22.8.12
Elgar: Enigma Variations
Sir John Eliot Gardiner makes a very persuasive case for placing Elgar as a composer in classic Central European Romantic mode in these excellent performances of Elgar's orchestral and chamber works, ending with a brilliant performance of Elgar's Enigma Variations. Gardiner's interpretations are certainly radical reinterpretations of Elgar's music; here he emphasizes how these scores pay homage to contemporaries - and artistic mentors - such as Brahms and Dvorak, among others, in his choice of tempi and the lush, warm performances he obtains from the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. I doubt I have heard the Enigma Variations sound so much like a work composed by Brahms before. The sound quality is quite superb, filled with the ample warmth one might expect from recordings made in the Vienna Philharmonic's concert hall. Without question this is yet another successful Deutsche Grammophon collaboration between Gardiner and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.--John Kwok Listen to samples
Elgar: Cello Concerto; "Enigma" VariationsG
This is a stunning performance of the Elgar Concerto for Cello by the gifted Jacqueline duPre with the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by her husband, Daniel Barenboim. Ms. duPre was already being compared to Casals when she was only in her mid-twenties because of her mastery of the sonorous instrument--known to be one of the most difficult to play. Her career was cut short by multiple sclerosis, diagnosed when she was barely 29, but her recordings, like the one superbly remastered here, live on. In the haunting melody of the Elgar concerto's Adagio, one is reminded of the beauty and sadness of duPre's short career. For cello buffs, this album is definetely 4-star, and the Enigma Variations are a nice bonus.--Ginues ressurected Listen to samples
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, Op. 85
Edward Elgar (1857-1934)
Adagio – Moderato
Allegro molto
Adagio
Allegro ma non troppo
The renaissance of English music in the twentieth-century
began at its turn with the revelation of Elgar’s ‘Enigma’ Variations, a work
soon taken up by the greatest conductors of the time and of all nationalities.
In the two following decades, Elgar composed oratorios, symphonies and
concertos but only at the end of this period, in the last of his large scale
works, this Cello Concerto, did he create another which also earned its place,
if more gradually, as a well-loved item in the permanent international
repertoire. It was, effectively, Elgar’s swansong. Composed in 1919, it was
first played by Felix Salmond at the Queen’s Hall, London, with Elgar
conducting, on October 26 of the year.
Although cast in four main sections, in contrast to the
three movement of the earlier Violin Concerto, the Cello Concerto is a leaner
and more concise score. Here, Elgar, self-taught but wise in orchestral
experience, successfully projects the solo cello line in clear relief against
an orchestral background of unusual refinement and stripped of all
inessentials.
The Concerto begins with a brief recitative-like
introduction by the solo cello, leading into the first subject of the first
movement proper, a Moderato in nine-eight time. Announced by the violas, it
moves like a winding path in autumnal moods. It passes to the solo cello and
then to an orchestral tutti before this opening section is rounded off by its
return to the solo instrument. Clarinet and bassoons then introduce a second
them, which, counterpointed by the solo cello, the violins continue. This then,
in Tovey’s well-chosen word, blossoms into the major mode, before reverting to
the minor and leading to a recapitulation of the opening section of the
movement.
Cello recitative, anticipations of the succeeding scherzo,
and a brief cadenza lead into the common-time Allegro molto, a kind of nimble
moto perpetuo in E minor, with a contrasted second idea beginning in the
remoteness of E Flat major. The music soon reverts to E minor and the initial
idea, with the second theme reappearing in G major before the swiftly scurrying
coda.
The slow movement unfolds like a prayer, led by the solo
cello. I B flat major and three-eight time, it comes to rest on the dominant (F
major). This leads into B flat minor for a false start to the finale, an
introduction soon swerving into E minor for
another noble recitative and brief cadenza. They lead to the resolute
announcement of the main subject of the final Allegro, ma non troppo (E minor,
two-four time) by the solo cello to an off-beat accompaniment. An orchestral
tutti leads to a more wayward second idea. Resourceful development, in which
the initial them recurs rondo-like and engenders a powerful climax, is followed
by a chromatic episode, (Poco piu lento, common-time) of deep poignancy. It
subsides into a recall of the second phrase of the slow movement, and a final
glance at the opening recitative of the Concerto. After which, the main subject
supplies a brisk and brusque coda.
