This recording is the Decca debut album from American cellist Alisa Weilerstein.
Some recording it is too, containing a highly desirable performance of Sir
Edward Elgar’s much loved Cello Concerto. Weilerstein recorded
these three scores at a series of live concerts in 2012. From Rochester,
New York State, Weilerstein, born in 1982, made her professional debut aged
13 playing Tchaikovsky’s Rococo Variations with the Cleveland Orchestra.
Weilerstein has been the recipient of several prestigious awards, namely
an Avery Fisher Career Grant (2000) and more recently a MacArthur Foundation
Fellow (2011). The fact that Weilerstein has played with many of the world’s
elite orchestras so early in her career is testimony to her extraordinary
talent.
Undoubtedly the principal work here is Elgar’s Cello Concerto a
universally admired work that provides numerous challenges to the performer.
Written in 1919 this intensely moving score was penned by an Elgar emotionally
scarred by the horrors of the Great War. An example of how tastes change
was highlighted by music writers in the 1950s holding the view that the
Elgar Cello Concerto didn’t have the same public affection as his
Violin Concerto; this is certainly not the case today. Probably
the principal reason for this escalation in popularity is the legacy of
the magnificent and iconic recording by the late Jacqueline du Pré. Du Pré
was just twenty when she took her 1712 Davidov Stradivarius cello to the
Kingsway Hall, London in 1965 to make that recording with the LSO under
Sir John Barbirolli. With the spectre of du Pré’s recording in the background,
it was courageous of Weilerstein to embark on this project. She first collaborated
with Daniel Barenboim in 2010 with the Berlin Philharmonic at the orchestra’s
annual Europa-Konzert in the Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford. As the former husband
of Jacqueline du Pré, Barenboim had conducted a live recording of the work
with his wife in 1970 with the Philadelphia Orchestra. Armed with his deep
knowledge of the score Barenboim assisted Weilerstein in preparing this
performance. From the age of seven she had played and later studied all
of du Pré’s recordings of the Elgar Cello Concerto. It comes as
no surprise that this intensely emotional live account conveys a similar
depth of searching expression. Right from the opening bars of the first
movement, Weilerstein’s boldly passionate approach feels as if she is living
the music rather than just playing it. In the short Lento - Allegro
molto I was struck by the scurrying figures that contrast so starkly
with the overall air of nobility. The poignantly lyrical Adagio
is performed with a deep heart-rending pathos that feels entirely convincing.
With playing that combines exuberance and nobility, the Finale
grips the listener from start to highly satisfying finish. Barenboim’s Berlin
players provide a rich and shadowy backdrop.
Prior to the recording of Elliot Carter’s Cello Concerto Weilerstein
had met the American composer then aged 103 to discuss and try out aspects
of the seven section score. The contrasting textures of Carter’s frequently
stark and jagged sound-world are interpreted with ample vigour and solid
commitment.
Max Bruch although a German Protestant based his Kol Nidrei (1880)
an Adagio for cello and orchestra on a solemn Jewish melody chanted
during the service of Atonement on the eve of Yom Kippur. Weilerstein, taken
things at a measured pace, brings out the work’s hauntingly evocative and
somewhat shadowy mood.
The soloist’s English-made William Forster cello (1790) emits a splendidly
rich, burnished timbre that feels eminently suited to the Elgar. The music
has been fairly closely recorded with a highly agreeable cool and clear
sound. I realise that the Elgar and Bruch coupled with the often rugged
modernism of Elliot Carter may prove off-putting for some. I rather like
a combination of the popular and accessible with the more challenging and
neglected but the Carter did feel rather incongruous in this company. Nevertheless
this is well worth obtaining for the Elgar Cello Concerto alone.
Weilerstein is a sensational cellist of high emotional temperament and her
live Elgar is quite stunningly played. As I expected from such an excellent
orchestra, the support from the Staatskapelle Berlin and Barenboim is beyond
reproach.
Michael Cookson
I rather like a combination of the popular and accessible with the more
challenging and neglected but this is well worth obtaining for the Elgar
alone.
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