We press forward in the Naxos Casella series with considerable 
                  confidence (see reviews of Symphony 
                  1 and Symphony 
                  2). This release conjoins three works, one of which is very 
                  popular, another which you will probably not have heard, and 
                  yet another which is making its first appearance on disc. 
                    
                  Given that premieres are always enticing, let’s start 
                  with Notte di Maggio (A Night in May), Casella’s 1913 
                  work for voice and orchestra. Despite admitting that it was 
                  strongly influenced by The Rite of Spring, a contemporary 
                  listener would probably have pointed, rather, to Debussy. Impressionism 
                  is indeed the main ethos, though there are some Stravinskian 
                  elements later, where the level of percussive and lower string 
                  writing does attest to the fact that Casella was at the notorious 
                  premiere of The Rite, and indeed had dragged along his 
                  old pal, Malipiero. Casella gleefully informed people that he’d 
                  included a twelve-note chord, but of more immediate interest, 
                  beyond musicological novelty, is just how intense and effective 
                  the work is. The orchestration is subtle, not garish, and the 
                  vitality is kept up for the quarter of an hour. Mezzo Olivia 
                  Andreini is a vibrant contributor with an almost stentorian 
                  chest register, though she’s not always on the note. This 
                  early work should win some friends for Casella. 
                    
                  The Cello Concerto followed over twenty years later. Casella 
                  came from a cellistic background, and his pedigree is enhanced 
                  when one knows that his grandfather, a cellist, had been a friend 
                  of Paganini, and that his father, Carlo, was the dedicatee of 
                  a concerto by Alfredo Piatti, one of the great players of the 
                  day. Thus armed, Casella pitches the intrepid soloist head first 
                  into the concerto - no lingering about - in an intrepid and 
                  urgent first movement. The orchestration is not especially reticent 
                  - brass, basses to the fore - but it doesn’t cover the 
                  soloist, because Casella varies it cannily, often asking the 
                  soloist to play in the lower register in the opening movement. 
                  There are lyric moments too in this opening but nothing quite 
                  prepares one for the delicate way Casella leads into the linked 
                  slow movement, where finally Casella allows the cello to soar, 
                  and find another voice. This is a truly lovely passage, where 
                  the rich string accompaniment, the calming brass, and the solo 
                  bronze of the fine protagonist, Andrea Noferini, conjures quite 
                  a spell. To finish, Casella unleashes what he called his ‘updated 
                  bumblebee’ for a wholly unserious, very enjoyable finale. 
                  
                    
                  And when a performance of Scarlattiana is as persuasive 
                  as this one, where pianist Sun Hee You plays so dextrously, 
                  and where - in particular - the basses and winds are so affectionate 
                  in their contributions, then this is a performance to hear with 
                  the greatest of pleasure. 
                    
                  Presiding over these forces is Francesco La Vecchia and once 
                  again he and his forces prove to have Casella in their bloodstream. 
                  I warmed to their way with the First Symphony and I warm to 
                  this disc just as much, finely recorded and annotated as it 
                  is. 
                    
                  Jonathan Woolf