The Tchaikovsky Concerto 
                has previously been available on a Concert 
                Artist disc coupled with Saint-Saëns 
                Fourth Concerto. Interested readers 
                should look at my review of that disc 
                for comments on the former - http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/May03/TCHAIKOVSKY_hatto.htm 
              
 
              
Here it’s fashioned 
                in the context of an all-Russian disc 
                and takes as a discmate another bedrock 
                concerto, Prokofiev’s much played Third. 
                Much played, yes, but not so often played 
                as it is here. Superficially this is 
                a relatively slow interpretation – and 
                Hatto is certainly not known as a slowcoach 
                in this area of her repertoire. Take 
                a look at the insert timings and you 
                can see that she is nearly two minutes 
                slower in the Adagio than Kissin and 
                a minute and a half slower than Katchen. 
                She is a minute slower than Argerich 
                (though Argerich has been slowing up 
                in this concerto over the years – 9.01 
                with Abbado and 9.39 with Dutoit) and 
                roughly the same amount vis-a-vis Demidenko 
                and Katchen. This is not to mention 
                Prokofiev’s own celebrated, blazing 
                sword recording with the LSO (on Naxos). 
              
 
              
How best, in spite 
                of crude matters of timings, to characterise 
                Hatto and Köhler’s interpretation? 
                Well in his own recording the composer 
                was nervous, electric, quick, cultivating 
                huge contrasts and laconic profiles, 
                grotesque and urbanely thrown away in 
                equal measure. Hatto and Köhler 
                are very different: slower, yes, but 
                also subtle in their interplay and crafting. 
                This is especially so in the Theme 
                and Variations second movement where 
                we find something remarkably Gallic 
                about the pianism, about the orchestration, 
                about it all. I confess I was taken 
                aback by the Ravelian inheritance that 
                becomes exposed here. I’d never considered 
                the Concerto in that light before, blinded 
                as I generally have been by the infectious 
                virtuosic swagger and unremitting energy 
                of it all. Here, suddenly, I see the 
                it in a different light. Whether others 
                will share this more subdued, multi-hued 
                Gallic vision, an interpretation which 
                is not anti-virtuosic but which promotes 
                tints and colours above mere rhetoric, 
                will remain to be seen. In its determined 
                way however it has subtly shifted my 
                perception of the way the piece can 
                sound. 
              
 
              
As a bonus – infelicitous 
                word for these two notoriously devilish 
                pieces – we have Prokofiev’s Toccata, 
                lighter and more full of shade than 
                usual, though not stinting on the leonine 
                drama. And there’s Islamey, a remorseless 
                trial of technique, which sounds evocative 
                and sensitively shaped. It is rather 
                more musically involving than usual 
                in this performance – it seems here 
                co-opted firmly to the more sensitive 
                wing of Lisztian inspiration. 
              
 
              
These are perceptive 
                and thought-provoking performances. 
                They avoid all hints of routine and 
                casual run-through parochialism. Instead 
                these readings are welded to recreative 
                imagination and technical surety. I’m 
                sure the Prokofiev Concerto, in particular, 
                will be the cause of some challenging, 
                fruitful debate. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                
              
see also review 
                by Christopher Howell 
              
The Tchaikovsky 
                is also available coupled to Saint-Saens 
                Piano concerto No 4. See reviews by 
                Jonathan 
                Woolf and William 
                Hedley 
              
MusicWeb 
                can offer the entire Concert 
                Artists catalogue