
jueves, 26 de febrero de 2015
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra / Marin Alsop BARTÓK Concerto for Orchestra - Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta

miércoles, 25 de febrero de 2015
Lina Tur Bonet / Musica Alchemica VIVALDI Violin Concertos & Sonatas
In view of the vast number of recordings of concertos by Antonio
Vivaldi, it may come as a surprise that there are still works that have
not so far been documented on recordings. The Spanish violinist Lina Tur
Bonet and the renowned Vivaldi expert Olivier Fourés have compiled a
programme with such 'premieres' for the present recording. These include
the so-far unrecorded Violin Concertos, RV218 and RV346, the
incompletely handed-down RV771 as well as two so-called 'Graz' Sonatas,
for which Fourés reconstructed the cello part in the present version. In
these works, Vivaldi shows a rather unusual aspect of himself - very
diversified and variegated. Lina Tur Bonet, at the helm of her ensemble
Musica Alchemica, plays with a full and round tone: with virtuoso élan
in the fast movements and with dreamy lyricism in the slow passages.
BOOKLET
BOOKLET
martes, 24 de febrero de 2015
Clare Hammond ETUDE Chin - Kapustin - Lyapunov - Szymanowski
The six études by the South-Korean composer, Unsuk Chin, form the centrepiece of this disc.
Some of the most significant pieces to be written for the piano in recent years, these are natural
successors to the piano études by György Ligeti and are already of international prominence. With
their scintillating textures and inventive use of timbre, they are entirely absorbing and electrifying
works which are rapidly becoming a keystone of the piano repertoire.
These have been combined with a variety of études from either end of the
twentieth century. The three by Lyapunov are very much in a late-Romantic,
Lisztian mould with descriptive titles and compelling narratives.The first,
‘Terek’, is named after a river which flows from Georgia into Russia and is
prefaced with a dramatic poem by the Russian poet Lermontov. ‘Nuit d’été’ is
more contemplative and is followed by the impassioned and explosive
‘Tempête’.
Szymanowski’s Op. 33 were written less than 20 years after Lyapunov’s yet they
inhabit an entirely different sound-world. With mercurial timbres and fleet
textures, they are similar to Debussy’s études, written in the same year. The
programme ends with
5 Studies in Different Intervals
by Nikolai Kapustin. Each study
is structured around a specific interval yet, despite this rather rigid concept, they are in a free-
formed jazzy style and provide an exuberant finale to the disc.
Acclaimed by The Daily Telegraph as a pianist of
“amazing power and panache”
, Clare Hammond gave debut recitals at
the City of London, Cheltenham and Presteigne Festivals, and made return visits to the Wigmore and Bridgewater
Halls in 2013. The Guardian wrote of her performance of Ken Hesketh’s
Horae
at Cheltenham that she
“displayed its
scintillating passagework and poetic calm with great flair”
. A passionate advocate of twentieth and twenty-first century
music, Clare combines a formidable technique and virtuosic flair onstage with stylistic integrity and attention to detail.
Clare’s first disc for BIS,
Reflections
, of the piano music of Andrzej and Roxanna Panufnik, was featured on BBC Radio
3’s ‘CD Review’ and her performance described as“commandingly virtuosic”
in BBC Music Magazine. International Piano
Magazine recommended the disc as a
“fascinating compendium, expertly executed”
and it was awarded 5 stars in
Diapason who stated that
“Hammond excels at instilling each piece with an atmosphere”
. Highlights in 2014 include 3 BBC
radio broadcasts, debut performances at 7 festivals across Europe, including the ‘Chopin and his Europe’ Festival in
Warsaw, the world premieres of works by 10 composers, and a Panufnik Centenary tour of Poland under the aegis of
the British Council’s ‘Artists’ International Development Fund’.
lunes, 23 de febrero de 2015
Lena Neudauer W.A. MOZART Violinkonzerte 1 - 5, Adagio KV 261, Rondos KV 269 & 373
As the blood began to spill in Lexington and Concord in 1775,
triggering the Revolutionary War, Mozart was nineteen years old,
composing safely in Salzburg. And though most well known as a piano
prodigy, he was also quite the violinist, having toured Europe to
perform for royal courts during his childhood. The love of his second
instrument is apparent given the diversity of repertoire written for it,
ranging from string duets to full symphonic works. That is most
explicitly on display in his five violin concertos, all written within
the same two years of that era of great revolution and political
upheaval.
This intense focus on violin concertos was short-lived, and it is a
mystery why Mozart stopped writing them altogether after 1775. But even
during this brief period in Mozart’s life, the five concertos he wrote
serve as a microcosm for his evolution as a composer.
In the Violin Concerto No. 1, written in 1773, elements of baroque
music are the building blocks, with a fairly strict adherence to the
norms of the era, not unlike the nascent and abiding pre-Revolution
America. Fast-forward two years, though, and Mozart’s violin concertos
of 1775 – beginning with the second – take on a more subversive shape,
mirroring the unrest in the American colonies.
