CD and Other Review

Review: Hommage (Egger)

Given its modest yet beguiling tone, it’s easy to forget the classical guitar is capable of painting a universe far beyond its actual sound-making capabilities. To fall under its spell is to enter a realm of ambiguity and suggestion; in other words, the classical guitar is the most poetic of instruments. So when 19th-century masters of the instrument Augustín Barrios, Francisco Tárrega, Caspar Joseph Mertz and the 20th-century composer Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco choose to pay homage to, respectively, Montevideo’s cathedral, Verdi’s opera La Traviata and the Alhambra, Schubert’s lieder and the music of Boccherini, there is no real paradox. Even if you aren’t familiar with the source material, you have your imagination to fill in the gaps. This is music that succeeds on its own terms but also points to a richer domain that, thanks to evocative writing, is immediately accessible. Of course, the quality of the interpretations must bear some of the responsibility for such a mysterious transference, and that’s where talented Austrian guitarist Armin Egger comes in. Whether it’s in Barrios’ melancholy, nostalgic waltzes and organ-evoking La catedral, Tárrega’s rippling Recuerdos de la Alhambra, Mertz’s virtuosic fantasy on The Flying Dutchman or Castelnuovo-Tedesco’s quirky evocation of a bygone era,…

February 13, 2014
CD and Other Review

Review: Barber, Copland, Gershwin: Piano Concertos (Royal Scottish National Orchestra/Oundjian)

This disc of mid-20th Century American piano concertos is a polished affair. Wang’s brilliant pianism is infectious and appropriately lyrical for the slow movement of Barber’s concerto. The Scottish orchestra under Peter Oundjian brings power to their role in the proceedings. Chandos maintains its usual high standard. And that should be it – but it isn’t. The problem concerns the two jazz-influenced pieces. Simply put, Wang doesn’t swing. To give an example, the piano licks in the third movement of the Gershwin are given a scherzando treatment: impressively achieved, but not what Gershwin was getting at. Underneath the Lisztian decoration is a streetwise toughness that eludes these musicians. Copland’s early concerto is one of the few where he referenced 1920s jazz. Again, Wang does not know what to make of this element. Missing the music’s louche cheekiness, she simply sounds awkward. To hear what is missing, turn to Copland and Bernstein (Sony). To rediscover Gershwin’s brash cityscape, try Earl Wild with the Boston Pops, or a 1954 Decca recording by Julius Katchen with Mantovani and His Orchestra (!), which is even more idiomatic. Katchen squeezes out every last drop of ragtime (as does Wild). And, fine as Wang and Oundjian are in…

February 13, 2014
CD and Other Review

Review: Decca Sound: The Acoustic Years (Various)

This release is a sequel to the earlier Decca Sound box set. It covers the years of Decca’s analogue “Full Frequency Range Recording”, starting with the company’s earliest stereo recordings from 1954 –Ansermet conducting the Suisse Romande Orchestra in music by Rimsky-Korsakov, Glazunov, Balakirev and Liadov – and finishing in 1980 just prior to the advent of digital recording, with Dutoit conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra in tone poems by Saint-Saëns. The bonus CD gives us the Ansermet Russian program in its original mono, for comparative purposes. Unlike the earlier box, this is not presented as a best performance collection; rather, it is designed to showcase the peak of Decca’s sound quality over those analogue decades. And indeed it does: the sound of Fistoulari’s highlights from Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake holds up stunningly (recorded with the Concertgebouw Orchestra in 1961), not to mention Solti’s visceral Mahler Resurrection Symphony with Heather Harper, Helen Watts and the London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus from 1966. Sometimes the sound is of its time. When Decca producers recorded opera in the late 1950s and early 1960s they preferred a cavernous space with the voices set back  – an opera house acoustic – yet the clarity and presence…

February 13, 2014
Live Review

Review: Forklift (KAGE, Melbourne)

Three girls and a forklift: a match made in heaven or the latest in contemporary dance? Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in

February 13, 2014
news

Third variation to a charitable theme

The Theme and Variations Foundation celebrated their third annual fundraiser with international pianist Alexander Gavrylyuk. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in

February 12, 2014
post

Perth Festival 2014 looks like a hit in the making

Having just reviewed my way through the classical music program at this year’s Sydney Festival you might think I’d be all festival-ed out, but to be honest, the heady maelstrom of one can just as easily whet your appetite for the next. And let’s face it, it’s summer in Australia so what better reason to get out of the Limelight office. I’m aware that comparisons are odious but the first thing you notice when you step off the plane in WA is that it’s hotter here – well over 30 degrees to be precise. The second thing you learn about Perth’s offering, once you start to read the publicity blurb, is that the city may be smaller but the Festival is in fact bigger and longer. With a substantial program of film added on, Perth Festival counts as Australia’s largest arts event. The night before I travelled I spoke to Michael Barenboim, violinist and son of Daniel, who is coming out to play Mozart concertos with the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields on February 21 and 23. He too was also looking forward to Perth. “It’s my first time in Australia”, he told me, “but I can only stay for a…

February 12, 2014
features

Bryce Dessner: An American in Perth

ABC Classic FM’s Julian Day spoke to all-round musician Bryce Dessner ahead of his Perth Festival classical gig. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in

February 12, 2014