Here is a meeting of two unlikely minds: Niccolò Paganini, 
                  the ultimate showman, the first rock star, the man who brought 
                  virtuoso solo playing to new, undreamed-of heights, and Fritz 
                  Kreisler, the suave gentleman with a genius for salon music 
                  and miniatures. And yet Kreisler arranged a series of Paganini’s 
                  works for violin and piano, both works which were originally 
                  for orchestra (like ‘La Campanella’ or ‘Le 
                  streghe’) and works which were originally for violin alone 
                  (like the selected caprices). This is a recital consisting entirely 
                  of such arrangements, and Paganini fans will want to have it, 
                  but its appeal will also extend to violin aficionados generally. 
                  
                    
                  Alongside Hyperion’s “Romantic Concerto” series, 
                  the less evocatively named Naxos series “Nineteenth Century 
                  Violin Music” is one of the greatest gifts to violin enthusiasts 
                  in many a year. Announced in 2007, the series aims to include 
                  major (and, frankly, minor) works by the likes of Charles-August 
                  de Bériot, Pierre Baillot, Rodolphe Kreutzer, Jenő 
                  Hubay, Antonio Bazzini, Jan Kalliwoda, and Ferdinand David, 
                  as well as the complete works of Henri Vieuxtemps and Pablo 
                  de Sarasate. Grammy-nominated violinist Philippe Quint has been 
                  an enthusiastic member of the project, having previously recorded 
                  a slate of Beriot concertos. Now, with the Paganini/Kreisler 
                  transcriptions, he reaches an intriguing medium between the 
                  famous and the obscure. This is familiar music in an unfamiliar 
                  frame. 
                    
                  Some works are more popular than others: ‘La Campanella’ 
                  and the twenty-fourth caprice are justly legendary, while the 
                  somewhat long-winded variations on Rossini tunes have been consigned 
                  to the footnotes of music history. Philippe Quint tackles them 
                  all with freshness, dazzling technique, and a tone which is 
                  a little brighter and thinner than I like. He cannot make satisfying 
                  the structures of the variations (which were, frankly, built 
                  to show off Paganini’s skills to best advantage), but 
                  he can dispatch their double stops, multiple extended harmonic 
                  passages, and occasional expressive demands seemingly without 
                  any difficulty. As I write this, I am listening to the Moto 
                  perpetuo and wondering not just how anyone can play this 
                  music, but how anyone can make it sound so easy. 
                    
                  The twenty-fourth caprice is one of the most interesting tracks: 
                  Kreisler could not help but write some variations of his own! 
                  The booklet helpfully explains which of Paganini’s variations 
                  have been replaced by Kreisler’s new inventions, which 
                  are all worthy of joining the originals - and some of them are 
                  tougher to play: try 0:53!. Pianist Dmitry Cogan even gets his 
                  own mini-variation (2:18), a welcome moment at the surface after 
                  spending most of the disc submerged beneath a sea of virtuosic 
                  violin writing. Is it just me, or do the capacious chords of 
                  that little piano solo invoke another composer associated with 
                  this tune: Rachmaninoff? 
                    
                  The Caprice No 20 in D begins as a surprisingly lyrical, lovely 
                  invention thanks to Kreisler’s (and Cogan’s) singing 
                  piano accompaniment, and Quint squeezes every bit of romance 
                  out of the main theme. The central section is still a ferocious 
                  technical challenge for the violin. Le Streghe (“Witches”) 
                  doesn’t sound very devilish until its conclusion, but 
                  it is witty and gives Quint plenty of chances to show off. The 
                  ‘I Palpiti’ variations close the recital, beginning 
                  with another chance for Cogan to reveal his sensitive playing 
                  style, before Quint delivers the gorgeous main tune and shrugs 
                  off several minutes of adventures in the violin’s highest 
                  register. 
                    
                  The sound is good, but I have heard some of Philippe Quint’s 
                  other discs on which his violin playing is presented in a more 
                  flattering light. Here the tone is a bit too bright, too thin, 
                  although it got better when I cranked up the volume. There is 
                  one poorly-done edit, at 7:58 on ‘Le Streghe.’ One 
                  more production note: this is one of the first Naxos discs to 
                  not have any white space on the cover. The trend began a few 
                  months ago, with (I think) the Alfredo Casella series, and seems 
                  to be expanding as it goes along. Maybe in a few years’ 
                  time the old white covers with little paintings and Times font 
                  will be gone. That really would leave me irrationally nostalgic. 
                  
                    
                  But back to the disc at hand: if you are not very passionate 
                  about Paganini, or the violin in general, I do have to warn 
                  that much of this music originally consisted of brazen showing-off 
                  and Kreisler did not get in the way of that goal. For the mere 
                  casual fan of virtuosic violin pieces, the recital can be hard 
                  to enjoy in one sitting. 
                    
                  On the other hand, if you love the music of Paganini, or if 
                  you are collecting the Nineteenth Century Violin series, you 
                  will definitely want to hear this recital. The best all-around 
                  recital of Paganini music arranged for violin and piano probably 
                  remains Pavel šporcl’s on Supraphon with pianist 
                  Petr Jirikovsky. It features arrangements by a number of tinkerers 
                  and has fuller sound. šporcl has a more genial tone but, 
                  especially as šporcl does not play ‘La campanella’ 
                  or the twenty-fourth caprice, there is room for the two albums 
                  on one shelf. Violin aficionados are strongly advised to follow 
                  that course and listen to both. 
                    
                  Brian Reinhart