Showing posts with label BBC NOW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC NOW. Show all posts

Friday, 11 August 2017

Four centuries of British music from Ryan Wigglesworth and the BBC NOW - Prom 32

© Benjamin Ealovega
BBC Prom 32

Toby Spence (tenor)

Ryan Wigglesworth (conductor)

Wednesday 9 August, 2017


Britten: Ballad of Heroes, Op. 14

Brian Elias: Cello Concerto

Purcell, arr. Elgar: 'Jehovah, quam multi sunt hostes mei'

Elgar: Variations on an Original Theme ('Enigma'), Op. 36

Britten:
'The largely unison text was delivered with powerful clarity by the BBC National Chorus of Wales'.

'Toby Spence delivered the final movement’s recitative with great presence, and impressive precision in Britten’s challenging, leaping lines'.

Elias: 
'Elschenbroich took the opportunity to allow the cello to sing'.

Elgar:
'Wigglesworth’s reading here lifted proceedings, and in particular, the pianissimo playing he demanded of the orchestra was most effective'.

Read my full review on Bachtrack here.

Tuesday, 16 August 2016

Webern, Brahms and a Watkins première from Søndergård and BBC NOW - Prom 37

© BBC/Mark Allan

BBC Prom 37


Paul Watkins (cello)
Thomas Søndergård (conductor)


12 August 2016






Walton: Partita

Huw Watkins: Cello Concerto

Webern: Passacaglia, Op. 1

Brahms: Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98

Watkins: 
'Moments of real beauty here, and this is definitely a work that would merit a second hearing in a more favourable acoustic'.

'It certainly exploited Paul Watkins’ consistently warm tone well, and this was an engaging performance of a promising addition to the concerto repertoire'.

Webern:
'A taught and arresting performance'.

Brahms:
'Fine playing from the BBCNOW, with sweet string tone and incisive woodwind playing throughout'.

'An unexpectedly controlled affair'...(with)...'little space for indulgence'.

Read my full review on Bachtrack here.

Paul Watkins

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

CD Reviews - January 2013


Dutch cellist Pieter Wispelwey has already recorded the Bach Cello Suites twice before - so why has he now, fourteen years on from the last outing, decided to record them again?  Well, he's reached his 50th birthday, but he's also spent considerable time with eminent Bach scholars Laurence Dreyfus and John Butt, and has explored the six suites in perhaps greater depth than ever before.  Bach notoriously left very little instruction for how the suites should be played, not just in terms of tempi or articulation, but even the kind of instrument on which to play them – in fact three different types of instrument are called for.  So for this recording, Wispelwey has recorded them playing on a standard Baroque cello for the first five, and a Violoncello piccolo (with an additional fifth high string) for the sixth, but he has also gone for a lower pitch than usual.  Modern concert pitch is normally 440Hz, and Baroque pitch is generally agreed to be a semitone lower, at around 415Hz.  But Wispelwey has gone for 392Hz – known as the Cöthen pitch - a whole tone lower than modern pitch.  This creates a remarkably different sound world, and rather than being muddy or heavier than one might expect, it actually sounds lighter, freer and even natural, yet without the saccharine sweetness that many modern instrument recordings produce.  There is also an earthy grittiness, produced by the gut strings under a lower tension than usual.  Right from the word go, with the familiar Prelude of the first suite, this sound captivated me, and made me listen afresh to these incredible masterpieces.  Wispelwey talks in the accompanying DVD documentary about the dance movements, and achieving the right tempi for these – some of his tempi are faster than we might be used to, and he makes these movements really sing with a delightful spring.  The rocking cross rhythms of the Prelude to the fourth suite are a highlight for me that I could listen to again and again.  Yet Wispelwey doesn’t see this as his definitive word on the works, and talks of the possibility of further recordings in the future – his passion for them, almost an obsession, is clearly not sated yet!


