All Reviews articles – Page 105

  • Berg-Belcea
    Review

    Berg: Lyric Suite. Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht. Webern: Langsamer Satz; Five Movements op.5

    2016-02-19T00:00:00Z

    THE STRAD RECOMMENDSThe Strad Issue: March 2016Description: Expressions of love by the composers of the Second Viennese SchoolMusicians: Belcea Quartet, Nicolas Bone (viola) Antonio Meneses (cello)Composer: Berg; Schoenberg; WebernA theme of love runs through this very generously filled, 81-minute disc of music by the Second Viennese School ...

  • Shostakovich-Capucon1
    Review

    Shostakovich: Cello Concertos nos.1 & 2

    2016-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Capuçon and Gergiev find the chamber intimacy in the cello concertosMusicians: Gautier Capuçon (cello) Mariinsky Orchestra/Valery GergievComposer: ShostakovichIt is difficult for anyone recording these particular scores to ignore the towering presence of Mstislav Rostropovich, for whom both concertos were written and who ...

  • Schubert-Amsterdam
    Review

    Schubert: String Quintet in C major D956

    2016-02-16T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Schubert’s chamber masterpiece in an arrangement with added bottomMusicians: Amsterdam Sinfonietta Soloists, Rick Stotijn (double bass)Composer: SchubertTaking inspiration from a Sliding Doors vision of history – Domenico Dragonetti and Schubert as bosom buddies – the latest recording from the Amsterdam Sinfonietta takes ...

  • Kancheli-Kremer
    Review

    Kancheli: Chiaroscuro; Twilight

    2016-02-14T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Kremer and friends locate the light and dark in Kancheli’s musicMusicians: Gidon Kremer, Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin) Kremerata BalticaComposer: KancheliGiya Kancheli’s pessimistic view of the world expresses itself in music that can be both simplistic and banal. Familiar, sentimental, often sickly Romantic chord ...

  • Grieg-Cammarano
    Review

    Grieg: Violin Sonatas: no.1 in F major, no.2 in G major, no.3 in C minor

    2016-02-12T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Admirable playing – but it can’t match up to the competitionMusicians: Daniela Cammarano (violin) Alessandro Deljavan (piano)Composer: GriegDaniela Cammarano and Alessandro Deljavan offer commendable, thoughtful readings, rising to the various challenges of the fast movements and responding well to the abundant lyricism ...

  • Coleridge-Little
    Review

    Coleridge-Taylor: Violin Concerto in G minor. Delius: Suite. H. Wood: Violin Concerto in A minor

    2016-02-10T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Music by Brits that nevertheless displays an American accentMusicians: Tasmin Little (violin) BBC Philharmonic/Andrew DavisComposer: Coleridge-Taylor; Delius; H. WoodThe Chandos engineers have produced a typically wide and opulent soundstage for concertante works by three English composers who crossed the Atlantic – in ...

  • Cassado-Meneses
    Review

    Cassadó: Suite for Solo Cello. Kodály: Solo Cello Sonata; Duo

    2016-02-08T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Meneses tackles two peaks of the solo cello repertoireMusicians: Antonio Meneses (cello) Claudio Cruz (violin)Composer: Cassadó; KodályGaspar Cassadó’s three-movement, Catalan-themed response to the Bach Suites is still little known in proportion to its originality, perhaps owing to the vertiginous technical demands it ...

  • Bruch-Liebeck
    Review

    Bruch: Violin Concerto no.1 in G minor; Romance in A minor; Serenade in A minor

    2016-02-06T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Wonderful playing – even if the programme is back to frontMusicians: Jack Liebeck (violin) BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra/Martyn BrabbinsComposer: BruchI am curious about the ordering of this disc (volume 19 in Hyperion’s Romantic Violin Concerto series). The cover lists the works in ...

  • Brahms-New-Orford
    Review

    Brahms: Two String Quartets op.51

    2016-02-04T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Playing of warmth that gets to the heart of Brahms’s elusive quartetsMusicians: New Orford QuartetComposer: BrahmsBrahms’s op.51 string quartets synthesise Beethovenian structural integrity with Schubertian lyricism under high musical pressure. The resulting contrapuntal compression was to have a vital creative impact on ...

  • Brahms-Dvorak-Garlitsky
    Review

    Brahms: String Quintet no.2 in G major. Dvorák: String Quintet no.3 in E flat major ‘American’

    2016-02-02T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Garlitsky and students take on two Romantic string quintetsMusicians: Boris Garlitsky, Jaha Lee (violins) Kyoungmin Park, Georgy Kovalev (violas) Philip Graham (cello)Composer: Brahms; DvorákThe expansive and eager theme that opens the second of Brahms’s string quintets is one of the most notable ...

  • Brahms-Schumann
    Review

    Brahms: Cello Sonata in E minor op.38. Schumann: Fantasiestücke op.73; Intermezzo from F-A-E Sonata; Adagio and Allegro op.70; Three Romances op.94

    2016-01-31T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Characterful playing of persuasive transcriptions for violaMusicians: Ettore Causa (viola) Boris Berman (piano)Composer: Brahms; SchumannSchumann probably brought it upon himself when he allowed his late chamber music to be published in versions for different instruments.On this disc, violist Ettore Causa plays pieces ...

