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Notes
Four years after a highly successful Bartók recording with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Edward Gardner here returns to the composer on SACD, with James Ehnes as solo violinist, and his Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra.
The central piece in this recording is the Concerto for Orchestra, the largest work that Bartók completed during the last five years of his life and described by the composer, in the programme notes for its 1944 premiere, as ‘a gradual transition from the sternness of the first movement and the lugubrious death-song of the third, to the life-assertion of the last one’.
It is joined by the Dance Suite, the immediate predecessor, among Bartók’s few works for full orchestra without a soloist, of the Concerto for Orchestra, though by more than two decades; and by the violin Rhapsodies, the colourful folk influences of which are revealed by James Ehnes, a specialist in the repertoire, who already has recorded the complete sonatas as well as the concertos for violin and for viola to critical acclaim [CHAN 10690, 10705, 10752, 10820].
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Reviews
“…I defy anyone to listen to these performances of the Rhapsodies without a smile on their face. Bartók’s fantastically original combination of instruments works beautifully here, his use of the cimbalom giving a spark of colour that gives it something pretty special, all of which is captured beautifully by the Chandos engineers. James Ehnes sounds like he's having a whale of a time, especially in the faster sections, which are a riot, and the whole performance sounds like it’s only a couple of steps away from the café culture from which it originally sprang. Likewise, the Dance Suite is characterised by an anarchic sense of fun, as though Bartók was playing with all the tools in the musical toy box and loving every effect. The opening has wonderful sense of grotesquerie to it, and Gardner directs the whole thing with energetic thrust which means you never forget this is dance music. His approach pays especially rich dividends in the cut-and-thrust of the third movement, where it helps that the orchestra glitter like quicksilver, and the thrust of the finale is very appealing. However, the contrast of the slower movements also judges the balance well, and sets the seal on a very strong performance…”
Simon Thompson – MusicWeb-International.com – 28 July 2020
“...The folk-inflected and virtuosic two-movement Violin Rhapsodies 1 & 2 are both excellently played by James Ehnes, who has an obvious feel for the idiom... The disc ends with an enchanting account of the Dance Suite (an item more substantial than its title suggests), making a successful close to a very successful disc. The foot-stamping movements are infectious, and each dance well characterised, with the returns of the little ritornello touchingly done... It is a very generous (80 minutes) and very desirable set of contrasting Bartók works. In fact, it would make the ideal introduction to the composer, or a fine modern addition to a collection in which the classic recordings are already well represented.”
Roy Westbrook - MusicWeb-International.com - 5 February 2018
*** (Good Album)
Jeremie Bigorie - Classica magazine (France) - February 2018
Andrea Bedetti - Audiophile Sound magazine (Italy) - November/December 2017
“... the recording is scintillating... Gardner has this traditionally well-behaved orchestra fizzing with attitude and brazen ferocity, but there is hard-earned character too, not least in the swarming string passages of the Concerto for Orchestra’s first scherzo and the comparative warmth of the movement that follows.”
Andrew Mellor - The Strad - January 2018
Performance **** Recording *****
“The Bergen Philharmonic and its chief conductor Edward Gardner give highly accomplished accounts of Bartók’s four most approachable orchestral works... “
Misha Donat - BBC Music magazine - January 2018
“... As ever with Bartók, the folk element is strongly present, here and in the Dance Suite (1923) and Rhapsodies Nos 1 and 2 with the ever persuasive Canadian violinist James Ehnes as soloist, full of Hungarian-Romanian zest. The Bergen orchestra sounds wonderfully alive to Bartók’s rhythmic exactitudes.”
Fiona Maddocks - The Observer - 29 October 2017
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