The great English conductor, Richard Hickox, died unexpectedly four years ago now, and the loss to English music is still keenly felt.  Chandos have been re-releasing a number of his recordings which amount to no less than a definitive catalogue of music by the great English composers.  I’ve been listening to two of these – a two disc set of works by Sir John Tavener (b.1944), and ‘The Collector’s Edition’ 6-disc box set of Orchestral Works by Frank Bridge (1879-1941).  The Tavener set includes three works.  The first, We Shall See Him as He Is, is an extensive piece for soloists (Patricia Rozario, John Mark Ainsley and Andrew Murgatroyd), choruses (here the BBC Welsh Chorus, The Britten Singers and Chester Festival Chorus) and an unusually scored orchestra (BBC Welsh Symphony Orchestra) with just brass, strings, organ and timpani (so no wind instruments).  This was composed in 1990, and stems from the period when Tavener was most devoutly immersed in the Greek Orthodox religion, and before he began to embrace other religions, and moved apart from his close relationship with his spiritual adviser Mother Thekla, who died in 2012.  As always with Tavener, he creates long periods of meditative calm, here interspersed with outbursts from the brass and timpani, which don’t entirely work for me.  I have sung in performances of his later work, The Veil of the Temple, and this was more successful at creating moments of high drama to contrast with the extended meditative passages.  Eis Thanaton is for two soloists and orchestra (the City of London Sinfonia), and was written shortly after the death of Tavener’s mother in 1985, to whom he was very close.  Again, the orchestration involves just brass, strings and timpani.  An incredibly haunting work, the soloists Patricia Rozario (a personal favourite of Tavener’s) and Stephen Richardson do a great job as Mother and Son.  The final work, Theophany, makes use of pre-recorded tape with orchestra (Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra), and again two soloists (Jeremy Birchall and Margaret Feaviour).  The tape uses multi-tracked bass chant and a Chinese wind-gong, creating an otherworldly effect. 

The Bridge set contains a total of 43 separate works, yet consistently draws on most of the same forces – the BBC National Chorus and Orchestra of Wales, with Sarah Connolly (mezzo), Philip Langridge (tenor), Roderick Williams (baritone), Howard Shelley (piano)  and Alban Gerhardt (cello).  Many of these works are barely known and rarely performed – only a few crop up more regularly on the concert platform, including the suite The Sea (composed by Brighton-born Bridge in Eastbourne, and a work which particularly impressed his pupil Britten), the cello concerto Oration, and Phantasm for piano and orchestra.  Yet there are many delights to be found in this collection – from the brief yet expressive Norse Legend to the ambitious early symphonic poem, Mid of the Night.  The songs for solo voice and orchestra, collected together on the last two discs, are beautifully performed by the three singers, and many of them are premiere recordings.  I particularly liked the impressionist Day after day, with highly sensitive singing from Connolly.

These two collections demonstrate how important Hickox was in bringing forgotten English repertoire to our attention, and reminds us what a loss he was to the music world.



Hot on the heels of the success of the first volume of their live recordings of Beethoven Piano Trios, the Gould Piano Trio are back with the second set.  Here we have two early works, the first of which is numbered ‘WoO 38’ – without opus – meaning that it was only published after his death, and this is followed by Op.1 No.3, composed just four years later in 1795.  Whilst they do not sound revolutionary to our ears, they were both more substantial endeavours than the domestic scale trios from other composers before, already giving notice of the expansive direction Beethoven would take from here on in.  Beethoven already uses the cello very differently in these works too, giving it a much more prominent role.  These two early works are joined on this disc by a later work from his middle period, Op.70 No.2.  Despite his deafness and uncertainty of income now dominating his existence, this work is still full of positivity, much more relaxed in feel to the first of the Op.70 set, the ‘Ghost’, which was on the Goulds’ first disc.  The recordings are again live, from one concert at St George’s, Bristol, and are full of spirit and energy.  The opening Allegro of Op.1 No.3 is especially full of drive, and the variations which follow this has a graceful and sensitive touch.  With I’m guessing another couple of discs to go, I’m very much looking forward to the next volume of what is proving to be an outstanding set.