Continuing the revolutionary undertones of these pieces, German violinist Lena Neudauer brings more than just notes on a page to these
performance. In addition to masterfully crafted interpretations,
Neudauer has composed all-new cadenzas, injecting her own voice into
music that might otherwise be a simple following of a black-dotted
roadmap to conformity. Neudauer’s recording presents all five of
Mozart’s violin concertos, in addition to a string adagio and two
rondos, transmitting both the elegance of their time and a hint of the
turbulence yet to come.
domingo, 22 de febrero de 2015
Paul Lewis MUSSORGSKY Pictures At An Exhibition SCHUMANN Fantasie Op. 17

viernes, 20 de febrero de 2015
Alice Sara Ott / Francesco Tristano SCANDALE
The disc’s title and raison d’être escape me: ‘Scandale’ says
the cover in shocking pink. The ‘Rite of Spring’ premiere is presumably
the eponymous ‘scandale’, but Rimsky-Korsakov’s Sheherazade? Ravel’s La valse?
Rimsky’s widow objected fiercely to Diaghilev using the former as a
ballet and Ravel never spoke to the impresario again after he refused to
turn it into a ballet. Hardly scandals. The booklet bleats about both
performers being ‘keen to return to a starting point that is free from
expectations and in doing so they allow themselves – scandalously so –
to create something entirely new’.
Better to ignore such waffle and enjoy these dance pieces at face
value, the performances and recording of which are terrific. If it is
hard to forget Stravinsky’s orchestration, the sections of motoric
rhythm in his two-piano version of The Rite seem made for the
percussive character of the instrument, while some of the slower
passages reveal more so than in their original garb the challenging
harmonic language that so provoked the first audiences. ‘The Kalender
Prince’ by Stravinsky’s teacher in his own duet version provides lyrical
contrast before La valse, deftly, brilliantly executed, the
final pages more dogged and relentless than the increasingly frantic
view taken by the thrilling Argerich and her many different waltzing
partners. The final piece is the world premiere of Tristano’s A Soft Shell Groove which, with its foot-tapping (literally) rhythm, is bound to find many friends among listeners and other two-piano teams. (Gramophone)
jueves, 19 de febrero de 2015
Vilde Frang MOZART Violin Concertos 1 & 5 - Sinfonia Concertante
Norwegian violinist Vilde Frang made her orchestral debut to great acclaim at the age of just 13, with the Oslo Philharmonic and Mariss Jansons. On that occasion, she chose Sarasate's Carmen Fantasia, and in the fifteen years that have followed she has taken on the great Romantic and moderns, the Nordics and Russians: Sibelius and Prokofiev concertos for her debut album, followed by Tchaikovsky and Nielsen.
Now, at 28, this young but serious star violinist at last commits Mozart concertos to disc, in lively, intimate readings with English chamber orchestra Arcangelo, led by Jonathan Cohen.
The impetus for this album was a 2012 orchestral tour of Asia conducted by Cohen in which Vilde Frang performed Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5. The vibrancy of their musical collaboration was something both artists were keen to repeat and commit to disc.
Jonathan Cohen writes: “This was an important project for us to do with Vilde. Her poetic and sensitive playing and her beautiful silvery sound really serves Mozart and she was looking to collaborate with an ensemble such as ours well versed in the style and culture of Viennese classicism."
As complement to Mozart's First and Fifth Violin Concertos, Frang chose the beloved Sinfonia Concertante, enlisting Ukrainian viola virtuoso Maxim Rysanov as her duo partner.
"She and Maxim I think have produced a very special Sinfonia Concertante, which is a particularly extraordinary composition," says Cohen.
The album has already been praised for the lightness and warmth, elegance and playfulness of the dialogue between soloist and ensemble. "The solo concertos are terrific. The First is often seen as slight, but Frang, with an endlessly varied palette of colours, delights in showing us how wrong we are," declares Sinfini Music. "She melds eloquently with the ensemble and manages to convey an artless simplicity."
miércoles, 18 de febrero de 2015
Rolando Villazón / London Symphony Orchestra / Antonio Pappano MOZART Concert Arias

“I think the big challenge is that it’s new for all
of us. In that it is different from singing ‘Il mio tesoro’, of which
we’ve heard so many great interpretations by so many great tenors, under
so many great conductors,” he says.
Although he had already fallen in love with Mozart during recording sessions of Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte, the
tenor forged an even deeper connection through this project. “No
composer has spoken to me as directly. I feel like I have found a dear
companion in him. In these pieces, just as in everything he wrote,
Mozart demands the personality of the artist. He wants you to give
yourself.”
The selection of ten arias covers a wide range of emotion and historical territory. For Villazón, numbers such as Se al labbro mio non credi, composed for the celebrated tenor Anton Raaff – who would sing the title role of Mozart’s Idomeneo – deserve to be heard more often: “Se al labbro is worthy of a place alongside Mozart’s best-known arias.” The most mature work on the album, Müsst ich auch durch tausend Drachen,
dating to around 1783 and the only German-language track, was most
likely intended for a comic opera that Mozart never completed. At the
other end of the spectrum, Va’, dal furor portata was written when the composer was only nine years old.
“It’s fantastic to compare the very young Mozart
with the mature Mozart and track his development,” says the tenor. “Who
knows what he would have left to us had he lived a bit longer.”
As fate would have it, Villazón stumbled upon the
music while sifting through scores at a shop in Munich. “I was actually
looking for Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte, when I
discovered this edition of concert arias for tenor,” he recalls. “I went
through it and said: ‘This is it. This is a project.’” In 2011, while
singing the title role in Massenet’s Werther at the Royal Opera House in London, he approached Pappano about making a recording.
