May Editor’s Choices
RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR
BEETHOVEN Piano Concertos Nos 2 & 4 Royal Northern Sinfonia / Lars Vogt Ondine An enjoyable cycle reaches its conclusion in considerable style – the rapport between Lars Vogt and his Northern Sinfonia feels natural and joyous after a rewarding journey.
FERNEYHOUGH Le terre est un homme, etc. Sols; BBC Symphony Orchestra / Martyn Brabbins NMC A fine birthday present for Ferneyhough’s 75th, his music – complex, sometimes confrontational, often demanding – given truly skilful and devoted advocacy.
VIVALDI The Four Seasons Brecon Baroque / Rachel Podger Channel Classics If ever a disc were selfrecommending, this is it: one of today’s most consistently brilliant Baroque violinists, records one of the era’s most famed and engaging works. Enjoy!
REICH Drumming Synergy Vocals; Colin Currie Group Colin Currie Records One of minimalism’s most significant – and most epic – works is given a mesmeric performance by Colin Currie and colleagues, who beautifully handle its rhythmic patterns and phasing.
SCHUMANN String Quartets, Op 41 – Nos 2 & 3 Elias Quartet Alpha One is left feeling that the hugely impressive Elias Quartet have thought about every nuance and detail of these works; add in the rich sound, and it’s a very fine release indeed.
HAYDN Piano Sonatas, HobXVI – No 32; No 40; No 49; No 50 Paul Lewis pf Harmonia Mundi If last month’s interview with Paul lewis whetted your appetite for what we hope may be a long Haydn sonata journey, this well chosen first set won’t disappoint!
MOMPOU. RAVEL. BROCAL Piano works Julien Brocal pf Rubicon There’s a sensitive,
beguiling grace to Julien Brocal’s playing throughout this recital, which seems to effortlessly convey a captivating world of colour and mood.
VICTORIA Tenebrae Responsories Stile Antico Harmonia Mundi The Tenebrae Responsories are full of poignant inner drama, something Victoria’s music well embodies, and which Stile Antico powerfully capture in this highly communicative performance.
‘ENFERS’ Operatic excerpts by Gluck and Rameau Sols; Pygmalion / Raphaël Pichon Harmonia Mundi
An intriguing concept, about which our critic had his doubts, though none at all about these thrilling performances, bursting with a gripping theatricality.
coupled with works by Eötvos and Ligeti) is chock-full of character – a real one-off.
So what makes this new release so special? Bartók’s brilliantly scored Second Concerto in particular is a blend of earth and spirit, formal sophistication and phantasmagorical invention, folk-like themes and harmonic originality. These elements are securely focused by Tetzlaff and Lintu in the second movement especially, where, to call on a nature metaphor, the music suggests an exquisitely coloured hummingbird: such fragile beauty in the quieter episodes, sometimes reduced to a mere whisper (from 6'11" is pure filigree), Lintu always cueing a fine-spun accompaniment; though when the going gets tough (at 4'39" into the same movement), where wind and timps loudly protest against the carping soloist, the effect is dramatic. In the movement’s central scherzo episode, from 7'16", with its tremulously dialoguing violin and percussion (fast whirring of wings?), you can almost feel the music’s physical impact.
The outer movements are superb, Tetzlaff pressing forwards or cosseting the line according to the dictates of the moment. But always there’s that awareness of a master colourist in the forefront; nothing is ever showy just for the sake of it, yet at 7'15" into the first movement, after Tetzlaff has reduced his tone to something barely audible, he rudely breaks the mood with a virtuoso flourish. Between them Tetzlaff and Lintu command a compelling and comprehensive overview of this multifaceted masterpiece, its fierce rhythms and many moments of affecting repose, not to mention its very singular emotional climate. Incidentally, Bartók’s original, purely orchestral ending is used. I much prefer it.
The First Concerto is equally fine, at the very least. Listen from 7'07" into the Allegro giocoso second movement, a dizzying sequence of repeated phrases from Christian Tetzlaff tailed by an exultant tutti where Lintu and his Finnish Radio players bound in like excited kids in a playground. It’s a wonderful, conspicuously Straussian moment which I often revisit on my old Isaac Stern/Eugene Ormandy recording – but Tetzlaff and Lintu are in a different league. The same is true of the whole concerto, in fact, Tetztlaff commanding a wider range of tonal colours for the opening section of the preceding Andante sostenuto than almost anyone else on disc. To call on another nature metaphor, this is flora and fauna translated in terms of sound; and as the movement progresses, so the emotional tension builds commensurately.
I’ve said it before, but my favoured couplings for the Second Concerto are the two magnificent Rhapsodies (as played by Barnabás Kelemen under Zoltán Kocsis on Hungaroton, who also add variant versions). But Tetzlaff’s account of the First Concerto elevates this work to a whole new level of musical excellence, so much so that I’m inclined to place his expertly recorded CD of the two concertos ahead of all rival versions. It’s that good!
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GRAMOPHONE RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR 2018 13