Once again we have a Nadien disc from Cembal d’amour, 
                  a label that acts as Boswell to the violinist’s Dr Johnson. 
                  A number of important inscriptions have emanated from this source, 
                  both studio and, more often, live. I think I must have reviewed 
                  them all. Nadien always has something to say, and whilst his 
                  ethos may be frankly derived from Heifetz, his individuality 
                  is such that he stands as a soloist with his own highly developed 
                  arsenal of expressive tools at his disposal. 
                    
                  It’s most instructive to hear him in Franck’s sonata, 
                  with pianist David Hancock in New York in 1968. They take the 
                  first movement deftly, not lingering overmuch, and allowing 
                  maximal contrast to fall between the movements and not, as can 
                  often happen, for ennui to set in through undifferentiation 
                  of mood, texture or tempo. This is a well characterised performance, 
                  powerfully projected and the finale is a good example of purposeful 
                  ensemble playing. We hear Nadien’s characteristically 
                  tight vibrato, of course, and at one or two points moments where 
                  his phrasing sounds just a touch calculated - but this is refined 
                  and elegant playing indeed. 
                    
                  His Debussy sonata performance - from the same concert? - is 
                  a direct one. The ethos is not especially Gallic - not in the 
                  way Thibaud, or Dubois or Francescatti were in their own ways, 
                  recognisably Gallic, or Franco-Belgian - but it retains independence 
                  on its own terms. One either accepts the oscillatory and fervid 
                  vibrato usage, or one doesn’t. I happen to find the playing 
                  here rather too suave, but that’s a phrasal (and personal) 
                  matter - but certainly the end could be more decisively stated. 
                  
                    
                  The Fauré Berceuse is played quite quickly, but such 
                  is Nadien’s control of rubato that by the end one may 
                  not think so at all. It was certainly habitual with him to play 
                  it briskly, as he did so in his commercial recording of it. 
                  It’s a question more of accenting, than tempo as such. 
                  He also plays Heifetz’s transcription of Rachmaninoff’s 
                  Daisies and though the sound here - from Mohawk Trails in 1970 
                  - is rather less good than the companion pieces, the playing 
                  is first class; note that the pianist here is Abba Bogin. Finally 
                  we have a high octane two fiddle summit meeting of Nadien and 
                  Ruggiero Ricci in the Prokofiev Sonata for two violins. The 
                  contrast between the resinous Ricci tone and the faster vibrato 
                  of Nadien proves highly diverting, the two coiling and twisting 
                  around each other in a fulsome dance. 
                  I’m sure Nadien adherents will want to get to know these 
                  inscriptions. 
                    
                  Jonathan Woolf