RECORDING OF THE MONTH


RECORDING OF THE MONTH

BARGAIN OF THE MONTH

VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
A London Symphony
Oboe Concerto
£11 post free World-wide



RACHMANINOV Elegy, Preludes, Piano concerto 3
£12 post free World-wide

CHAUSSON, DEBUSSY
RACHMANINOV
TRios
2CDs £16 post free World-wide

Search
What's New
Classical CD Reviews
Live Reviews
Jazz CD Reviews
Composers
Resources
Contact Us

Every Day we post 10 new Classical CD and DVD reviews. A free weekly summary is available by e-mail. MusicWeb is not a subscription site and it is our advertisers that pay for it. Please visit their sites regularly to see if anything might interest you. Purchasing from them keeps MusicWeb free.
  Classical Editor: Rob Barnett  
Founder Len Mullenger   
 


 

BUY NOW 

AmazonUK   AmazonUS

Hans Werner HENZE (b.1926)
Violin Concerto No.1 (1946) [26:57]
Violin Concerto No.3 (1997) [33:24]
Fünf Nachtstücke (1990) [9:09]
Peter Sheppard Skærved (violin)
Aaron Shorr (piano - Nachtstücke)
Saarbrücken Radio Symphony Orchestra/Christopher Lyndon-Gee
rec. 16-17 September 2004 (Concerto No.1), 14-15 September (Concerto No.3), Große Sendesaal, Saarbrücken, Germany. Fünf Nachtstücke rec. 12 December 2004, Potton Hall, Suffolk.
NAXOS 8.557738 [69:30]
 


Henze has written three violin concertos, separated by a period of fifty years. In this, the year of his eightieth birthday, Naxos present the First and Third and add the Five Night Pieces, written for the violin soloist here, Peter Sheppard Skærved. This has the advantage of avoiding a direct comparison with Dabringhaus und Grimm’s full price release of all three concertos on MDG 601 1242-2 which does spill over onto two CDs lasting eighty-six minutes in total.
 
The First Concerto dates from 1946. It shares little commonality with the concerto of Henze’s older German contemporary Wolfgang Fortner, which was written the following year. Maybe there’s a shared Bergian inheritance but Fortner’s neo-classicism finds no reflection in the twenty-one year old Henze’s plan. This is an admixture of Berg and Hindemith with perhaps some trace of Bartók as well. The ruminative and the abrasive are not always well digested and there are some moments of youthful posture and some note spinning. It’s a much better work when Henze evocatively presents orchestral string cushions and in the dialogues between the soloist and the orchestral sections. The highly rhythmic finale with the soloist’s pizzicati and double stopping are all highly effective but in this performance things seem to hang fire too often. There’s a distinct lack of internal dynamism, maybe a desire to inflate the concerto beyond its natural constraints as well. Even in the ghostly waltz sections things tend to misfire. Certainly if one listens to the MDG soloist Torsten Janicke, abetted by the alert Magdeburg Philharmonic under Christian Ehwald, we hear a more lithe and incisive performance. And unless my memory is failing me the Henze directed 1968 recording with Wolfgang Schneiderhan (in the multi-volume Henze Collection boxed set DG 4498602) was also that much more directional and structurally sound.
 
The Third Concerto draws on Mann’s Doktor Faustus for its literary-narrative inspiration. A three movement work, unlike the four movement First, it was written in 1997 but underwent revisions in 2002.  This performance is again considerably slower than the rival MDG. There are hints of Bach and Berg in the opening suffused with those abrupt conjunctions of exceptional lyricism and brusque outburst that are so much a part of Henze’s lexicon. The hallucinatory incidents in the Esmeralda movement – ghostly castanets – are vividly realised. And the Bergian lament in the central movement conjoins with a powerful martial episode of implacable drama. Such things as the open fifths of the finale do point inevitably to the Berg Concerto though I find that the violin’s parade of soloistic tricks, not least in the cadenzas, is a rather knowing appropriation of the language of the romantic concerto. A tighter rein on proceedings might have helped dissipate or at least modify this point of view. At too many points I felt the performance lacked focus.
 
The Five Night Pieces are compressed but evocative sound pictures, freely lyrical in part and aggressive in others. The dedicatee is on hand to play them with surety and control.
 
The playing indeed is unfailingly eloquent and the orchestra under Lyndon-Gee plays with considerable power and command. No problems with the well balanced recording either. My preference however very much remains the MDG, albeit at full price.
 
Jonathan Woolf

see also review by Dominy Clements 

BUY NOW 

AmazonUK   AmazonUS

 

Advertising Rates
Visitor stats
MusicWeb International
has over 40,000 Classical CD reviews on offer

Discs received

Having a problem Donating?



Gerard Hoffnung Concerts &
The Bricklayer Story

MusicWeb can now offer you discs from the following catalogues:
Prices include postage

There will be NO VAT Rises

[Acte Préalable £13.50]
[Arcodiva £12.00]
[Avie from £6.25]
[British Music Society £12.00]
[CDACCORD from £13.50 ]
[ClassicO £12.50]
[Hallé from £11]
[Heritage £10]
[Hortus £14.99 ]

[Lyrita ONLY £11.75 ]
[Nimbus Special prices]
[Northern Flowers £13.50]

[REDCLIFFE £11 ]
[Sheva £11]
[Tactus £11.50 ]
[Talent from £12.00 ]
[Toccata Classics £10.50 ]

Musicweb
Special Offers

Monthly Best Buys

 

Naxos Classical


New Releases

Hyperion


New Releases


 





MusicWeb sells the Polish
catalogue CDAccord
£10.50 post free W-W


MusicWeb sells the
Arcodiva catalogue
£12.00 post free W-W


£11.75
post-free
world- wide

 

 

Google Ads - for information about privacy matters, click here
Amazon Musicweb International is a participant in the Amazon EU Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com


Return to Index

Untitled Document


Reviews from previous months
Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the discs reviewed. details
We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin Board
Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to which you refer.