Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 3;
Bartók: Piano Concerto No. 2. Lang Lang, piano; Berliner
Philharmoniker conducted by Sir Simon Rattle. Sony. $15.99.
Stravinsky: Violin Concerto;
Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2. Patricia Kopatchinskaja, violin; London
Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Jurowski. Naïve. $16.99.
Bach: Violin Concertos in A minor
and E; Concerto for Violin and Oboe in C minor; Sonatas Nos. 3 and 4 for
Harpsichord and Violin. Janine Jansen, violin; Ramón Ortega Quero, oboe; Jan Jansen, harpsichord. Decca. $15.99.
Grieg: Complete Symphonic Works,
Volume III—Concert Overture “In Autumn”; Lyric Suite; Klokkeklang; Old
Norwegian Melody with Variations; Three Orchestral Pieces from “Sigurd Jorsalfar.”
WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln
conducted by Eivind Aadland. Audite. $19.99 (SACD).
Schumann: Complete Symphonic
Works, Volume I—Symphony No. 1; Overture, Scherzo and Finale; Symphony in D
minor (original version, 1841). WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln conducted by Heinz Holliger.
Audite. $18.99.
Lang Lang’s tendency to
pound the piano into submission has thankfully diminished somewhat in recent
years – a particularly good thing when he performs concertos such as the
Prokofiev Third and Bartók
Second. These two works are rarely juxtaposed in recordings, which makes the
Sony CD featuring the Berliner Philharmoniker under Sir Simon Rattle
extra-special. In truth, the performances are special, too. Lang Lang is
particularly impressive in the Bartók,
where he shows a somewhat uncharacteristically light touch coupled with a
sensitivity to rhythms and phrases – a combination leading to a more musically
mature performance than this consummate showman usually delivers. Perhaps
Rattle gets much of the credit – he certainly gets some of it for the wonderful way he brings forth all the colors of
which the Berlin Philharmonic is capable (and there are a lot of them). The brass tone of the orchestra is, as always,
exceptional, and the sheer vitality that Rattle obtains from the orchestra
makes for a performance both exciting and musicianly. The Prokofiev is
top-notch, too, but not as surprising: it is the sort of concerto that fits
Lang Lang’s style well, and indeed the pianist has said it is his personal
favorite among Prokofiev’s five concertos. This is scarcely unexpected: the
Prokofiev Third is a display piece, communicating more flashiness than depth,
and Lang Lang makes no attempt to extract anything particularly profound from
it. The result is a highly exciting reading that is not in any way revelatory:
all is on the surface. But it is a tremendously polished surface and clearly
one with which Rattle, usually a more-sensitive conductor, is in this case
quite happy: he goes along with Lang Lang’s approach and actually emphasizes
elements of it by playing up some of the orchestra’s more-raucous
contributions. Both for repertoire and for the sheer skill of the performance
by pianist and orchestra alike, this is a highly successful and very engaging
disc.
Prokofiev is paired with
Stravinsky on a more moderate, less over-the-top Naïve CD featuring violinist
Patricia Kopatchinskaja and the London Philharmonic Orchestra led by Vladimir
Jurowski. The Stravinsky Violin Concerto and the Prokofiev Second here get
thoughtful, carefully assembled performances in which soloist and orchestra
cooperate throughout rather than seeming at times to be competing to outdo each
other (as is the case with Lang Lang and Rattle). There is certainly no lack of
excitement here – quite the opposite – but there is a sense that the music
comes first and the performers are at its service. The sensitivity of the
Prokofiev Second is particularly welcome: Kopatchinskaja gives it time to
breathe in the first two movements and only lets loose with stirring intensity
in the finale. As for the Stravinsky, its operatic elements come to the fore
here and it emerges as a display piece, yes, but not one in which the violinist
is all that matters: what Stravinsky puts on display is his own thinking, his
own unusual design for the work, and his own sense that a concerto can be more
than a back-and-forth discussion-cum-competition between single instrument and
ensemble. These are subtler performances than those of Lang Lang and Rattle,
neither better nor worse but different in their emphasis and the way they
handle the conflict and cooperation between soloist and orchestra. Jurowski
seems somewhat more cerebral and controlled here than Rattle does when working
with Lang Lang, and this is all to the good for the music, which comes across as
a success both in what it communicates and in how.
