Presto News - 19th April 2010Wagner Lohengrin - BBC Awards |
![]() This year’s BBC Music Magazine Awards were announced last week and the big winner was a recording of Wagner’s Lohengrin, performed by the WDR Symphony Orchestra, Cologne, conducted by Semyon Bychkov. It won the Opera Awards and the coveted Disc of the Year. Other winners receiving Awards included Moldovan violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaya for her radical interpretation of Beethoven’s Violin Concerto (Orchestral Award), the British Elias String Quartet (Newcomers of the Year) and the Jerusalem Quartet, winning the Chamber Award for the second time for their disc of Haydn Quartets. Antonio Pappano won the Choral Award for his masterful reading of Verdi’s Requiem with the National Academy of St Cecilia, Rome, featuring Rolando Villazón among the soloists. Distinguished pianist Murray Perahia won the Instrumental Award for his Beethoven Piano Sonata disc and Dutch mezzo-soprano Christianne Stotijn the Vocal Award with her fabulous disc of Tchaikovsky Songs with pianist Julius Drake. You can view full details of all the winners here. ![]() Semyon Bychkov But today I’d like to tell you a bit more about the Wagner and Semyon Bychkov. Studio opera recordings are these days a bit of a rarity, and it has been over ten years since the last studio recording of Lohengrin, but after performances in Spain and at the Vienna State Opera, Bychkov felt he had assembled the nucleus of a truly memorable cast for the project and with his own orchestra in Cologne and the support of Günther Hänssler (and his label Profil) it soon became a reality. The cast is superb and it is hard to spot a weak link. I must admit I worried a bit when I saw Johan Botha cast as Lohengrin as I have never been that impressed when I have seen him on stage or heard him before, but here he really sings out of his skin – he shows he can be sensitive and lyrical or dramatic and powerful as his part demands. Whether Bychkov should take the credit for Botha’s achievement I don’t know but either way there aren’t many better Lohengrins than this on disc. Elsewhere Adrianne Pieczonka's Elsa is similarly impressive, while Petra Lang makes a fearful Ortrud. The Cologne Radio Orchestra and its Chorus (which has a big part in this opera) are superb but the overall power and sweep of the performance comes from Bychkov’s inspired reading of the score. I think some listeners find it puzzling in Wagner that even the vilest characters get some of the noblest music. It is true that earlier composers would typically have given a character like the scheming evil Ortrud only music to portray her as a one-dimensional anti-heroine. Wagner, however seeks a much more complicated characterisation than this. He wants us to understand Ortrud’s inner feelings, that she is not pure evil, but actually longs to find love, and it is only from being deprived of this that she turns into this evil monster. By giving the nasty characters enchanting music we’re drawn into them in a much more emotional and empathetic way than we would otherwise, and it is this which I think makes Wagner’s operas so all-consuming. It is a really stunning performance of an exquisite score, superbly captured with a lush and rich sound both in SACD and normal stereo. If you’re not familiar with the work (or Wagner operas in general) this is an excellent place to start. You’ll need to make an investment not just financially, but in time, to really get the true reward from it. It is three and a half hours long and you’ll probably want to follow it through with the libretto (included) at least the first time through. I’ve given you two samples to whet your appetite – firstly the Act 1 Finale, and then an extract from the Elsa and Ortrud Act 2 duet (don’t miss the fabulous string sound – it really is to die for). Enjoy! Volcanic ash cloud As I imagine most readers will already know, aircraft across much of Europe have been grounded as a result of an ash cloud caused by an erupting volcano in Iceland. Mail to Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and other parts of Europe is being transferred to road services where possible, and mail to much of the USA and some other destinations is being transferred by road to a southern European airport and then flown out, but please be patient if mail takes a few days longer than usual to arrive. We're doing everything we can, and hopefully all will be back to normal shortly.
