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CONCERTO REVIEWS

Here are a couple of reviews I wrote a few months ago for Fanfare, covering very recommendable recordings of concertos by Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky and Glazunov ...

GLAZUNOV Violin Concerto TCHAIKOVSKY Souvenir d’un lieu cher; Violin Concerto * Vadim Gluzman (vn); Andrew Litton, cond; Bergen PO * BIS SACD 1432 (hybrid multichannel SACD: 70:58)

There have been many, many fine recorded performances of Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto, more than a couple of Glazunov’s, and no doubt many more will arrive in the next few years. Do we need Vadim Gluzman’s new traversal of these scores? Yes, indeed. While it’s impossible to classify this or any other version of the Tchaikovsky as the absolute best, Gluzman’s certainly stands among the finest.

First, there’s Gluzman’s tremendous virtuosity—not the showy sort, but the kind that makes the pyrotechnics sound absolutely natural and musical. Just consider those double stops in the last movement of the Tchaikovsky, or nearly any bar in the tricky Glazunov, all featuring faultless intonation. The playing is both impeccable and elastic; you never have the sense that Gluzman is tightening up at the hard parts.

Then, there’s Gluzman’s lyric ardor. These aren’t the hottest performances available, but they do sing warmly, without making the music turn to goo. One can find greater nobility or poise in some other performances of the Tchaikovsky slow movement, and more throaty darkness in the low notes of some other Russian soloists. But that’s why we collect multiple renditions.

There are some interesting connections here. Gluzman separates the two concertos with Glazunov’s orchestration of Tchaikovsky’s three-movement Souvenir d’un lieu cher; he also performs on a 1690 Strad that once belonged to Leopold Auer, the (reluctant) dedicatee of the Tchaikovsky concerto and the man who premiered the Glazunov. Surely none of this affects Gluzman’s performance, but it does bring a special sense of heritage to the project.

Andrew Litton leads the Bergen Philharmonic in perky, alert accompaniments, soaking in a warm ambient bath. The orchestra lacks the presence it enjoys in its Grieg series for BIS—the most beautiful orchestral sonics I’ve ever heard—but it puts across what’s necessary here.

There are already other choices for this music on SACD, notably the slightly sweeter-toned Julia Fischer on PentaTone (with the Tchaikovsky works on one disc, the Glazunov on another). If you already have Fischer’s recordings, it’s less imperative to obtain Gluzman’s, but either artist’s discs would be a superb addition to either a basic or a comprehensive collection. James Reel

MENDELSSOHN Violin Concertos: in e (original version); in d. Concerto in d for Violin, Piano, and Strings. Capriccio Brillant. Rondo Brillant. Serenade and Allegro Giocoso. Piano Concertos: in a; No. 1 in g; No. 2 in d. Concertos for Two Pianos: in E; in A-flat * Isabelle van Keulin (vn); Ronald Brautigam, Roland Pöntinen, Love Derwinger (pn); Lev Markiz (cond); Amsterdam Sinfonietta * BIS SACD 1766 (two-channel SACD: 255:55)

Here’s the third incarnation of a series recorded in the mid 1990s. First, it came out on four separate CDs, then in a four-for-the-price-of-three box, and now on a single SACD. This is not a surround-sound version, but BIS takes advantage of the SACD’s great storage capacity to place four and a quarter hours of music onto a single platter. Note that although it’s a conventional two-channel production, this disc is compatible only with SACD players.

If you invest in this very satisfactory set, you’ll still need someone else’s recording(s) of the standard version of Mendelssohn’s popular E-minor Violin Concerto. What we have here is the original, pre-Ferdinand David version. Aside from a bit of inferior passagework, this is not a weak work that was vastly improved by David’s expert advice; this initial version is merely different, not worse. It’s less of a violin showpiece; David advocated moving passages up an octave, adding lots of extra double stops, expanding the first-movement cadenza, and so on, to produce a more brilliant effect. In the original version, Mendelssohn tends to employ sighing or dying phrases where later he would heighten the drama with rising sequences. The version we know is largely heroic assertion, whereas the early version is more of a Romantic struggle whose outcome is never assured, even if the stakes don’t seem as high as in, for example, the Sibelius concerto.