For the conductor, some arias resemble entire scenes
in their dramatic structure. “It’s quite a challenge because a lot of
these pieces are from a very young Mozart. They’re not the Mozart we
know. They have an identity all their own. There’s a tremendous energy
to them, and the singer and orchestra have to go at them with so much
fire: you have to find the freedom, the newness and the youth of the
music.”
Villazón notes that the recitative Misero! O sogno and following aria Aura che intorno spiri demand the full gamut of technical skills from a singer: “Bravura,
interpretation, how to manage the text. And the high notes! But the
beauty of Mozart is that it’s not suddenly, ‘Bang! A high note.’ It’s
simply another note that you need to go through to maintain the melody.”
The tenor found an ideal partner in the London Symphony Orchestra.
“These are players who listen, who search and work together with the
singer and the conductor. It felt wonderful, as if I was suspended from
the gorgeous line that the orchestra was playing. From every point of
view this music has been a treat to perform.”
Pappano, who has been recording with the orchestra
since 1997, praises the musicians’ energy and intuition. “They create an
environment where the singer can be alive and inhabit the character, an
essential element in opera, where the exchange of energy is so
important.” This is also no small feat given Mozart’s high demands on the orchestra to create its own drama in exchanges with the singer.
“They want the best and will follow you to achieve a certain
expression,” says the conductor. “The sound is gleaming, full of youth
and shine. That is what I really love.”
And he found it a joy to hear Villazón indulge himself in comic numbers such as Con ossequio, con rispetto, written for Salzburg performances of Niccolò Piccinni’s opera, L’astratto, ovvero Il giocator fortunato, in
1775. “The character is paying compliments in one voice, while
expressing what he feels in the asides – under his breath, so to speak,”
explains Pappano. “That gave Rolando the opportunity to show his
feeling for comedy. And I’ve experimented a little bit by changing the
colours in the orchestra. When he’s insulting, I have the violins use a
chatter-like articulation, and then at the end, a more nasal, snarly
sound. Somehow I think Mozart would have approved. People need to laugh
and enjoy.”
Villazón observes that even in humorous moments,
Mozart’s music can convey the most profound insight – allowing his
affinity for the composer to constantly grow. “There are moments
performing this music when you are suddenly in heaven,” he says. “Mozart
makes you laugh but also, perhaps most importantly, makes you dream.
Somehow the fun qualities co-exist with the serious. This almost
impossible combination is what makes him unique.”
martes, 17 de febrero de 2015
Sol Gabetta / Bertrand Chamayou THE CHOPIN ALBUM
On her new album, cello superstar Sol Gabetta teams up with one of
the best young artists, French pianist Bertrand Chamayou. Gabetta and
Chamayou have played together on many occasions and quickly became both
friends and artistic partners. They collaborated on the album concept
and will tour this repertoire in Europe throughout 2015. The Chopin
Album contains a selection of pieces by well-loved composer Frédéric
Chopin (1810-1849) as well as music by his close friend, the composer
and cellist Auguste-Joseph Franchomme.
The centrepiece
of this album is Chopin's striking sonata for cello and piano in G
minor, op. 65, written in 1846; one of the rare pieces Chopin wrote for a
solo instrument other than the piano. The duration is over 30 minutes
and was written for and dedicated to Chopin's close friend Franchomme.
The cello sonata was the last work published during Chopin's lifetime
before he died in October 1849.
The Grand Duo concertant in E
major, B. 70 was written jointly by Chopin and Franchomme in 1832.
Chopin had initially been contracted by his publishers to write a work
for piano based on Meyerbeers opera ‘Robert le diable’. He had attended a
performance and liked the work, but was disinclined to write a
‘fantasia’ on another composer's music. Franchomme persuaded him to
jointly write a piece for cello and piano, using themes from the opera.
Chopin delivered the general structure of the piece and wrote the piano
part and Franchomme wrote the cello part. The piece was published under
both their names, and was favourably reviewed by Robert Schumann.
Chopin's
Polonaise brillante in C major, op. 3 for cello and piano is one of
Chopin's first published compositions and was written in October 1829,
dedicated to the Austrian cellist Joseph Merk. Chopin composed the
famous Nocturne in F major, op. 15, no.1 for piano in 1832. The
transcription for cello and piano on this album was done by Franchomme.
Auguste
Franchomme was one of the best and most celebrated cellists and persons
of the musical life in Paris of his time. He also worked as a composer
and published around 50 works for cello, among them his Nocturne for
Cello and Piano, op. 15, no.1 which Gabetta and Chamayou selected for
this album. Chopin's Étude, op. 25, no.7 (1836) for piano solo is part
of the famous 12 etudes op. 25 and was arranged by composer Alexander
Glazunov for cello and piano. (Presto Classical)
lunes, 16 de febrero de 2015
Zehetmair Quartett BÉLA BARTÓK - PAUL HINDEMITH
Five years after their widely acclaimed recording of Béla Bartók’s
fourth string quartet the Zehetmair quartet (in new line-up) play the
Hungarian’s masterly fifth quartet, written in 1934, coupled with Paul
Hindemith’s fourth from 1921 which is marked by a neo-classicist return
to elaborate polyphony and baroque forms: landmarks of 20th century
chamber music in interpretations of analytical clarity and emotional
intensity.
