Piano Concerto No. 1 in G major* (1929-1931) [21:40]
    Piano Concerto No. 2 in D major, For the Left Hand** (1929-1930) [18:45]
    
    USSR Academic State Symphony Orchestra/Yevgeny Svetlanov, Vladimir Verbitsky
    rec. 1959 (first concerto), 1978 (second concerto), 1975 (Pavane), 1982 (La 
    Valse), Grand Hall of the Moscow Conservatory, Moscow. Mono/stereo, ADD/DDD
    
Now this is unusual, the legendary Russian conductor 
      Yevgeny Svetlanov in French repertoire. True he has recorded Chausson’s 
      
Poème de l’amour et de la mer (LSO, BBC Legends BBCL 
      50062) and Debussy’s 
La mer (ICA Classics ICAD 5123 and Naïve 
      V4946, with the LSO and French National Orchestra respectively). He conducts 
      the Ravel G major concerto and the two ‘bonus tracks’ here; 
      Vladimir Verbitsky conducts the left hander. Zak’s performance of 
      the first concerto has appeared on CD before as part of a compilation (MEL 
      CD 1001789) but I can’t trace CD versions of the other items on this 
      disc.
       
      Svetlanov was one of those conductors who tackled everything he did with 
      considerable gusto, even if the results were less than polished. That approach 
      works just fine with Russian repertoire, but what of Ravel’s metropolitan 
      chic? The soloist in the G major concerto is the Ukrainian pianist Yakov 
      Zak (1913-1976). It’s a surprisingly good mono broadcast from 1959, 
      and the ear adjusts to the narrow soundstage quickly enough. The diamantine 
      glitter of the piano part certainly comes through well enough. Also, there’s 
      an urgency and eloquence to Zak’s playing that’s hard to resist; 
      his account of the 
Adagio assai combines clarity and insight, and 
      Svetlanov is a pliable accompanist throughout. I was particularly taken 
      with Zak’s nimble and proportionate response to Ravel’s mercurial 
      writing, not to mention his sure feeling for the work’s idiom. French 
      spoken with a Russian accent? Certainly, but it’s remarkably fluent.
       
      The second concerto is played by another Ukrainian pianist, Alexander Slobodyanik 
      (1941-2008). Although the recording was made in 1978 the opening sounds 
      rather murky; that said it brightens up nicely thereafter, with clean, animated 
      playing from soloist and orchestra alike. This, too, is a thoroughly engaging 
      performance whose lyrical impulses are never crushed by heavy handedness. 
      The orchestra seem to relish those sudden outbursts – tastefully rendered, 
      I assure you – and Slobodyanik responds with alacrity and good humour 
      to Ravel’s scintillating score. Conductor Verbitsky is impressive 
      too; his pacing is persuasive and he makes full use of the concerto’s 
      extensive colour palette.
       
      I do admire Svetlanov in Russian repertoire - his Shostakovich especially 
      - and in the wake of that marvellous first concerto I feel I must endorse 
      his French excursions too. However, his two 'bonus tracks' are comparatively 
      disappointing. The 
Pavane is decent enough, even if the woodwind 
      wobble is disfiguring, and there’s a pleasing ebb and flow to the 
      performance as a whole. Svetlanov’s ear for blend and detail is as 
      reliable as ever, and he doesn’t overload the music with too much 
      expressive weight. 
La Valse is also well handled, although it lacks 
      the rhythmic audacity and glint of madness that others find in the piece. 
      The 1982 recording is close and rather dry; thankfully it’s not at 
      all fatiguing.
       
      These are logical fillers, I suppose, but they don’t show Svetlanov 
      at anything near his best; besides, there are far more accomplished performances 
      of these works to be had elsewhere. Frankly I would have been more than 
      happy with just the concertos, for there’s a wholly unexpected sit-up-and-listen 
      quality to both that encourages one to hear these staples anew. There’s 
      brief applause after the second concerto and 
La Valse; also, the 
      more recent recordings bring fewer advantages in terms of weight, space 
      and detail than one might expect. Indeed, the ‘modern’ engineering 
      is rather crude at times; as with the start of the second concerto that 
      of 
La Valse sounds rather boomy, and the end of the 
Pavane 
      is faded too abruptly. The disc and booklet are enclosed in one of those 
      ghastly Digipaks.
       
      The concertos are a treat; routine fillers though.
       
      
Dan Morgan
      twitter.com/mahlerei