Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 5, 2013

Villa-Lobos: Bachianas Brasileiras Volume 3


“The cellists of the São Paulo SOP give measured and beautifully poised accounts of Nos 1 and 5 and the performers catch the intimacy one expects of the medium. Donna Brown is in fine voice in No 5… No 4 may well be the most unfamiliar to those who know the standard "orchestral" version... evocative of Bach in its use of a keyboard. Jean Louis Steuerman... plays with great finesse and understanding...” --Gramophone Magazine, December 2007





The primary novelty here is the piano-solo original version of Bachianas Brasileiras No. 4, an interesting alternative to the more familiar setting for orchestra. There seems little question that the latter is preferable on purely coloristic grounds, particularly in the second-movement chorale and the dance-finale. Jean-Louis Steuerman plays very well, however, and it's only in that energetic last movement that he sometimes gives too much emphasis to the left-hand accompaniment (at a tempo perhaps a touch too frantic). But then if you have the orchestral version in your ears, as I do, your expectations in terms of textural balance naturally will be different from what can be achieved on solo keyboard. It's a fine performance.

Both wind players sound terrific in the brief and quirky Bachianas Brasileiras No. 6, and soprano Donna Brown sings (and hums) really beautifully in the popular No. 5. I was particularly taken with her clarity of diction and accuracy of intonation in the rapid-fire second movement. Here, and in Bachianas Brasileiras No. 1, the cello section of the São Paulo Symphony plays magnificently, with incisive rhythms (check out the first movement of No. 1) and a big, rich tone. As usual, BIS's engineering is excellent. I look forward to the conclusion of this first rate series. It looks to be the Bachianas Brasileiras cycle of choice, assuming standards remain this high. --David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com

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