Flautist Sally Walker on the importance of hope through music
Walker will perform Kats-Chernin's Night and Now in a concert commemorating the victims of the Babi Yar massacres.
Walker will perform Kats-Chernin's Night and Now in a concert commemorating the victims of the Babi Yar massacres.
The Aussie bass triumphed at the 2017 Opera Awards, giving him the opportunity to hone his craft abroad. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Sydney's Met musos indulge in a little musical vodka.
A smart, challenging programme highlighting Shostakovich's personal upheavals.
The events of 1917 changed the course of history but Russian music has had more than its share of revolutions.
Shostakovich wrote his First Violin Concerto in 1947-48 while persecuted and bullied by Andrei Zhdanov. The Soviet Central Committee secretary announced his decree on music, condemning formalism and naming Shostakovich specifically, while the composer was writing the Scherzo, imprinted with the jagged musical motif based on his initials, DSCH, used here for the first time. The concerto – written, like the second, for David Oistrakh – wasn’t performed until 1955, once Zhdanov and Stalin were dead. It is these tensions, fears and anxieties that German violinist Peter Frank Zimmermann brings to the fore in his agonised performances of Shostakovich’s Violin Concertos with the NDR Elbphilharmonie – the renamed NDR Sinfonieorchester – led by Alan Gilbert and recorded live at the Laeiszhalle, Hamburg in 2012 and 2015 respectively. In the First Concerto Zimmermann bases his performance of the solo part of the autograph manuscript – which includes Shostakovich’s own metronome marks and bowing instructions – rather than the often heard version edited by Oistrakh. He also uses the composer’s preferred opus number – 77 – in keeping with the work’s date of composition rather than publication. Above the restive strings of the opening Nocturne, Zimmermann’s sound has a rich,… Continue reading…
Trifonov storms the heavens in an evening of young men's masterpieces.
Krymov's puppets tell a darkly visual tale of Shostakovich and his time.
A return to first love: Brodskys bring searing intensity to a cycle of "old friends".
This is a stunner. Weilerstein manages to make this difficult music absolutely riveting. If I had to point to a collaboration between orchestra and soloist that was as close to ideal as humanly possible, then this would be it. The cellist herself is at the top of her profession. The Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (described by one English critic as “super-elite”) is in red-hot form, as is Spanish conductor Pablo Heras-Casado, currently Principal Conductor of the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, but who has also performed at the Met and with the Vienna Philharmonic. These concertos are among the most important 20th-century repertoire for the instrument, and Weilerstein’s playing seems to convey that. The first concerto’s Moderato hovers between wonder and melancholy, sentiments not uncommon in Shostakovich’s music. Later we hear the composer’s own motif, DSCH, which he employed often, perhaps as a badge of defiance in the face of Stalin’s grotesque tyranny. The second concerto reverses the traditional structure. It begins with a long (nearly 15 minutes) Largo, followed by an Allegretto which would test the chops of any cellist. Weilerstein makes it sound as if it was written for her, as indeed many more recent large-scale… Continue reading Get…
The Israeli violinist explains why he loves our open-minded culture, and what he finds in Tchaikovsky, Beethoven and Shostakovich. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
A clever pairing is more than simply programming by numbers.
★★★★☆ Caetani’s no-nonsense authenticity rehabilitates Soviet musical propaganda. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in