The Zehetmair Quartet was founded in 1994. After its first tour in
spring 1998 it received invitations to return from every concert
organizer. Its annual European tours have been augmented by concerts in
the United States (2001 and 2003) and Japan (2002). Highlights of 2004
were guest appearances at the Edinburgh Festival, the Helsinki Festival,
and the Schleswig-Holstein Festival and in spring 2006 a highly
successful tour took it to Vienna, Berlin, Cologne, Zurich, Madrid,
Lisbon, Manchester, and other capitals. The four musicians also made
guest appearances in Japan in February 2007.
In 2000 the Quartet made its ECM début with Bartók’s Fourth and Karl Amadeus Hartmann’s First, an album that won the quarterly German Record Critics’ Prize. Their 2004 release of Schumann quartets received Gramophone’s Record of the Year Award, the Diapason d’Or, the Edison Classical Music Award (Netherlands), and two Belgian awards: the Caecilia Prize and the Klara Prize for the year’s best international release.
Second violinist Kuba Jakowicz and cellist Ursula Smith joined the quartet in 2005. (ECM Records)
In 2000 the Quartet made its ECM début with Bartók’s Fourth and Karl Amadeus Hartmann’s First, an album that won the quarterly German Record Critics’ Prize. Their 2004 release of Schumann quartets received Gramophone’s Record of the Year Award, the Diapason d’Or, the Edison Classical Music Award (Netherlands), and two Belgian awards: the Caecilia Prize and the Klara Prize for the year’s best international release.
Second violinist Kuba Jakowicz and cellist Ursula Smith joined the quartet in 2005. (ECM Records)
domingo, 15 de febrero de 2015
The Parley of Instruments DOWLAND Lachrimae or Seaven Teares
There have only been two occasions when English composers have profoundly affected the course of European musical history. The first was in the early fifteenth century when the motets, Mass movements and chansons of John Dunstable and his contemporaries became the models for subsequent developments in Flanders and Burgundy. The second was two centuries later, at the beginning of the seventeenth century, when a number of English composers and instrumentalists found work at northern European courts. They went abroad for three main reasons. Some, like Peter Philips and Richard Dering, were religious refugees, in flight from Queen Elizabeth’s persecution of Catholics. Some, such as William Brade and Thomas Simpson, were probably attracted by the lucrative opportunities available in the prosperous small courts and city states of northern Europe. Others were associated with the English theatre companies that began to tour the Continent in the 1580s and ’90s following the 1572 Act of Parliament that restricted the activities of ‘common players in interludes and minstrels’. Henceforth, actors were forbidden to work in England unless they were under the patronage of the Queen or a prominent courtier.
John Dowland probably had mixed motives for leaving England in 1594. He had just been turned down for a post as a court lutenist, but he also had Catholic sympathies. He worked first at Wolfenbüttel and Kassel, and in 1598, after a second attempt to obtain a court post, he joined the group of English musicians in the service of Christian IV, King of Denmark. He remained in Copenhagen until 1606, though he visited London in the summer of 1603 ‘on his own business’, as a Danish court clerk put it. By 1603 he was one of the most famous lutenists in Europe and could reasonably have expected a court post in the wake of Queen Elizabeth’s death in March of that year, for the wife of the new King James I was Anne of Denmark, sister of Christian IV. In the event, it still eluded him, perhaps, as Peter Warlock once suggested, because Anne did not wish it to be thought that she had poached one of her brother’s musicians. When he finally became one of James I’s lutenists in 1612 he had long left the Danish court. Dowland probably hoped to attract Anne’s attention by dedicating Lachrimae, or Seaven Teares to her. In the dedication he states that he had ‘access to your Highnesse at Winchester’ (the court was there in September and October 1603), and that he had twice tried to sail back to Denmark but had been compelled to winter in England ‘by contrary windes and frost’.
Dowland broke new ground with the publication of Lachrimae. At the time, dance music was usually written or printed in sets of separate quarto parts, but Lachrimae is a folio volume and has the parts for each piece distributed around each side of a single opening, so that in theory they could be performed around a table from a single copy. Dowland may have adopted this format, the one he used for his lute songs, because he included a lute part in tablature, which could not easily be accomodated in a small set of part-books. Lachrimae is certainly the first English collection of five-part dance music, manuscript or printed, to include a lute part, though lutes often appear in contemporary pictures of violin bands accompanying dancing. (Peter Holman)
viernes, 13 de febrero de 2015
Garrick Ohlsson SCRIABIN Complete Poèmes
Initially idolised by a small coterie, Scriabin was also vilified by
those who placed reason above passion, clarity above obscurity. Today he
enjoys a near classic status and Garrick Ohlsson’s disc of the complete Poèmes provides ample food for thought. Having notched up a huge array
of recordings combined with an intensive concert career, his playing now
reflects rich experience and musical quality. True, those accustomed to
Horowitz’s incandescent response to Scriabin’s neurosis may feel
themselves short-changed by Ohlsson’s restraining hand, by a more
settled view of an unsettled genius. But there are admirable
compensations in playing that can contain even Scriabin’s wilder, least
accessible outpourings.
At the same time, even Ohlsson cannot
entirely erase evidence of writing of such self-conscious liberation
that it finally and ironically becomes caged in its own conventions.
