Matt Haimovitz’s latest recital of twentieth-century cello compositions
sustains the thesis of its predecessors (12/95 and 5/97) that extreme
contrast, not merely variety, has been the spice of twentieth-century
musical life. To juxtapose two works from 1914, Reger’s Third Suite and
Webern’s Three Little Pieces, the former expansive and
retrospective, the latter aphoristic and reaching nervously into an
unknowable future, makes the point with admirable immediacy.
The rest
of the music here is more mainstream, the Britten Sonata showing that
there was as much mileage left in the old classical genres in 1960 as
Debussy had found in his Sonata more than 40 years before. With these
works, of course, Haimowitz is competing against a long series of
distinguished predecessors on disc, and his partnership with Cassard
(how often have they played these works in concert, I wonder?) can’t
match the empathy of Moray Welsh and John Lenehan in the Britten, or –
it goes without saying – of Rostropovich and Britten himself in both
sonatas.
The recording as such is at its best in the unaccompanied
works, its closeness and resonance reinforcing the powerful musical
profile of Dutilleux’s elegant yet forceful Strophes, and helping
to ensure that Reger does not seriously outstay his welcome. In Webern,
Debussy and Britten the piano sound has an abrasive aspect to it, as if
the object were to underline the incompatibility of two such different
instruments. But the playing is technically first-rate, and should
certainly open doors (why the French title?) to anyone exploring this
repertory for the first time.' (Arnold Whittall / Gramophone)
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