With hindsight, it is possible to read into the stately
sorrow of the Cello Concerto, and particularly its penultimate episode, Elgar’s
farewell to a former world, the more prosperous and leisurely Edwardian era he
knew before the first world war. With the death of Lady Elgar in 1920, Elgar
lost his creative mainspring, so that the Cello Concerto was indeed a
valediction: certainly, he wrote little of real consequence after it.
Programme Note c Felix Aprahamian, 1983
Rossini: Overtures
This CD is quite amazing for several reasons. For starters, you get two CDs for the price of one. Therefore, for the price of one CD, you get 14 Rossini overtures (I must admit that I have not even heard of some of the overtures included). All of the works included are well recorded, so there is very, very little of the hiss or blip that plague other CDs. The best aspect of the CD, however, does not lie in its technical values. Instead, it is the performances themselves that caught my attention. The interpretations taken by Chailly and the New Philharmonic Orchestra are certainly fresh, though not necessarily ones that I would feel safe taking had I been the conductor. The tempi and dynamics of several famous passages (some from the popular Barber of Seville) are not what I am used to, though I was pleasantly surprised to learn that such interpretations are possible without sounding bad. This CD is definitely a good buy. Even if you disagree with some of the interpretations, you still get two CDs for the cost of one. And, for those who are tired of hearing the same performances over and over, these two CDs offer something new that may very well recaptivate your heart.--kv581 Listen to samples
Rossini: Complete Overtures
One French wit in the early part of the nineteenth century observed that he had more fun at a Rossini opera than in the bedroom, and Rossini's irresistable melodies, infectious gaiety, and wild zany sense of humor, all coupled with the dizzy acceleration of the famous Rossini crescendo makes this music as captivating and exciting today as it was two centuries ago when ladies intoxicated by the emotional power of the music fainted in the aisles. Rossini also wrote more serious music, his Otello was a great favorite of a man who knew his operas, Verdi, and the set also includes examples of this less known side of the composer of the Barber of Seville.
Neville Marriner recorded a great number of Rossini overtures back in the second half of the seventies, between 1974 and 1980, and this 3 CD set rounds up the lot and presents them in one box set. No attempt has been made to issue them in the order of composition - indeed the first CD begins with the last - the famous William Tell Overture. The rarer and earlier works, generally of far less interest, are closeted away on the third CD, while the first CD garners many of the best, and the second CD at least has several genuine masterpieces among the lesser pieces.
Rossini was a master of the orchestra, and certainly there is far more than enough to justify two CDs, if not three. However, Philips is not charging an arm and a leg for the box set, so perhaps it's best to view the lesser ones as an addendum.
The performances are brisk, with excellent rythmic impetus, and played with the pure clean tones favored by the Academy. Marriner doesn't surpass the greatest versions in the major works, such as the legendary Toscanini, or in stereo, Szell, but Marriner and his orchestra are alert and highly finished. Overall these grade out at between A to B+ performances; surely a box set anyone could enjoy over time. The set might also make a nice addition to a single CD set of the Rossini overtures. Again you have a chance with this set to hear a truly great master working up a form to ever more and more astonishing displays of pure pandemonium.
The sound has been improved from the LPs, which, while pretty enough, lacked a little oomph. These improvements make for a greater swagger and power, not always quite reached on the LPs. The sound stage and sonic effects fall a little short of the best recent recordings - the snare drum in La gazza ladra simply doesn't richocet off the walls as it can in live performances or contemporary SACD CDs. However, the musicianship remains very high, and if you originally owned and liked the first LP issues, these on CD will not be a disappointment.
A nine page essay in English by Philip Gosset discusses the overtures in fair historical detail - also in French and German translation.
A very good set, then, with the understanding that most people might be happy with a single CD of Rossini's overtures, such as Rossini: Overtures or in an expensive but stunning SACD reissue of the Cleveland Orchestra under Szell Rossini, Auber, Berlioz: Overtures [SACD]. For the adventuresome, this set should provide a wealth of interest and much pleasure.
Playing one of the CDs again I am even more impressed by the level of achievement. This is a terrific CD set!--Doug Haydn Listen to samples
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