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![]() Wagner: LohengrinKwangchul Youn, Johan Botha, Adrianne Pieczonka, Falk Struckmann, Petra Lang & Eike Wilm Schulte, WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln, WDR Rundfunkchor Köln, NDR Chor & Prager Kammerchor, Semyon Bychkov
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Chris O'Reilly - chris@prestoclassical.co.uk |
New Releases19th April 2010 |
This is just the pick of the recent releases. The New Releases and Future Releases pages are always available for browsing all the new and forthcoming releases. |
![]() Mahler: Symphony No. 2 in C minor 'Resurrection'Anne Schwanewilms (soprano) & Lioba Braun (contralto), Bamberg Symphony Orchestra & Bamberg Symphony Choir, Jonathan NottJonathan Nott continues his very successful Mahler series with Symphony No.2. The soloists are Anne Schwanewilms (soprano) and Lioba Braun (contralto). BBC Music Magazine described Nott’s recording of Mahler’s Symphony No.9 as “a fine achievement in a towering symphony.” |
![]() Norbert Burgmüller - Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2Hofkapelle Stuttgart, Frieder BerniusFebruary of this year marked the 200th anniversary of Norbert Burgmüller’s birth and this recording is an impressive homage. Robert Schumann described Burgmüller’s first symphony as “the most significant, noble work written in recent times.” The second, unfinished symphony is a very original work. |
![]() Britten - String Quartets Nos. 2 & 3Elias String Quartet“These newcomers...have plenty to offer. I particularly like the variety of colour and meaning they bring to the transformations of the Second Quartet's opening motif...there's plenty of passion and a strong feeling for shape.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2010 **** |
![]() Bruckner: Symphony No. 5 in B flat majorOrchestre de la Suisse Romande, Marek JanowskiThis is the third instalment in PentaTone’s Bruckner Symphonies cycle with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande conducted by Marek Janowski. The previous CDs in the series have received excellent reviews. |
![]() Bach, J S: St Mark Passion, BWV247Dominique Horwitz (speaker), Amarcord & Kölner Akademie, Michael Alexander WillensThe St. Mark Passion belongs to the lesser known treasures among the sacred opus of J S Bach. Thus, the present recording made in the Frauenkirche Dresden is all the more spectacular, since it is performed in the reconstructed version of 1731 published by Carus. The actor Dominique Horwitz recites the text of the Evangelist, alternating with the arias and chorales. |
![]() Artur Pizarro plays Albéniz & GranadosArtur Pizarro (piano)Prize-winning pianist Artur Pizarro turns his considerable talents to Iberia, the highly virtuosic masterpiece by Isaac Albéniz, and Goyescas by Enrique Granados, considered to be the Spanish composer's finest work. These demanding works showcase Artur’s enviable technique and extreme virtuosity. |
![]() Leoncavallo - La Nuit de maiPlácido Domingo (tenor) & Lang Lang (piano), Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna, Alberto VeronesiConductor Alberto Veronesi’s inspiration to celebrate Leoncavallo’s work results in a revelatory recording by uniting Plácido Domingo, the world’s most celebrated living tenor, with virtuoso pianist Lang Lang. A relatively unknown masterwork recounting the passionate vis-à-vis of a poet with his muse, La Nuit de Mai is a romantic symphonic piece for tenor based on Musset’s poem of the same name. Plácido Domingo’s emotion laden tenor negotiates La Nuit’s lyric and dramatic demands with characteristic impact and bravura. Suavely accompanying Plácido Domingo in a selection of short songs, Lang Lang concludes this novel album with two dazzling solo piano pieces. |
![]() 15 New Re-IssuesSome fantastic bargains from Brilliant Classics this month - including Janet Baker and Richard Hickox performing Respighi, Ernest Ansermet conducting the Tchaikovsky ballets, Klára Würtz playing Mozart Piano Sonatas and Rudolph Barshai conducting Mahler 10. Also rarities from Alessandro Scarlatti, Lodovico Giustini and others. |
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listen - Wagner - Lohengrin: Act I Finale - Durch Gottes Sieg