The concertos of Bach
communicate very differently, and Janine Jansen brings a suitably light touch
and elegant fingerings to them on a new Decca CD. The all-Bach disc contains a
particularly good A minor concerto (BWV 1041), a bit more emotional than the
work usually is but certainly nowhere in Romantic territory. The concerto in E
(BWV 1042) is technically impressive but seems a touch more ordinary – the
interpretation does not go anywhere new, although it treads familiar territory
with considerable grace. The violin-and-oboe concerto, a reconstruction that is
increasingly finding favor with performers and audiences alike, has
considerable warmth (again, within appropriate Baroque confines) and some
lovely interplay between the solo instruments. And the two harpsichord sonatas
fill out the disc very nicely indeed: each is as long as each of the concertos,
and each sonata is as filled with musical ideas worked through with an equal
amount of integrity and spirit. But the sparseness of line in the sonatas, with
only two instruments rather than a chamber ensemble, lets Jansen bring out the
melodic elements and contrapuntal elegance of the works’ construction even more
clearly than in the concertos. There is a sense of friendliness and intimate
cooperation among the musicians on this recording, which would be clear from
the performances even if listeners did not know that harpsichordist Jan Jansen
is Janine Jansen’s father and cellist Maarten Jansen is her brother. Chamber
works always have considerable intimacy when well played, and the ones here
have more than most, thanks partly to Jansen’s wonderful violin tone (she plays
a 1727 Stradivarius) and partly to the fresh view of the music that all the
performers bring to these readings.
The first-rate Grieg series
on Audite is filled with freshness as well. Eivind Aadland again and again
offers interpretations of familiar music that make the works seem new, no
matter how often a listener has heard them before. The third volume of the
series is a highly attractive mixture of the well-known with some definite
rarities. Aadland conducts with great sensitivity and a particularly sure grasp
of the music’s context and scope. The pieces here are mostly transcriptions and
mostly play to Grieg’s greatest strength, the creation of miniatures. Only one
work, the Concert Overture “In Autumn,”
lasts more than 10 minutes as an integrated piece. Klokkeklang (“Bell Ringing”) is only a five-minute work, and the
three other pieces on this very well-recorded SACD are more extended only
because they are collections of small component parts: the very attractive Old Norwegian Melody with Variations,
for example, lasts nearly 23 minutes only because it includes 15 separate elements.
The best-known works here, Lyric Suite
and Three Orchestral Pieces from “Sigurd
Jorsalfar,” are also collections of short movements, each of which is a
little gem in itself and each of which, when added to the others, produces a
totality that (especially in the Lyric
Suite) is equal to more than the sum of its parts. The consistency of the
playing of the WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln
is one of the many pleasures of this recording and of this ongoing series,
which is giving listeners a chance to hear Grieg as a far more varied and
wide-ranging composer than he appears to be to people who know only the Piano
Concerto and excerpts from Peer Gynt.
The WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln is also featured on an Audite CD
that marks the start of another series that promises to be a very fine one
indeed. This one will present the complete symphonic works of Schumann as conducted
by a very knowledgeable and intelligent conductor, Heinz Holliger. There are a
number of rarities in Schumann’s orchestral music, and one of them turns up
with two familiar pieces on this first recording. The rarity is the Symphony in
D minor, the work that we know today as the very popular Symphony No. 4 – in a
later version, in which many orchestral parts are doubled and the overall
texture of the music is made heavier and muddier. The work’s popularity in that
later version is testimony to the quality of the ideas and the excellence of
the unusual structure, which straddles the line between single-movement and
multi-movement form. And there is no question that the well-known version is a
solid and weighty work. But the earlier one, which is very rarely performed, is
significantly lighter, more transparent, and clearer in its presentation of
themes and its balance among orchestral sections. The actual music changes very
little between the two versions, but the effect of the symphony changes
dramatically, as Holliger’s fine performance makes very clear indeed. The other
two symphonic works here are the ever-popular “Spring” symphony, which gets a
nicely balanced and bright reading in which the orchestra’s singing qualities
are particularly prominent, and the curious Overture,
Scherzo and Finale, an almost-symphony in which each movement could stand
alone but in which the three together make up a particularly lighthearted and
bright work (because of the lack of a slow movement) that almost sounds like
theater music. Holliger’s well-thought-out, well-put-together performances bode
well for this Audite series, and if the mix here of popular and less-known
works continues in future volumes, this group of releases – like the Grieg
series – will be a notable one indeed.
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