Ysaÿe’s works for 
                  violin and orchestra are far less frequently encountered than 
                  his solo sonatas. There was always something of a vogue in Russia 
                  for some of the bigger works. Oistrakh was a proponent of the 
                  Poème élégiaque, recording it. More recently Raskin has 
                  committed a couple to disc. But in the main these are under-recorded 
                  works of lush, Chausson-esque evocation.
                One can see what 
                  Oistrakh saw in the Poème élégiaque. Along with its hothouse 
                  Franckian inheritance there’s Chausson’s stamp but also a Tchaikovskian 
                  shape to the solo line that reminds one of the Russian’s own 
                  Violin Concerto. The languorous heat haze that sometimes falls 
                  over the music is almost tropical - the rich orchestration is 
                  by Jacques Ysaÿe. Chant d’hiver offers another cushioned 
                  ride, though one obviously less verdant. Good player though 
                  he is – lower string work really speaks - Albrecht Laurent Breuninger 
                  takes a decidedly more leisurely approach than Aaron Rosand 
                  did in his traversal with the Luxembourg Radio Orchestra and 
                  Louis de Froment in their Vox Box. Rosand deploys timbral variety 
                  and a bewitching colouration to make this piece really live 
                  and at a considerably faster tempo. The newcomer’s more leisurely 
                  charms aren’t obliterated but are very different.
                The Berceuse 
                  is a more concise and delightfully lyrical morceau but of a 
                  bigger stamp is Les neiges d’antan. This has its whimsical 
                  side, attractively brought out here, and certainly not over-done. 
                  Breuninger dares a sleek period portamento or two and he proves 
                  deft in his harmonics, even the cruelly stratospheric ones with 
                  which the piece ends. 
                The Violin Concerto 
                  might raise hopes as to an undiscovered masterpiece but it’s 
                  actually a surviving work – among many concertos – from his 
                  relative youth and boyhood. It’s couched in concerto grosso 
                  form, in three movements, and is for strings alone. The 
                  recording team has calculated this rather well with the solo 
                  violin well integrated into the body of strings without losing 
                  its relative prominence in the fabric. The ethos here is backward-looking 
                  but enjoyable because there are those typically languorous moments 
                  that mark out his orchestral writing. The fugato sounds rather 
                  academic but the slow movement is intense if short. The finale 
                  has its vaporous moments but also some Chausson inspirations 
                  as well.
                The Op.24 Divertimento 
                  is aptly described in the notes as an example of Art Nouveau 
                  in music. Well, Brussels is famous for its Art Nouveau, and 
                  Ysaÿe was a Belgian, so ... well let’s not follow it too far 
                  as Liège was his stomping ground. There are some insider’s 
                  bowing demands here and some terrific colouristic opportunities. 
                  It’s an unusual work, quite intense, with a lot of decorative 
                  embellishment of the theme.
                This disc has the 
                  field largely to itself at the moment. Performances are warm 
                  and lyric, though occasionally rather laid-back. With very decent 
                  notes and a suitably enveloping acoustic this is a intriguing 
                  sidelight on Ysaÿe’s more prominent and bracingly up-to-date 
                  solo sonatas. 
                Jonathan Woolf
                
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