Presto News - 20th February 2012Aleksandra Kurzak and Renée Fleming |
![]() I’ve got two very different recital programmes from two very different sopranos to tell you about this week. Both ladies come to us courtesy of Decca and both are currently celebrated Violettas, but there could scarcely be more contrast in terms of their instruments or repertoire choices: one is a relative newcomer laying her cards on the table with a glittering selection of operatic favourites; the other is venturing into more esoteric waters as she approaches the autumn of a stellar international career. ![]() Aleksandra Kurzak First up is a recital debut disc from a young Polish soprano, Aleksandra Kurzak, who’s making quite an impact in the world’s major opera houses of late. From the glimpse we get of her sensual, witty Susanna on this disc it’s easy to see why: every ounce of the feline charm which is currently bewitching audiences and critics at the Royal Opera House comes across on record, and she’s as compelling in the simple phrases of Deh, vieni as she is in the bravura showpieces which dominate the rest of the disc. Her diamantine soprano sits so high that it actually confused my sense of pitch on several occasions (‘surely that can’t have been a high D?!’) but there’s not so much as a hint of shrillness even at the very top of the voice: her warm middle register has a mellowness and body which isn’t normally associated with coloratura sopranos and she never lapses into the generic arch mannerisms which can sometimes creep into these roles (listen to her warm, sincere O mio babbino caro to hear these virtues to best effect). This disc is effectively a portfolio of all the great display pieces for this voice type (Adina, Musetta, Violetta, Lucia and Gilda all feature). It’s a box of (familiar) delights, chiefly because each aria is so deftly characterised and because Kurzak simply exudes such joy from beginning to end. (Apparently the title ‘Gioia’ was suggested by her agent, who remarked that he could see the joy in her face each time she sang, and you can certainly hear it in every phrase!) Every item fits her supple, full-bodied instrument like a glove, but the stand-outs for me were her deliciously impertinent Adele (you can sense her every gleeful reaction to the befuddled Eisenstein as she teases him at the masked ball); a vulnerable, volatile Violetta; and the utterly exhilarating cabaletta from Lucia di Lammermoor, despatched with such tangible exultation in the act of singing that it brought a lump to my throat even after three hearings. ![]() Renée Fleming From a singer in the early stage of her recording career, we move on to one of the current grande dames of sopranos, in a demanding programme of twentieth-century French orchestral song cycles. Renée Fleming’s extensive discography to date has focused more on operatic repertoire than song, and though she writes enthusiastically about her affinity with the language in the booklet note, she’s recorded relatively little French music (her opulent Thaïs being a notable exception). The real curiosity here is the premiere recording of Dutilleux’s Le temps l’horloge, which sets texts by three poets on the theme of time and makes ingenious use of accordion and harpsichord. The cycle was written especially for Fleming and its soaring, often angular lines do indeed sound made-to-measure. I must admit that I was a little surprised when I first heard that the disc was to include Ravel’s Shéhérazade, more commonly recorded by mezzos, and Messiaen’s formidable Poemes pour Mi, usually the province of bigger, more dramatic voices than Fleming’s lush lyric soprano. But it all works beautifully – the voluptuous Ravel songs (underpinned by some fantastically atmospheric orchestral playing) showcase smoky, almost mezzo-ish tints which I hadn’t heard from this singer before, and the powerhouse Messiaen songs are delivered without a hint of strain at either extreme of their large dynamic and tonal range. Fleming mentions in the booklet note that she herself was rather surprised when conductor Alan Gilbert suggested the Messiaen, and describes how they worked together to play up the translucency of the music so as not to overwhelm her essentially soft-grained instrument. Not that there’s any resultant lack of drama: the big climaxes come off thrillingly, and she musters some real bite in the lower reaches, especially in the nightmarish visions of the fourth song Epouvante. My only reservation is that it’s almost too beautiful in places. Fleming is seemingly incapable of making an ugly sound, and some of the visceral horror of the poetry is smoothed away as a result. Interestingly, the Ravel and Messiaen were recorded only last year, two years after the Dutilleux, and the later recordings show more amplitude and colours in the middle register: it seems that one of the most celebrated soprano voices of today is still developing in new and exciting directions! Perhaps both of these discs represent the start of something new…