  • Barber-Watkinses
    Review

    American Works. Barber: Cello Sonata. Bernstein: Three Meditations from Mass. Carter: Cello Sonata. Crumb: Sonata for Solo Cello. Copland: Waltz and Celebration from Billy the Kid

    2016-01-29T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Crumb and Carter stand out in a recital of cello AmericanaMusicians: Paul Watkins (cello) Huw Watkins (piano)Composer: Barber; Bernstein; Carter; Crumb; CoplandMidtown Manhattan skyscrapers swirling in the city mist: the cover art framing Paul and Huw Watkins’s album of stateside cello and ...

  • Bach-Eijlander
    Review

    Bach: Cello Suites Vol.1; no.1 BWV1007, no.3 BWV1009, no.4 BWV1010

    2016-01-27T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: February 2016Description: A natural approach pays dividends in three of Bach’s Cello SuitesMusicians: Joachim Eijlander (cello)Composer: BachOh no, was my initial reaction on encountering this disc – not another version of the Bach Suites! But when I began listening to the natural and unaffected ...

  • My-Armenia-Khachatryan
    Review

    My Armenia. Babadjanian: Six Pictures. Bagdasarian: Nocturne; Rhapsody. Khachaturian: Poem-Song; Two Dances from Gayaneh. Komitas: The Apricot Tree; The Crane; It Is Spring; Seven Folk Dances. Mirzoya

    2016-01-25T00:00:00Z

    THE STRAD RECOMMENDSThe Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Leading Armenian players lovingly perform the music of their countryMusicians: Sergey Khachatryan (violin) Lusine Khachatryan (piano)Composer: Babadjanian; Bagdasarian; Khachaturian; Komitas; MirzoyanThis recording, ‘dedicated to the 100th commemoration of the Armenian Genocide’, is presented by violinist Sergey Khachatryan, winner of the ...

  • Fitelberg-Arc-Esnsemble1
    Review

    Fitelberg: String Quartets nos.1 & 2; Serenade; Sonatine; Nachtmusik

    2016-01-23T00:00:00Z

    THE STRAD RECOMMENDSThe Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Premiere recordings of chamber music that’s truly worth investigatingMusicians: ARC EnsembleComposer: FitelbergJerzy Fitelberg, born in Poland in 1903, ended up in New York avoiding the Nazis. By the time he died in 1951 he was feted by the contemporary music ...

  • Beethoven-Phillips-Guy
    Review

    Beethoven: Complete Works for Cello and Piano

    2016-01-21T00:00:00Z

    THE STRAD RECOMMENDSThe Strad Issue: February 2016Description: Sparkling performances of Beethoven’s cello sonatas and variationsMusicians: Xavier Phillips (cello) François-Frédéric Guy (piano)Composer: BeethovenBy way of a musical limbering-up exercise, Xavier Phillips and François-Frédéric Guy open their latest release with the three sets of variations that Beethoven based on ...

  • Club-Album-Mutter
    Review

    The Club Album

    2016-01-16T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: January 2016Description: Mutter and friends live from DG’s Yellow LoungeMusicians: Anne-Sophie Mutter (violin) Lambert Orkis (piano) Mahan Esfahani (harpsichord) Mutter’s VirtuosiIt may come as a surprise to find Anne-Sophie Mutter releasing a live disc and DVD from a Berlin nightclub. Yet here is the ...

  • Nelsova-Audite
    Review

    Cello Concertos, Sonatas & Suites. Works by Bach, Beethoven, Boccherini, Brahms, Dvorák, Kabalevsky, Milhaud and Schumann

    2016-01-14T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: January 2016Description: Collected performances by a legendary Canadian cellistMusicians: Zara Nelsova (cello) Artur Balsam, Lothar Broddack (pianos) Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra/Georg Ludwig Jochum, Gerd AlbrechtComposer: Bach, Beethoven, Boccherini, Brahms, Dvorák, Kabalevsky, Milhaud, SchumannThe greatest cellist to come out of the Americas (see ‘Great Cellists’, ...

  • Bound-to-Nothing-Fantasticus
    Review

    Bound to Nothing: The German Stylus Fantasticus. Sonatas and works by Buxtehude, Erlebach, Krieger, Kühnel and Walther

    2016-01-12T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: January 2016Description: Dutch trio takes on German Baroque ‘fantastic’ sonatasMusicians: FantasticusComposer: Buxtehude, Erlebach, Krieger, Kühnel, Walther‘Instituted to display genius’, remarked an early commentator on the extrovert Baroque string style recorded here, and he left open the question of whether he or the stylus fantasticus ...

  • Vivaldi-Ehnes
    Review

    Vivaldi: The Four Seasons. Tartini: Violin Sonata in G minor ‘The Devil’s Trill’. Leclair: Violin Sonata in D major ‘Tambourin’

    2016-01-10T00:00:00Z

    The Strad Issue: January 2016Description: A calmer, cooler version of Vivaldi’s seasonal concertosMusicians: James Ehnes (violin/director) Andrew Armstrong (piano) Sydney Symphony OrchestraComposer: Vivaldi, Tartini, LeclairThis might be the ideal antidote to Nigel Kennedy’s new, rebooted Four Seasons (see above), with its general disregard, healthy or otherwise, for ...