premium
when, at the time of writing, the classicsonline mp3 is temporarily
discounted to £3.74.
And
finally ...
I
promised to say more about two recordings to which I gave
a preliminary thumbs-up last month:
Sacred
Garland: Devotional Chamber Music from the Age of Monteverdi
Nicolo Corradini
(d. 1646) Spargite
flores (Venice,
1613) [4:19];
Claudio Monteverdi
(1567-1643) Venite, sitientes ad aquas (Venice,
1624) [4:09]; Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
(1525/26-1594) Pulchra es amica mea (Milan, 1620)
[4:34]; Alessandro Grandi
(1586-1630) Jesu, mi dulcissime (Venice, 1625)
[3:20]; Michelangelo Rossi
(c. 1602-1656) attrib. Partite sopra la Romanesca (Rome,
1657) [2:43] ; Tarquinio Merula (1594/95-1665) Nigra
sum (Venice, 1624) [3:53]; Alessandro
Piccinini (1566-c. 1638) Toccata
XII - from Intavolatura di liuto, et di chitarrone, libro
primo (Bologna, 1623) [2:34]; Ignatio
Donati (c. 1570-1638) O
gloriosa Domina (Milan, 1626) [3:30]; Giovanni
Battista Bovicelli
(fl. 1592-1594) Angelus ad pastores (Venice,
1594) [4:05]; Girolamo Alessandro Frescobaldi
(1583-1643) Canzona ‘La Bernardinia’ (Rome, 1628) [3:03] ;
Giovanni Picchi
(fl. 1600-1625) Toccata [4:31]; Benedetto
Re (fl. early 17th c.) Tulerunt
Dominum (Venice, 1618) [3:19]; Girolamo
Alessandro Frescobaldi Canzona ‘La Capriola’ (Rome, 1628) [3:29]; Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger
(c. 1580-1651) Toccata VII (Rome, 1640) [3:58]; Archangelo
Crotti
(fl. 1608) Congratulamini (Venice, 1608) [3:52] ;
Girolamo Alessandro Frescobaldi Toccata I (Rome, 1637) [3:46];
Tarquinio Merula
Gaudeamus omnes [3:23]
The Gonzaga Band (Faye Newton (soprano); Jamie Savan (treble
cornet, mute cornet); Richard Sweeney (theorbo); Steven Devine
(harpsichord, organ))
rec. Church
of St Andrew, Toddington, 2-4 April 2008. DDD.
CHANDOS CHAN0761 [63:24]
from
theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
Palestrina, Gombert,
Lassus, Victoria, etc. ‘Song of Songs’
Ego flos campi [6:05]; Osculetur me [3:24];
Antiphon: Cum esset rex [0:44]; Surge, propera amica
mea [6:07]; Quam pulchra es [6:11] ; Antiphon:
Nigra sum [0:41]; Veni, dilecte mi [4:19]; Vadam
et circuibo [10:41]; Alleluia: Tota pulchra es
[2:41]; Ego flos campi [3:18]; Nigra sum [5:34];
Antiphon: Læva eius [0:37]; Hortus conclusus
[5:33]; Nigra sum [3:58]; Antiphon: Speciosa facta
es [0:42]; Veni, dilecte mi [4:22]; Trahe me
post te [5:16]; Antiphon: Iam hiems transiit [0:49];
Vidi speciosam [6:39]
Stile Antico
HARMONIA MUNDI HMU80 7489 [77:28]
from
emusic.com (mp3, variable bit-rate)
I’m delighted to
be able to confirm my initially favourable impressions of
both: the Harmonia Mundi in particular has been a regular
favourite and may be strongly recommended. The only problem
is that this recording may tempt you to hear the whole of
Palestrina’s settings of Canticum Cainticorum, The
Song of Songs, in which case I recommend that you go
for the inexpensive Virgin Double CD with the Hilliard Ensemble
(5622392), available for around £8 – don’t buy it as a download,
which is likely to cost more than the CDs – or the single
budget-price Hyperion CD (Helios CDH55095 – again, the CD
is less expensive than the iTunes download). There’s also
a recording by Magnificat on Linn (CKD174, CD and mp3 and
lossless downloads) which I haven’t heard but which was well
received; I hope to report on in a future Roundup.
The
small-scale music on Chandos is a little more esoteric but
it is very attractive and the performances and recording are
fully worthy of it.
Brian
Wilson
Postscript
Very
positive initial reactions to two Hyperion September issues,
due to be available soon as downloads (see the Phinot review
above):
Francisco Guerrero (1528-1599)
Missa De la batalla escoutez &
other works
Pange lingua gloriosi [8:31] ;
Missa De la batalla escoutez [29:18] ;
In exitu Isræl [13:58]; Duo
seraphim clamabant [4:19]; Regina cæli lætare, alleluia
[3:34]; Magnificat octavi toni [7:27]; Conditor
alme siderum [4:13]
Westminster
Cathedral Choir, His Majestys Sagbutts & Cornetts/James
O’Donnell
rec. All Hallows,
Gospel Oak, London, June, 1999. DDD.
(reissue:
from CDA67075)
Texts
and translations included.
HYPERION
HELIOS CDH55340 [70:59]
A
splendid budget-price reissue.
William Byrd (1539/40-1623)
The
Cardinall’s Musick Byrd Edition 12: Assumpta est Maria
Salve
sancta parens
[4:55]; Benedicta et venerabilis [2:33]; Felix
es, sacra Virgo [1:36] ; Beata es, Virgo Maria
[2:10]; Beata viscera [1:48]; Quem terra, pontus,
æthera [4:30] ; 7 Salve regina a 4 [4:23];
O gloriosa Domina [3:41] ; Vultum tuum [6:16];
Diffusa est gratia [7:10]; Ave Maria [1:45];
Ecce virgo concipiet – Alleluia [1:41]; Memento,
salutis auctor [3:05]; Salve sola Dei genetrix
[3:04]; Ave maris stella [7:48]; Gaudeamus omnes
in Domino [5:23] ; Propter veritatem et mansuetudinem
[4:05] ; Assumpta est Maria [1:31] ; Optimam
partem elegit [1:57]
The
Cardinall’s Musick/Andrew Carwood
rec.
Fitzalan Chapel, Arundel Castle, 10–12 November, 2008. DDD.
Texts
and translations included.
HYPERION CDA67675 [69:21]
A very worthy successor to The Cardinall’s Musick’s recent
recording of music associated with feasts of St Peter – but
don’t jettison the earlier Hyperion budget-price reissue of
much of this Marian music from the Gradualia – Helios
CDH55047 (Pro Cantione Antiqua/Bruno Turner).
More details of both recordings next month
Brian Wilson