What could be more alluring than the stark dynamism of Bartók’s
                piano playing, the warm timbral shading of Benny Goodman’s
                clarinet and the astringent aristocracy of Josef Szigeti’s
                violin? Of course it means the composer’s 
Contrasts in
                this famed old 1940 recording, restored once more under the 
Bartók
                plays Bartók rubric of the Naxos Historical series.
                If anything is self-evidently definitive in the context of the
                composer’s own contribution then this is surely it, and
                the fact that all three of the works here comprise Bartók’s
                complete commercial American discography adds a further gloss
                on the matter. 
                
                
Contrasts  was commissioned by Goodman. We can admire
                his puckish curlicues at the end of the 
Verbunkos recruiting
                dance and reflect on the fact that he would have sounded rather
                different had he studied earlier with Reginald Kell; not better,
                necessarily, but different. Szigeti’s provocative abrasions
                act as fruitful soil-drenched Hungarian astringencies. The nocturnal
                fireflies of the central movement are faithfully captured. No
                less so is the pungent chordal support supplied by the composer
                in the 
Sebes, that fast dance finale, in which Szigeti’s
                intense flourishes elaborate on the opening Saint-Saëns-derived 
Danse
                Macabre figures. It ends a must-have collaboration. 
                
                The Rhapsody was written in 1928 and was a suitable vehicle for
                Szigeti’s biting and wholly magnificent fiddling. He was
                not yet afflicted with the tremulous bow arm and inevitable co-ordination
                problems that were to appear later in the 1940s. Here his terse
                tonal reserves are entirely appropriate. That said, his playing
                is even more energised and committed in the live Library of Congress
                recital that he gave with the composer and which has been preserved;
                the studio recording sounds that much less uninhibited, so to
                sample the really real deal you should consult transfers such
                as those on Vanguard 
OVC8008 or
                Hungaroton HCD 
12330.
                The final item is a selection from 
Mikrokosmos played
                by the composer over four days in April and May 1940. He plays
                32 pieces in all, and they were grouped by matrix into threes
                - mainly. He recorded two sets of four, one of two and No.144,
                the ‘Minor Seconds, Major Sevenths’ was housed on
                a separate matrix of its own given that it lasts over four minutes.
                These are wonderful artefacts, compressed gems of pianism and
                touch. No.120 the ‘Fifth Chords’ is especially volatile
                and vibrant; No.151, the ‘Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm’ comes
                close to a 52
nd Street dive, and the most elusive
                is that long 144. 
                
                The transfers are first class. For my own tastes in the Rhapsody,
                I’m not wholly averse to Lewis C Wiener’s brighter,
                more open sound on Biddulph LAB070-71. But this all-round conspectus
                stands at a tangent because it’s predicated on the totality
                of Bartók’s New York recordings. 
                
                
Jonathan Woolf
                
                see also review by Dominy Clements