In the scherzo episode, where wind and timps protest against the carping soloist, you can almost feel the music’s physical impact
Rob Cowan welcomes vividly characterful accounts from Christian Tetzlaff and Hannu Lintu of Bartók’s two violin concertos, which stand tall in a competitive field
Bartók Violin Concertos – No 1, Sz36; No 2, Sz112 Christian Tetzlaff vn Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra / Hannu Lintu Ondine F ODE1317-2 (61’ • DDD) Ondine’s new Bartók CD is an out-andout winner; but, having in the past praised numerous versions of these two works, I feel it only fair to open this review by placing Christian Tetzlaff and Hannu Lintu in a proper critical context.
Viewed at a realistic perspective, when it comes to coupling Bartók’s two violin concertos on the same CD there are six principal digital contenders. James Ehnes stands apart in that he adds the Viola Concerto, a bonus that in musical terms is very much to be reckoned with. His performances are warmly communicative and much aided by vivid support from the BBC Philharmonic under Gianandrea Noseda. So if you want all three works very persuasively performed, and the three-tier concerto context appeals, then there’s no contest: it has to be Ehnes. Where Ehnes takes a sweetly romantic view of the First Concerto’s amatory first movement, Renaud Capuçon is more
12 GRAMOPHONE RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR 2018
soulfully romantic, even doleful at times. But he also does well by both concertos. So too do Arabella Steinbacher and Marek Janowski: when reviewing their CD in these pages I commented how they ‘offer us Bartók in 3D, the three dimensions not only spatial but emotional as well. I can’t think of a version of the Second Concerto, past or present, where structure and content are more thoughtfully balanced, or where significant points in the score are more lovingly underlined.’ I stand by that assessment but, when it comes to structure and content being thoughtfully balanced, they now have a formidable rival in Tetzlaff and Lintu. That’s not forgetting Isabelle Faust and Daniel Harding, who provide a lean, lissom and sensitively phrased option, nor Thomas Zehetmair with Iván Fischer, who are probably closest in style to the current CD under review. And of course Patricia Kopatchinskaja’s Second Concerto (2013 Gramophone Recording of the Year, PH O T O G R A P H Y
I
B E R T A Z Z
I A
I O R G
G
:
Click on a CD cover to buy/stream from gramophone.co.uk
Subscribe for unlimited and fully-searchable access to the digital archive of Gramophone stretching back to April 1923 across web, iOS and Android devices.