Whether frantic or remote, one poème becomes much like another and many
of the composer’s more bizarre titles and instructions (Désir, Caresse dansée, Festivamente, fastoso, Etrange, capricieusement,
etc) come to seem like a form of desperation, of special pleading in
the face of public and critical bafflement. But whether in the Scherzo,
Op 46 (jocular in an ironic sense), in the gazelle-like leaps of the Poème ailé, Op 51 No 3, or in the one substantial offering, Vers la flamme,
you feel grateful for Ohlsson’s refusal to indulge or over-reach.
Finely recorded, his empathy with so many fragmented dreamscapes is
lucid and sensitive. (Gramophone)
jueves, 12 de febrero de 2015
Angela Hewitt FRANZ LISZT Piano Sonata - Dante Sonata - Petrarch Sonnets
Elegant and immaculate in both musicianship and platform wardrobe,
the pianist Angela Hewitt doesn't immediately rush to mind when
considering the wild music of Liszt. Well-ordered Bach is more her cup
of tea. She's equally a natural in the piquant French delights of Ravel
and Debussy. Yet here she is, with an album of Liszt, Liszt and Liszt.
The
first paragraph in her programme note doesn't exactly bode well: 'After
hearing the Liszt Sonata as a teenager, I came away thinking what an
awful piece it was. It just seemed a vehicle for banging the piano.'
That's my point: I can't even imagine Hewitt banging a door, still less a
concert grand. She thinks differently now, or so she says she calls
this big B minor sonata masterful and thrilling. Yet probably a secret
residue of teenage distaste remains: she certainly stays determinedly
fastidious throughout the work's fortissimo thunder or the Dante
fantasy's mad ride to hell …
Even if her approach sometimes rubs against the music's grain, the poise
and clarity of her textures and phrasings still brings major pleasures.
She elucidates the B minor sonata's structural subtleties and balances
its boarding power with scintillating details like the silver arpeggios
circling round the second subject about nine minutes in. In the three
Petrarch sonnets, the kaleidoscope of emotions is exquisitely traced. If
only she could enjoy Liszt's flamboyance more: I'd almost buy this
album for the piano's numerous dying notes, reverberating long and
exquisitely toward the end of time. (Geoff Brown /The Times)
miércoles, 11 de febrero de 2015
Rolf Lislevand NUOVE MUSICHE
Is it fair for baroque to sound so sensual? An elegiac soprano
voice wafts above an instrumental piece by Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger.
Flamenco rhythms underpin a passacaglia. Then suddenly we hear the
typical harmonies and ornaments of Celtic folk music. Is that how this
music really sounded in Italy in the early 1600s? Of course not. But
what the Norwegian lutenist and guitarist Rolf Lislevand and his six
colleagues bring off on Nuove musiche, their début album for ECM,
has all the earmarks of a manifesto. Their vibrant and literally
unheard-of readings of early baroque music from Italy are meant to grab
the listener directly, as if it really were 'new music'.
'For years people tried to play early music as closely as possible to the way it was played at its time of origin', Lislevand explains 'But that's a philosophical self-contradiction. The first question is whether it's possible at all to replicate the performance of a musician who lived centuries ago. As far as I'm concerned, reconstruction is not really interesting at all. Do we really want to act as if we hadn't heard any music between 1600 and the present day? I think that would be dishonest. With this recording we say goodbye once and for all to early music's authenticity creed.'
This doesn't mean that anything goes - on the contrary. Lislevand, who learned his craft at the famous Schola Cantorum in Basle, has been professor of lute and historical performance practice at Trossingen Musikhochschule since 1993. He has turned out many prize-winning recordings, some of them with his Kapsberger Ensemble, which forms the core of the musicians on Nuove Musiche. He avidly scrutinises every available scrap of information on what he plays and how to play it properly. But those are only the preconditions for a convincing performance. After all, one vital element in baroque music was improvisation: 'Pieces were played to meet the needs of the moment', Professor Lislevand points out. 'To play strictly according to the notes on the page would be tantamount to lying, for the scores were written in a sort of shorthand. They presuppose a good deal of knowledge and self-assurance from the player.'
Take the percussion instruments, for instance. We know they were used, but nobody around 1600 bothered to write down the parts. So we have no way of knowing for sure how they were used. Did they only serve as timekeepers, or was their timbre exploited as well? Lislevand has very strong views on the subject: 'The idea that it wasn't until today that we could freely express our feelings is not only naive but arrogant. Personally I believe that the people of the 17th century were much richer and more self-aware than we assume today.' It is only natural, then, that the percussionist Pedro Estevan offers a huge range of expressive sounds and rhythms on Nuove musiche.
Lislevand searches for points of contact between the 400-year-old pieces on this recording (by Kapsberger, Pellegrini, Piccinini and others) and the musical horizons of today's performers. Usually the starting point is the passacaglia, a set of increasingly dramatic variations on an unchanging bass pattern. Passacaglias formed the core repertoire of the lute and guitar books of the 17th century. 'They thrive on chromaticism, harsh dissonances and offbeat rhythms. If the composers tried to get these effects, then we have every right to go even further. My idea is simply to develop and elaborate things already there in the material. Arianna Savall's melody really does come from the Kapsberger toccata itself. Everything there that smacks of echoes from current popular music is already contained in the pieces. I just coax it out.' (ECM Records)
'For years people tried to play early music as closely as possible to the way it was played at its time of origin', Lislevand explains 'But that's a philosophical self-contradiction. The first question is whether it's possible at all to replicate the performance of a musician who lived centuries ago. As far as I'm concerned, reconstruction is not really interesting at all. Do we really want to act as if we hadn't heard any music between 1600 and the present day? I think that would be dishonest. With this recording we say goodbye once and for all to early music's authenticity creed.'
