Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Barber Samuel. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Barber Samuel. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Bảy, 15 tháng 9, 2012

Barber & Meyer: Violin Concertos


Hilary Hahn continues to impress. Her Barber ranks with the finest available, and moreover, does so by taking a personal approach to the music, far removed from the Romantic effusions of the celebrated Stern/Bernstein collaboration. Both she and her accompanist, the estimable Hugh Wolff, offer a cooler, neo-classical view of the piece, particularly in the first movement which comes off as less rhapsodic, more highly contrasted, and more tightly put together than usual--very refreshing and vital music-making that many listeners may well prefer.




Of course, the slow movement is nothing if not Romantic, and Hahn gives the lyricism its due, adding her own special elegance to the shaping of Barber's sweetly nostalgic melodies.

The finale is simply a show-stopper. Not only does Hahn blow through the music with astounding effortlessness, but she does so while articulating with stunning clarity and purposefulness the music's harmonic piquancy (aided to no small extent by Wolff's immaculate accompaniment). In the process, she reveals countless little twists and turns of phrase that other performances breeze right over, and the general impression is of a much more substantial musical experience than usual. Even after excellent recent versions by Gil Shaham and Joshua Bell, this is an interpretation that makes you listen to the music anew, and there can be no higher praise than that.

It's impossible to underestimate the importance of major artists performing and recording contemporary music, even if the works in question might not be immediately acclaimed as "classics". That's for future generations to decide. Hahn deserves a huge amount of credit (as do colleagues like Anne-Sophie Mutter and Elmar Oliveira) for using their fame to explore new music for their instrument. Edgar Meyer's colorful Violin Concerto, composed expressly for Hahn, poses no major stylistic challenges to the listener, and for this reason it will probably be dismissed by many critics, both of the professional and armchair variety. But it's a lovely piece, beautifully written for the violin, and it makes the perfect complement to Barber's concerto.

Cast in two large sections, the work opens with a soulful, folk-like tune that sounds a lot like the soundtrack from the movie Fargo. This is no disparagement: Carter Burwell's film score is marvelous. The folk tune alternates with quicker passages featuring lively solo playing over a gently syncopated accompaniment. The second part starts with a slow movement: elegantly simple music consisting of solo violin over a series of luminous, long-held chords, with delicate woodwind roulades beneath. This yields to a country fiddle-style dance episode, a brief return of the slow music, and a whirlwind conclusion. The piece is instantly memorable, scored so deftly that every note of the solo is clearly audible, and sounds like great fun to play.

Despite the music's outward simplicity, there's a lot of craft in this piece. It's clear that Meyer thought long and hard about serious musical issues like proper instrumental balance, formal shapeliness, effective solo writing, and tempo contrast, and it seems to me that his success is undeniable. I can't imagine a better introduction to this appealing new work than the one provided by Hahn and Wolff. Don't miss this marvelous disc. --David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com 

Thứ Hai, 6 tháng 8, 2012

Saint-Saëns, Poulenc, Barber: Symphony No. 3 "Organ", Etc


"…it is a breathtaking achievement. There is passion, but precision, technically well-nigh faultless." --BBC Music Magazine, March 2008

"The inauguration of Verizon Hall's new organ has been preserved for all of us in one of the most outstanding SACDs yet. Somehow, producer Martha de Francisco and her team (assisted by Polyhymnia) have captured the detail, sweetness, and power of the orchestra, as well as the organ’s pipes and pedals, in a recording that is more than a sound spectacular." --Stereophile Magazine, May 2007
 

 "I have never heard an organ sound so good from top to bottom in a thoroughly natural concert hall setting." --Fanfare Magazine, July/August 2007

“Eschenbach's Poulenc is heavily romanticised, squeezing every last drop of pathos from the score and finding many moments of ravishing beauty. Latry is, for the most part, a willing accomplice – only in the swaying rhythm of the subito andante moderato do conductor and soloist seem at odds with each other – and while it is left to him to root out the music's austere and acerbic sides, he clearly relishes Eschenbach's slow tempi in reaching the work's two powerful climaxes.

