Review: From Russia With Love (The Metropolitan Orchestra)
Sydney's Met musos indulge in a little musical vodka.
Sydney's Met musos indulge in a little musical vodka.
The events of 1917 changed the course of history but Russian music has had more than its share of revolutions.
Carl Vine's Hallucinations prove a hypnotic new addition to the trombone rep.
Northey proves the world needs more Copland and less you know who.
Trifonov storms the heavens in an evening of young men's masterpieces.
Maria Razumovskaya is a London-based pianist who thinks deeply about the music she performs. As well as pursuing a performing career, she has a PhD in the life and work of Heinrich Neuhaus. Her veneration of such Russian giants influences her performance style and programming. This disc gives us two Bach transcriptions by Busoni: Chaconne in D Minor and Ich ruf’ zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ; Busoni’s own Fantasia in the style of Bach; Liszt’s Vallée d’Obermann and Funérailles; an Elegy by Rachmaninov, and a Fantasia by CPE Bach. They are all predominantly slow, minor-key pieces, either monumental or melancholy and often both. Razumovskaya’s polished technique is big enough to encompass the bell-suffused climax of Vallée d’Obermann, but she tends to approach every piece in the same ultra-Romantic way. CPE calls for spontaneity and unpredictability, qualities her carefully considered reading negates. Her most satisfying interpretation is of Busoni’s arrangement of the Chaconne from Bach’s Violin Partita No 2. Busoni completely reconceived it in pianistic terms, and the result is as solid as a set of variations by Brahms. Razumovskaya has the work’s measure and it encourages greater light and shade in her playing, but as a whole this recital is… Continue reading Get…
★★★★☆ Gaffigan and Gerstein prove once again that the devil gets the best tunes. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Rachmaninov devotees have long treasured the masterly survey of songs by the late Elisabeth Söderström, accompanied by Vladimir Askenazy, and the Chandos set from the early ‘90s that gave us the correct voice types. Some 20 years later this current set is a welcome release and a strong rival. Seven youngish Russian singers are heard here and all are fine artists and bring a great deal of Slavic intensity. Andrei Bondarenko’s rich baritone timbre caresses the ear and is superbly focused while Ekaterina Siurina’s bright forward tone is a delight and suits the lighter fare to a tee. Alexander Vinogradov, recently heard in a superb Shostakovich Babi Yar under Petrenko, has a sonorous instrument in the Russian bass tradition and does a fine job of vividly characterising those songs inspired by Rachmaninov’s friendship with Chaliapin. Daniil Shtoda who sung a fine Fenton on Abbado’s 2001 Falstaff sounds splendid if occasionally betraying a little wear and tear on the top of the voice. Justina Gringyte has a formidable dark mezzo sound that can tingle the spine. Rodion Pogossov and Evelina Dobraceva are both noticeably of the old school with occluded tone and some good old-fashioned Slavic wobble, however Dobraceva’s dramatic intensity…
Holographic technology allowed the deceased Russian composer to return to the concert platform. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Three's a charm as Gergiev and the London Symphony Orchestra score a Sydney hat-trick.
Romance and sheer murder rub shoulders in a searing Russian program.
Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky’s big guns, Medtner steals the show. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Making a debut playing the music of a relatively obscure composer is a brave move. That said, who could resist the music of Anton Arensky?