This doesn't mean that anything goes - on the contrary. Lislevand, who learned his craft at the famous Schola Cantorum in Basle, has been professor of lute and historical performance practice at Trossingen Musikhochschule since 1993. He has turned out many prize-winning recordings, some of them with his Kapsberger Ensemble, which forms the core of the musicians on Nuove Musiche. He avidly scrutinises every available scrap of information on what he plays and how to play it properly. But those are only the preconditions for a convincing performance. After all, one vital element in baroque music was improvisation: 'Pieces were played to meet the needs of the moment', Professor Lislevand points out. 'To play strictly according to the notes on the page would be tantamount to lying, for the scores were written in a sort of shorthand. They presuppose a good deal of knowledge and self-assurance from the player.'
Take the percussion instruments, for instance. We know they were used, but nobody around 1600 bothered to write down the parts. So we have no way of knowing for sure how they were used. Did they only serve as timekeepers, or was their timbre exploited as well? Lislevand has very strong views on the subject: 'The idea that it wasn't until today that we could freely express our feelings is not only naive but arrogant. Personally I believe that the people of the 17th century were much richer and more self-aware than we assume today.' It is only natural, then, that the percussionist Pedro Estevan offers a huge range of expressive sounds and rhythms on Nuove musiche.
Lislevand searches for points of contact between the 400-year-old pieces on this recording (by Kapsberger, Pellegrini, Piccinini and others) and the musical horizons of today's performers. Usually the starting point is the passacaglia, a set of increasingly dramatic variations on an unchanging bass pattern. Passacaglias formed the core repertoire of the lute and guitar books of the 17th century. 'They thrive on chromaticism, harsh dissonances and offbeat rhythms. If the composers tried to get these effects, then we have every right to go even further. My idea is simply to develop and elaborate things already there in the material. Arianna Savall's melody really does come from the Kapsberger toccata itself. Everything there that smacks of echoes from current popular music is already contained in the pieces. I just coax it out.' (ECM Records)
martes, 10 de febrero de 2015
GIYA KANCHELI Diplipito
“If you can imagine a flower that makes its way through asphalt,
that’s exactly what you find in my compositions. In my works I’m always
trying to get the flower through the asphalt.”
Giya Kancheli
Giya Kancheli
The present disc features premiere recordings made – as has been
the case with all of Kancheli’s ECM recordings – with the participation
of the composer. “Valse Boston”, written in 1996, bears two dedications,
one to its conductor and pianist Dennis Russell Davies, the other to
the composer’s wife (“with whom I have never danced”). If Kancheli has
made a point of avoiding the dancefloor he has created a piece that
moves uniquely, if not in ¾ time, and makes sometimes devastating use of
the abrupt dynamic contrasts that have become almost a trademark.
Hans-Klaus Jungheinrich in the liner notes:
“The metaphor of ‘dancing’ should be interpreted less as a profound than
as an ironic comment – but it is also an allusion to the vast distance
that separates Kancheli’s music from the apotheosis or demonic fury of
the dance. The Boston Waltz is generally associated with the louche,
slightly faded realm of urbane entertainment; for Kancheli this is at
most a ‘distant echo’ buried beneath the rubble of the ages.” Kancheli
has, however, said that he was inspired, in writing this piece, by the
visual image of Davies conducting this piece from the piano stool, half
standing, gesturing with a free arm or nods of the head while playing;
this was also a dance of sorts. Jungheinrich: “Three-quarter time is
never used as the vehicle, elixir and essence of dance-like energy. What
does occur at the beginning is a slow triplet movement; but instead of
introducing spirited movement, the consistently gentle sonorities retain
a heavy, clinging, glutinous quality. The first violins seem to want to
counter the persistent, grinding slowness of the tempo with their own
abandoned song, a mercurial line in the highest register.”
Davies and the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra have included “Valse Boston”
in their touring programmes on both sides of the Atlantic. The Chicago
Tribune wrote, “Don't let the innocuous title fool you: Giya Kancheli's
‘Valse Boston’ is a powder keg of a piece. It is a secular prayer
veering between extremes of dynamics, tempo and mood. One moment the
piano is goading the strings to produce angry, stabbing dissonances. The
next moment, it is quieting the orchestra with tiny fragments of
waltz-time, deceptively merry. Nobody conjures troubled landscapes in
sound like Kancheli. He has given us a bleak, very Eastern view of
modern existence, but the effect is cleansing.”