Three of the other concertante works are products of Mendelssohn’s teen years: the D-minor Violin Concerto, the A-minor Piano Concerto, the Violin-Piano Concerto, and the Two-Piano Concertos date from 1822-24, and inhabit the sound world of Mendelssohn’s early string symphonies (except for the two-piano works, the soloists are accompanied by string orchestra), although the Violin-Piano Concerto often comes off more as a chamber duo with string-orchestra commentary. The remaining works for single piano and orchestra are more mature products of the 1830s.

The soloists tend to play with the requisite nimbleness and spirit, although the two-piano works would benefit from greater verve, not just the precision offered here. Pianist Ronald Brautigam’s contributions are especially sparkling and impetuous, and Lev Markiz leads the Amsterdam Sinfonietta in fully complementary accompaniments (although the Piano Concerto No. 1 could use a slightly larger orchestra to convey the music’s storm and stress more fully).

These performances don’t necessarily outclass certain old favorites—Rudolf Serkin and Murray Perahia in the numbered single-piano concertos, Argerich and Kremer in the piano-violin work—but they serve the scores well, and present attractive music in a space- and money-saving little package. James Reel

Classical Music,

PRIMARY RESULTS

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LOOKING THE PART

Terry Teachout has posted an old thought piece expressing ambivalence over whether or not opera singers should be attractive. This is an old subject I wrote extensively about in the Star more than 10 years ago, and I won’t repeat my whole argument here, but it boils down to this: Those who claim that what’s most important in opera is the music are simply wrong. Opera by design is dramatic stage work, and all elements of the staging, including direction and casting, are every bit as important as the musical element. Singers who don’t look the part don’t belong there. Let them stick to recitals and oratorios and audio recordings. In straight theater, nobody would accept a 300-pound lump in the role of a waif, and it shouldn’t be acceptable in opera, either. (There are good parts available to 300-pound singers, but Cio-Cio San ain’t one of them.) I simply cannot comprehend how there can be any argument about this.

Classical Music,

I WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD

A nasty cold kept me off the air and out of the blogosphere for most of last week, and even caused me to hand my weekend reviewing duties over to somebody else. At least I got lots of rest, worked on my 18-month backlog of the New Yorker, got well into Season 3 of Battlestar Galactica and made excellent headway in Carl Schorske’s Fin-de-Siècle Vienna: Politics and Culture, which I borrowed a couple of years ago from my friend the former head of the UA German studies department, but neglected to finish before I actually went to Vienna; over the weekend I started over, and will now make my way to the end, I swear.

Meanwhile, I appeared in the Tucson Weekly without warning you. Here’s what I contributed to the Aug. 28 issue:

Last week, a half-dozen black-clad Hispanic actors stood on the Beowulf Alley stage, giving a reading of Gavin Kayner's _Noche de los Muertos_. It was a departure for Beowulf Alley in many ways: opening a workshop to the public in preparation for a premiere, later this season, of a local play requiring a Latino cast, something otherwise found almost exclusively at Borderlands Theater. Every element of that sentence represents something new for Beowulf Alley Theatre. It's a house that nearly closed in the summer of 2007 during a financial crisis that shed the company of its artistic director. To cope, the board started some serious brainstorming about fundraising and audience development, and assigned artistic direction to a committee that solicited production proposals from directors in the community. Beowulf Alley is still operating with an undisclosed deficit; the tax form it filed late last year shows that, for the season ending in June 2007, the company spent nearly $38,000 more than it took in, a serious but not necessarily fatal figure for an organization with annual expenses approaching $200,000.

You’ll find the full article here.

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ARIZONA PRIMARY INFO

While most of the attention in politics lately is focused on the presidential race, there is a local election coming up very soon.

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Tucson voters in next Tuesday's primary will be narrowing the candidates for the Arizona Legislature, Pima County Supervisors and other races. The winners of those races will be on a crowded ballot this November.

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