Szymanowski - Violin Concertos Nos. 1 & 2

EMI: 5034292

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Szymanowski - Violin Concertos Nos. 1 & 2

Label:

EMI

Catalogue No:

5034292

Series:

Recommends

Discs:

1

Release date:

17th Sept 2007

Barcode:

5099950342921

Medium:

CD
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Szymanowski - Violin Concertos Nos. 1 & 2


Szymanowski:

Violin Concerto No. 1, Op. 35

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Sir Simon Rattle

Violin Concerto No. 2, Op. 61

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Sir Simon Rattle

Paganini Caprices (3), Op. 40

with Silke Avenhaus (piano)

Romance in D major, Op. 23

with Silke Avenhaus (piano)


CD

$9.00

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playSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #1, Op. 35 - 1. Vivace Assai

playSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #1, Op. 35 - 2. Vivace Scherzando

playSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #1, Op. 35 - 3. Cadenza

playSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #2, Op. 61 - 1. Moderato

playSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #2, Op. 61 - 2. Allegramente

playSzymanowski: Violin Concerto #2, Op. 61 - 3. Andantino Molto Tranquillo

playSzymanowski: 3 Paganini Caprices, Op. 40 - 1. Andante Dolcissimo, Vivace Scherzando

playSzymanowski: 3 Paganini Caprices, Op. 40 - 2. Adagio, Molto Espressivo Ed Affettuoso

playSzymanowski: 3 Paganini Caprices, Op. 40 - 3. Thème Varié

playSzymanowski: Romance, Op. 23

Gramophone Classical Music Guide

2010

“They make an admirable coupling, the two Szymanowski violin concertos, but a demanding one for the soloist. They are both so beautiful that it must be tempting to embellish both with a similarly glowing tone.
They inhabit quite different worlds (they were written 16 years apart) and Zehetmair shows how well they respond to quite different approaches.
In the First, after a rapt solo entry, he uses for the most part a lovely but delicate tone, expanding to athletic incisiveness but not often to lushness.
It all fits very well with Rattle's handling of the orchestra: occasionally full and rich but mostly a sequence of exquisitely balanced chamber ensembles. Generous but finely controlled rubato from both soloist and conductor allows the concerto's improvisatory fantasy to flower; and the quiet close even has a touch of wit to it.
Zehetmair's sound is immediately less ethereal, more robust, for the opening melody of the Second Concerto. This is the sort of tone, you suspect, that he would use in Bartók's Second Concerto, and it points up a vein of Bartókian strength to this work's longer and firmer lines.
Rattle, too, seeks out bolder and more dense colours.
The Paganini Caprices were equipped by Szymanowski not with deferential accompaniments but with independent and quite freely composed piano parts. They change Paganini, even where the violin part is unmodified, into a late Romantic virtuoso, with a hint of Lisztian poetry alongside the expertly pointed-up fireworks of the Twenty-Fourth Caprice; even here Zehetmair is a listening violinist, not one to upstage his excellent pianist. The Romance, the warmest and most luscious piece here, is beautifully done but with a touch of restraint to prevent it cloying. A first-class coupling, and a recording that makes the most of the superb acoustic of Symphony Hall in Birmingham.”

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