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Jean SIBELIUS (1865-1957)
Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 47 (1905) [32:07]
Humoresque No. 1 in D minor, Op. 87, No. 1 (1917) [3:40]
Humoresque No. 2 in D major, Op. 87, No. 2 (1917) [2:08]
Humoresque No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 89, No. 3 (1917) [3:48]
Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)
Violin Concerto. No. 1 in D major, Op. 19 (1917) [22 :08]
Vilde Frang (violin)
WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln/Thomas Søndergård
rec. Rhein-Sieg-Halle, Siegburg, Germany, 11-13 March 2009. DDD
EMI CLASSICS 6 84413 2 [63:56]
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Sibelius’s concerto steals in on the listener here, the soloist’s
disembodied tone at the outset only gradually opening out to
something close to what the score demands. It’s a surprising
but totally convincing effect, and a sign of what is to come.
This is in fact a highly individual reading, and time and again
I found myself hearing details as if for the first time. The
thought that I have been enjoying and studying this work for
over thirty years, yet the soloist is only in her very early
twenties is a sobering one. There are moments of near-miraculous
stillness here in the first movement, and these too seem totally
right, making one wonder why one has never heard them played
like that before. The more muscular passages, on the other hand,
are dispatched with remarkable power and conviction. The slow
movement is marvellously done, the almost unbearable erotic
charge of the second big climax equalled only on disc, in my
experience, by Cho-Liang
Lin in 1987. Frang really tucks into the opening of the
finale, and the rest of the movement is dispatched with stunning
virtuosity. The coda is as thrilling as I have ever heard it.
Several very fine recorded performances of this glorious work
have appeared recently. I was particularly impressed by those
from Hilary Hahn (sadly not reviewed here – DG 000289 477 7346
7, March 2008) and Lisa Batiashvili (Sony),
both, by the way, indispensable also because of their couplings,
Schoenberg in the former case, Magnus Lindberg in the latter.
Of less recent performances I also like very much that by Tasmin
Little and Vernon Handley, generously coupled with the Brahms
concerto and last seen on Classics for Pleasure (at first EMI
Eminence in 1993 CD-EMX 2203).
The new performance now joins this very select group, its very
individual character perhaps just ensuring a top place alongside
Lin, this last a more conventional performance, but one in a
class of its own.
Vilde Frang is Norwegian, she was born in 1986, and this is
her first disc. Her studies are detailed in the booklet, and
no doubt the names of her teachers will mean more to violin
specialists than they do to me. Her rather elfin good looks
are not ignored by the EMI designers, though I have seen much
more brazen promotion than this, and in any event she is certainly
much easier on the eye than Sibelius himself who looks very
out of sorts in his photograph. A picture of Thomas Søndergård,
or at least some information about him, would have been welcome
though, as his name was new to me, and he and his superb orchestra
accompany the young soloist with tact and skill, whilst not
failing to provide playing of great character in purely orchestral
passages. The booklet is graced with an essay by David Gutman
fine enough to make one wish he had been allowed a little more
space.
I don’t know to what extent Frang was allowed free choice of
programme, but in any event it is commendable that her debut
recording should feature the first concerto of Prokofiev, rather
than the rather more commonly encountered second – which is
probably an easier listen – or indeed any other better-known
concerto. The opening puts one in mind of the Sibelius, a long
melody from the soloist over tremolando strings. This
melody is sweetly played with rich, full tone, romantic, as
it should be, but not at all cloying, and the high violin tracery
which accompanies its return at the end of the movement in exquisitely
done. In other passages Frang demonstrates her ability to project
forthright music whilst staying well on the right side of harshness.
This may well be a conscious decision, as this is a reading
which emphasises the concerto’s misty, mysterious side over
its more acerbic elements, and none the worse for that, in my
view. This is not to say that the harsher side of things is
neglected, however, as can readily be heard in the short central
movement. But how subtly the soloist characterises the different
elements of this movement, making of it so much more than a
simple display of violin pyrotechnics. Strong characterisation
continues into the finale which begins with another long melody
over a ticking accompaniment, most winningly played. The twittering
return of the work’s opening theme in the final pages might
almost be birdsong. My favourite version of this concerto has
long been that from 1975 by Kyung-Wha Chung, with Previn and
the London Symphony Orchestra on Decca (last seen in Previn
- A Celebration on DG 477 8114). Her view of the work is
similar to Frang’s, and those who seek something more muscular
might prefer Vengerov (Teldec 4509-92256) amongst others. But
it is a view I find very satisfying, and henceforth I will be
choosing Frang as often as I choose Chung when I want to hear
this work.
The programme is completed by three of the six pieces for violin
and orchestra that Sibelius composed in 1917 under the title
Humoresque. David Gutman refers to these pieces as “shafts
of pale Northern sunlight” in which “a quirky freshness subverts
the salon element”. I can do no better than to add that this
is music of real substance, albeit within a modest time span,
and played here with delicious aplomb, it makes for a satisfying
close to this superb disc.
William Hedley
see also review by Rob
Barnett (March '10 Recording of the Month)
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