(Edited versions of these reviews first appeared in GScene magazine, January 2013)


Wednesday, 21 November 2012

CD Reviews - November


Flautist Emily Beynon has joined forces with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, conducted by Bramwell Tovey, to record an interesting selection of British flute concertos.  The disc opens with Jonathan Dove’s (b.1959) The Magic Flute Dances, composed for Beynon.  Dove has taken motifs from Mozart’s opera and woven them into a pleasing set of dances, which go far beyond the obvious ‘flute’ connection, with some fascinating effects of orchestration.  William Alwyn’s (1905-1985) Concerto for Flute and Eight Wind Instruments, arranged by John McCabe (b.1939) for flute and orchestra comes next.  This is more immediately virtuosic for the soloist, perhaps understandable given that Alwyn was an orchestral flautist before turning to composition.  A slight ‘cheat’ next, with French composer Francis Poulenc’s (1899-1963) Flute Sonata, arranged for flute and orchestra by Sir Lennox Berkeley (1903-1989), whose own Flute Concerto closes the disc.  These are both great works that deserve greater exposure, and Beynon does them justice, with a bright and engaging sound throughout.

Various. British Flute Concertos. Emily Beynon, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Bramwell Tovey. 2012. Compact Disc. Chandos CHAN 10718.

The great violinist Ruggiero Ricci died in August, aged 94.  Born to Italian parents in California, he made his debut at Carnegie Hall aged 11.  Often referred to as the ‘Paganini of the 20th Century’, he was the first to record the complete Paganini Caprices in their original form.  This month I’ve been listening to a two CD set of Virtuoso Violin Concertos, with the Sibelius, Tchaikovsky and Khachaturian concertos, along with Sarasate’s Carmen Fantasy, Saint-Saëns’ Havanaise, and various other works.  The recordings date from 1959-1961, yet sound remarkably fresh.  There is a slight thinness to the sound, but my ears soon atuned to this – and the pay-off is hearing a romantic virtuoso at the height of his abilities.  Sadly, he carried on recording long after his technique had begun to wane.  But returning to these recordings, his true talent shines out.  His style, and the orchestral playing (from the LSO and LPO, under conductors including Sir Malcolm Sargent and Piero Gamba), are from a different age, but there can be no doubting he was truly a great violinist.  

Various. Virtuoso Violin Concertos. Ruggiero Ricci, London Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Øivin Fjeldstad, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Piero Gamba, Anatole Fistoulari. 2010. Compact Disc (2). Decca Eloquence DECCA 480 2083.

Every cellist must feel obliged to record the Elgar Cello Concerto at some point, yet it must be hard to know how to say something new, with such an iconic piece.  However, Paul Watkins has entered the fray, along with great Elgarian Sir Andrew Davis, and the BBC Philharmonic.  Having performed the work live on many occasions, he manages to make this recording feel fresh and immediate, and Davis and he produce touching sadness without ever wallowing.    The disc also contains the full set of ‘Pomp and Circumstance’ Marches, and Davis and the BBC Philharmonic avoid the overblown excesses of many ‘Last Night’ performances, yet bring out the inherent joy in these pieces.  The Elegy is also sensitively performed, emotion barely contained here.  The final piece here is the Introduction and Allegro for solo quartet and string orchestra, and this also receives an outstanding performance.  Overall, a strong offering, with perfect recording sound throughout. 
Armenian pianist Nareh Argamanyan has relased a CD of Rachmaninov, with the Morceaux de Fantasie, the Etudes Tableaux, and the Corelli Variations.  These are well-known show pieces, yet Rachmaninov also demands a great understanding of emotion and lyricism, if they are not to become overblown and sentimental.  Argamanyan is clearly committed to communicating this emotion, as is evident in the interview with her on the bonus DVD (which also contains performances of part of the Corelli Variations, and the great C sharp minor Prelude).  Yet on the whole, she manages to not allow this expression of emotion to become over-indulgent.  These are all fiendishly difficult pieces, yet with playing as confident as this, you are not made overly aware of this.  A whole disc of Rachmaninov can make you feel a bit bloated, but Argamanyan maintains enough interest and lightness of touch to avoid this – in fact, the final (and longest) work on this disc, the Corelli Variations, held my interest the most. 
 
Rachmaninov, Sergei. Morceaux de Fantasie, etc. Nareh Argamanyan. 2012. Hybrid Super Audio Compact Disc and Digital Versatile Disc. Pentatone PTC 5186 399.


(These reviews first appeared in GScene magazine)