This performance may miss many of Poulenc's subtleties in its single-minded striving for loveliness but the wildly enthusiastic cheering from the audience seems wholly justified given the unusual breadth of this reading.
The recording was made at the inaugural concerts of the new organ of Philadelphia's Verizon Hall, which included the almost obligatory Saint-Saëns Symphony. Properly, this is more a test of how well an organ integrates with an orchestra than a vehicle for the organ itself, and on those terms this proves to be a wholly successful performance. Eschenbach's intuitive reading casts the work in a rich perspective, the opening possessing a tangible atmosphere of menace while the second movement's Presto positively fizzes with energy.

The organ shows its stature (the booklet tells us that, with 6938 pipes, it is the largest concerthall organ in the US) with palpable depth in the first movement and majestic presence in the finale; but the real star of the show here is the Philadelphia Orchestra itself. Mouth-watering wind solos, gorgeous string-playing and a wonderfully crisp and cohesive sound (as it must be in what sounds a dreadfully dry acoustic) combine to create rather more memorable moments than we have a right to expect; the string entry just before the close of the first section is, as they say, to die for.” --Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Thứ Tư, 18 tháng 7, 2012

Barber, Walton and Korngold: Violin Concertos


It's an inspired coupling, as well as a generous one, to have these three high-romantic concertos together. James Ehnes gives superb performances, bringing out their full emotional thrust without vulgarity or exaggeration. His playing has always been impressive on disc, but here he excels himself in expressive range as well as tonal beauty, with expressive rubato perfectly controlled. --Gramophone






“Ehnes proves an ardent and committed advocate, mirrored by Bramwell Tovey's glowing partnership, particularly in the lyrical, beautiful slow movement, which has exquisite delicacy of feeling. It is an inspiring coupling, as well as a generous one...Ehnes gives superb performances of all three, bringing out their emotional thrust without vulgarity or exaggeration. An altogether indispensable CD.” --Penguin Guide, 2011 edition





Thứ Bảy, 19 tháng 5, 2012

American Music


“the conjunction of these three contrasting string pieces written across the 20th century proves useful, and stimulates thought. Furthermore, Hughes Deschaux's recording is terrific. It's vivid and warm with a generous sense of space...and you can't fault Pierre Morlet's cello, always singing and sorrowful.” --BBC Music Magazine, March 2012 ****

“This is an eccentric collection of strange bedfellows...the Diotima's performance is a strong one.” --Gramophone Magazine, March 2012




“Eloquent and tonal, it exudes a suavely Gallic influence. The Quatuor Diotima avoid supersweet sentimentalism and concentrate instead on clarity.” --Sunday Times, 13th November 2011

“Deeply peculiar in a highly satisfying way, this music provokes shocks and giggles in equal measure.” --The Arts Desk, 10th March 2012

“the shrill, astringent tone of the violins...works to their advantage in realising George Crumb's "Black Angels for Electric Quartet", a dramatic, sometimes antagonistically cacophonous assemblage of 13 brief "images from the dark land", in places seemingly influenced by Bernard Herrmann's piercing score for Psycho.” --The Independent, 4th November 2011 **

MP3 320 · 155 MB





Thứ Bảy, 24 tháng 3, 2012

Elgar, Barber: Cello Concertos


Elgar's Cello Concerto has been juxtaposed with a number of works on disc, but not before with Barber's concerto, which was composed 26 years later, in 1945. The combination works well, for the stylistic gulf between them is not as wide as that quarter century might suggest, even though Barber's romanticism is spiked with French neoclassicism.







Anne Gastinel's punchy, yet emotionally controlled cello playing is perfectly suited to the Barber and also provides a welcome antidote to the usual heart-on-sleeve treatment of the Elgar; the contributions from the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Justin Brown make their mark too. --The Guardian ****

MP3 320 · 115 MB