“Diplipito, written in 1997, is named for the little, high-tuned
Georgian drums – in the range of the darbouka or the bongos – that are
frequently used to accompany dancing. And the percussive syllables that
Kancheli gives to American countertenor Derek Lee Ragin are a kind of
concrete poetry inspired by the drum’s rhythm patterns. Giya Kancheli
was greatly impressed by Ragin in 1999 when he sang the world première
of the composer’s “And farewell goes out sighing”, alongside Gidon
Kremer with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra under Kurt Masur and the
countertenor was an essential choice for the recording of “Diplipito”,
where he is partnered with Thomas Demenga. Ragin makes his New Series
debut here while Demenga has been a mainstay of the label since its
inauguration.
Jungheinrich: “The vocal part in ‘Diplipito’ finds an equal partner in
the solo cello. The orchestra rarely play tutti, there are no winds or
brass at all, and the guitar, piano and percussion come in individually,
functioning alternately as solo and secondary presences. The terse,
tentative figures in the cello contrast with the cluster-like chords
typifying the piano line. For long stretches, the sonic space is
chromatically measured – often in small, careful interval steps…. The
mood of tranquillity, even latent immobility, that dominates the first
half of the piece is suspended by the entry of a vigorous ornamental
figure on the guitar (which is immediately picked up by the cello),
followed by several explosive fortissimo passages. The soft murmur of a
bongo rhythm increases the restlessness. This is the preparation for the
final phase, the disembodiment of sonic materiality.” (ECM Records)
lunes, 9 de febrero de 2015
Kavakos / Chailly / Gewandhausorchester BRAHMS Violin Concerto - Hungarian Dances BARTÓK Rhapsodies
To hear Leonidas Kavakos play the Brahms Violin Concerto is to be newly apprised of the work’s reputed difficulties. Not that Kavakos struggles with the solo part—far from it. But he presents the myriad double-stops, compound-chords, and wide leaps with such clarity and vividness that your ear is drawn to these effects more than usual. Yet for all this, Kavakos’ rendition is a thoroughly musical one, fully cognizant of Brahms’ structure and overall symphonic plan. Riccardo Chailly’s cleanly articulated, tersely-romantic accompaniment makes an apt foil for his soloist, as do the clear textures and lean string sound he evokes from the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra.
That Kavakos would choose the warhorse Joachim cadenza at first seems at odds with his interpretive stance, but his fresh approach proves otherwise. By sculpting each phrase so inventively, Kavakos rivets your attention and at times gives the impression that he’s improvising. In the songful slow movement (which showcases beautiful playing by the Leipzig winds) Kavakos soothes without sounding saccharine, while the finale crackles with life, thanks in part to the violinist inserting a bit of gypsy flair into the famous “Hungarian” tune.
This Hungarian flavor, albeit of a more rustic variety, carries over to Bartók’s Rhapsodies for violin and piano, which Kavakos and pianist Péter Nagy dispatch with jaunty bravura and folksy style. These same characteristics lend the more cosmopolitan Brahms Hungarian Dances a certain authenticity that the orchestral versions lack.
The recording places the orchestra slightly to the rear in the acoustic, but produces a satisfying full sound in louder passages (although the violin is oddly more prominent when playing with the orchestra than with just the piano). This is a fine modern Brahms Violin Concerto that can hold its own in a crowded catalog. (Victor Carr Jr)
jueves, 5 de febrero de 2015
Riccardo Chailly / Gewandhausorchester BRAHMS Serenades
Riccardo Chailly and the Gewandhaus Orchestra take another significant
step in an extraordinary musical journey with the release of the two
Brahms Serenades. The Serenades have been unjustly neglected and are
rarely heard in concert, making them perfect repertoire for Chailly’s
enquiring mind. Widely respected as a conductor with a “rare talent for
transforming music ripe for rediscovery” (Gramophone), his
reading of the Serenades fits with his philosophy that “all music must
aspire to be ‘new music’ again”. The recording follows Chailly’s
multi-award-winning sets of the Brahms and Beethoven symphonies.
Chailly’s radical approach to the symphonies produced a recording of “trademark clarity” according to Gramophone, which made the set its “Record of the Year 2014”. It also won aBBC Music Magazine
Award, the jury commenting: “Chailly combines fiery athleticism with
the warmly blended tonalities of the wonderful Leipzig orchestra. The
results tingle with immediacy and a pulsating sense of momentum.” Now
Chailly brings the same questing spirit to the Serenades. The release
highlights the importance of this repertoire in Brahms’s evolution as a
composer and orchestrator, making a significant statement and allowing
the Serenades to emerge from the shadow of the symphonies. Newly
reassessed as substantial masterworks in their own right, they show
Brahms in an unexpected light: the Op. 11 offering “a brightness,
waggishness and humour that would later become rare in Brahms,” in the
words of musicologist Peter Korfmacher, while the Op. 16 Serenade is
exotically scored for just wind and lower strings, creating a sense of
pleasant shade rather than darkness. With playing that is multifaceted,
multi-coloured light and delicate. “The double-bass jokes can generate
their wit, the music swings, and the colours glow,” says Chailly.
With his extraordinary attention to detail and keen ear for musical
nuance, Riccardo Chailly really gets to the heart of this richly
rewarding music. This is the first Decca recording of these works since
István Kertész recorded them in 1968. It is a worthy successor to
another great Brahmsian and a historic recording which will bring new
life to concert-hall rarities that are ripe for rediscovery.
“For an orchestra as steeped in the Austro-German tradition as the
Gewandhaus is, playing Brahms has always been part of its raison d’être.
