BARTÓK Concerto for Orchestra (Dausgaard)

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Béla Bartók

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: Onyx

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 78

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: ONYX4210

ONYX4210. BARTÓK Concerto for Orchestra (Dausgaard)

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Suite No. 1 Béla Bartók, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Béla Bartók, Composer
Thomas Dausgaard, Conductor
Concerto for Orchestra Béla Bartók, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Béla Bartók, Composer
Thomas Dausgaard, Conductor

The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under chief conductor Thomas Dausgaard launch a series coupling contrasting works by Bartók, this first instalment presenting the ever-popular late Concerto for Orchestra alongside the First Suite from four decades earlier. Commonalities include allusions to Hungarian folk styles (overt in the suite, utterly assimilated in the concerto), five-movement form and an innate mastery of orchestration, the explicitly Straussian accent of the early work absorbed and obliterated by the fully mature style of the late one.

The First Suite is in fact a heftier work than its title might suggest, decked in orchestral colours that wouldn’t shame Hollywood. The BBC Scottish play it for all its worth, apparently in the first recording of the unrevised (uncut) version; woodwinds are especially characterful in their impersonations of indigenous Hungarian instruments. The bristling Nachtmusik of the second movement finds its echo in the central panel of the Concerto, where again the woodwinds play starring roles, albeit alongside all the other sections and voices within the orchestra.

Dausgaard pays acute attention to Bartók’s markings, accentuating the seriousness of the Concerto’s opening movement and the cheekiness of the Giuoco delle coppie, with its parade of instrumental duets. The Elegia builds to a notable peak of unease, while in the Intermezzo interrotto Dausgaard is careful not to overindulge the string chorale or the brass’s slurs on Shostakovich’s character. Only the finale perhaps hangs fire: two echt Hungarian versions I recommended in the Gramophone Collection in April 2010 (listed below) shave 20 or more seconds from Dausgard’s time and distil a greater edge-of-seat thrill from music which after all benefits from actually sounding difficult. Nevertheless, Dausgaard’s care with both works pays off and augurs well for subsequent volumes.

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