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![]() Aleksandra Kurzak: Gioia!Aleksandra Kurzak (soprano), Francesco Demuro (tenor), Orchestra de la Comunitat Valenciana, Omer Meir Wellber
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![]() Renée Fleming: PoemesRenée Fleming (soprano), Orchestre National de France, Seiji Ozawa, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Alan Gilbert |
Katherine Cooper - katherine@prestoclassical.co.uk |
New Releases20th February 2012 |
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. |
![]() Tchaikovsky & Mendelssohn: Violin ConcertosRay Chen (violin), Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Daniel HardingOn this release Ray combines the Tchaikovsky and Mendelssohn violin concertos. Both works have played a significant role in Ray’s career so far. His superb interpretation of these works led to his triumph at two major violin competitions – in 2008 he won the Yehudi Menuhin Competition performing the Mendelssohn Concerto, followed by first prize in the prestigious Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels a year later, with the Tchaikovsky Concerto. Ray brings a fresh interpretation to these cornerstones of the violin repertoire and finds a kindred spirit in Daniel Harding and the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra – their youthful performance displaying zest and energy. |
![]() Yundi: The Red PianoYundi (piano)For his first non-Chopin recording, Yundi turns to repertoire from his native China on The Red Piano. Anchored by The Yellow River Concerto, the release also features traditional Chinese songs which have been arranged to reflect the lush Romantic tradition in which Yundi excels.
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![]() Shostakovich: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2Denis Matsuev (piano), Mariinsky Orchestra, Valery GergievSince winning the 11th International Tchaikovsky Competition in 1998, Denis Matsuev has established a reputation as one of Russia’s leading pianists. His first release on the Mariinsky label, featuring Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 3 and ‘Paganini Variations’, received widespread acclaim. He has toured throughout Europe and North America with Valery Gergiev and the Mariinsky Orchestra, as well as performing with the LSO, Berlin and New York Philharmonics. For his second Mariinsky release with Gergiev he turns to music by Shostakovich and Shchedrin. |
![]() Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 1Russian National Orchestra, Mikhail PletnevThis CD continues PentaTone’s very successful Tchaikovsky cycle, which has received critical acclaim. Symphony No.5 (PTC5186385) was CD Choice of the Month in the BBC Music Magazine. Symphonies Nos. 2 and 3 will follow later in the year, completing the series.
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![]() Schubert: Willkommen und AbschiedWerner Güra (tenor) & Christoph Berner (fortepiano Rönisch)Born in Munich, Werner Güra has a reputation especially as an interpreter of lieder. His recordings for harmonia mundi, including the great cycles of Schubert, Schumann and Wolf and vocal ensembles by Brahms and Schumann, have all been widely acclaimed. |
![]() Berio: Orchestral realisations of Schubert, Brahms & MahlerBergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Edward GardnerBerio had an abiding fascination with reconciling the past and the present, which can be seen in his orchestral realisations of works by Mahler and Brahms and – most notably – in Rendering (1990), his typically creative completion of unfinished symphonic sketches by Schubert.
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![]() Simone Dinnerstein: Something Almost Being SaidSimone Dinnerstein (piano)After the success of Simone Dinnerstein’s first album for Sony Classical, ‘Bach – A strange beauty’, which immediately earned the No. 1 spot on the US Billboard Classical Chart, and is one of the few classical albums to make the US Billboard Top 200, Simone’s second Sony album is again devoted to the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. This time the pianist juxtaposes music by J.S Bach with that of Franz Schubert.
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![]() Grieg & Rachmaninov: Piano ConcertosSa Chen (piano), Orquestra Gulbenkian, Lawrence FosterSa Chen has been called “a brilliant pianist” by Emmanuel Ax. Here she performs what are probably two of the best known of all piano concertos. Her previous release on PentaTone (PTC5186355) included Rachmaninov’s Études-Tableaux; “The tone is unremittingly beautiful, she displays a wide palette of pianistic colour...” International Record Review.
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![]() BBC Radio 3 CD ReviewSaturday 18th February 2012 |
Building a Library - Bach, J S: Goldberg Variations, BWV988 |
![]() First ChoiceAndrás Schiff (piano) |
Disc of the Week |
![]() Beethoven: String Trios, Op. 9 Nos. 1-3Trio Zimmermann: Frank Peter Zimmermann (violin), Antoine Tamestit (viola), Christian Poltéra (cello)
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