But Chailly brings a different perspective: as with Beethoven,
Mendelssohn and Mahler, his approach is both mindful of the performing
traditions and critical of them in the best, most constructive way. His
Brahms is neither massive nor self-consciously sculpted, but still
totally coherent.” (The Guardian)
miércoles, 4 de febrero de 2015
Sokolov THE SALZBURG RECITAL
Good news for pianophiles everywhere that Grigory Sokolov has, as DG
put it, now signed an exclusive contract. This is of course not taking
him into the studio or anything as workaday as that. No, he has allowed
them to release a live recital from the 2008 Salzburg Festival. But
let’s not knock that: it’s difficult to imagine just how much
negotiation that must have taken. Comparisons are irrelevant (except
perhaps with himself): this is Sokolov we’re talking about. But in this
cult of celebrity, his very aversion to the notion has turned him into
one – a bit like Glenn Gould in an earlier era.
Of course, all of this would be beside the point if he didn’t produce
the goods. It’s an overused word, but he is inimitable. His Chopin
Preludes, for example, have no time for the notion of a freely Romantic
melodic line being kept in check by a Classical accompaniment. Sokolov’s
reading as a whole is remarkably consistent with that of his live 1990
recital released on Opus 111. In both, he begins unhurriedly, as if the
music were gently rousing itself into life. But whereas in less
imaginative hands the results could seem mannered or overly drawn out,
here it’s mesmerising. In the Sixth Prelude, for instance, the upward
curling arpeggio has a rare poignancy, while the Tenth glistens but also
has an unexpected hesitancy about it. In No 13, the glorious melody of
the middle section is given with a freedom that would simply not work in
a lesser musician; while in the infamous ‘Raindrop’, Sokolov replaces
the constant dripping with a shifting pulse that has a real urgency,
albeit an unconventional one. No 19 is a particular highlight, its
delicacy quite heart-stopping. He ends as he began, with a tempo for No
24 that has gravitas (not to be confused with heaviness), the effect
granitic, magisterial.
The Mozart is treasurable too, though – of course – you have to take
it on its own terms. What he does with the slow movement of K280, for
instance, gives it a kind of operatic reach and breadth, though never
does it lapse into histrionics. And in the finale he brings out the main
theme’s stuttering quality superbly, lending the music not just a
mercurial quality but a dramatic one too. His delight in the chewy
harmonies of the opening movement of K332 is palpable, his phrasing
iridescent in its range.
The Salzburg audience (who are generally reasonably silent except for
the tumultuous applause) were lucky enough to get six encores. The Scriabin Poèmes are more than usually clear descendants of Chopin
in Sokolov’s hands and the filigree is out of this world. By contrast,
Rameau’s Les Sauvages is unexpectedly playful and whimsical, and
we end with a clear-sighted Bach chorale prelude that is all the more
moving for its apparent simplicity. As Sokolov says in the booklet: ‘I
play only what I want to play at the current moment.’ Perhaps that’s
what gives this set such integrity. (Gramophone)
martes, 3 de febrero de 2015
Thord Svedlund / Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra WEINBERG Chamber Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4
Mieczysław Weinberg’s time would certainly seem to be now. Advocacy
plays a big part in that, of course, and recent champions such as the
young German violinist Linus Roth – whose recordings of the Violin
Concerto and sonatas (Challenge Classics, 9/13, 7/14) have really
whetted appetites – can really bring about a sea change in interest.
This latest release of late chamber symphonies (and be advised the
numbering belies the presence of 21 earlier symphonies) further adds to
the fascination, and such is the emotional and highly personal nature of
Weinberg’s musical language that it’s nigh on impossible not to be
drawn into his confidence.
The opening Lento of Symphony No 3 for string orchestra, which
is in turn directly derived from his String Quartet No 5 (these pieces
not only evolve from earlier works but thrive on self-quotation from
elsewhere in his oeuvre), is entitled ‘Melody’ and that is precisely
what you get – an unvarnished unison in search of harmony and
development (very Bartókian), both of which it finds before emerging
once more as the purest ‘confessional’. In the boisterous and explosive
second movement it’s as if both Britten and Shostakovich have morphed
into a dynamic and wilful alliance. Weinberg undoubtedly gets his
immediacy and nose for atmosphere from Shostakovich (his self-confessed
idol – and there was mutual admiration) but he is his own man and full
of surprises. A boldness and directness prevails and he clearly relishes
the gamesmanship of composition – like the freewheeling Andantino finale of this piece.
The Fourth opens with a great example of what makes Weinberg’s themes so individual: a ‘Chorale’ borrowed from his opera The Portrait,
it’s a total ‘earworm’. But suddenly there is an obbligato clarinet
among the strings and with it a multitude of Klezmer associations. That
clarinet enjoys a wild ride in the second-movement Allegro molto,
and again the rug is pulled from beneath us at the close when solo
violin and cello are given quite unexpected monologues like
afterthoughts on what has passed. An aching folksiness pervades the slow
movement and a triangle offers two single shafts of light at the
beginning and very end (a tiny touch of genius) of a final movement
which seems to have been composed in the playing of it.
The Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra under Thord Svedlund make an
excellent case for these intriguing pieces and Chandos brings them to us
with vivid immediacy. Weinberg is coming in from the cold. (Gramophone)
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