ELGAR Enigma Variations. In the South (Alassio)
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Edward Elgar
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Hyperion
Magazine Review Date: 11/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 81
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CDA68101
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
In the South, 'Alassio' |
Edward Elgar, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Martyn Brabbins, Conductor |
Variations on an Original Theme, 'Enigma' |
Edward Elgar, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Martyn Brabbins, Conductor |
Carillon |
Edward Elgar, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Florence Daguerre de Hureaux, Narrator |
(Une) Voix dans le désert |
Edward Elgar, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Florence Daguerre de Hureaux, Narrator Kate Royal, Soprano Martyn Brabbins, Conductor |
(Le) Drapeau Belge |
Edward Elgar, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Florence Daguerre de Hureaux, Narrator Martyn Brabbins, Conductor |
Pleading |
Edward Elgar, Composer
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Martyn Brabbins, Conductor Yann Ghiro, Clarinet |
Author: Andrew Achenbach
Brabbins proves a comparably unhurried, affectionate and cannily observant guide through Enigma, the friends pictured within springing to life with unforced naturalness. As ever in Elgar, the antiphonal placement of first and second violins pays handsome dividends, and felicitous touches abound, not least the gorgeously shimmering textures of ‘CAE’ (whose reappearance in the finale has an overwhelming rightness about it) and the strings’ whiplash attack at the start of ‘GRS’. Other highlights include an especially tender ‘WN’, generously songful ‘BGN’ and deeply moving ‘Romanza’. Like Pierre Monteux’s famous 1958 LSO version, ‘Nimrod’ sets out at a genuinely ear-pricking ppp, but the string timbre in Glasgow sounds a tad clinical by the side of that glowing Kingsway Hall production.
We’re also treated to a trio of patriotic wartime offerings in support of occupied Belgium. Each benefits from some superbly articulate orchestral playing, narrator Florence Daguerre de Hureaux declaims Emile Cammaerts’s French texts to the manner born, and soprano Kate Royal makes an eloquent contribution in Une voix dans le désert (by some margin the most imaginative of the group). Finally, and pushing the playing time to over 80 minutes, comes a first recording of Elgar’s purely orchestral arrangement of his own 1908 song ‘Pleading’, which shows the BBC Scottish SO’s long-standing Principal Clarinet, Yann Ghiro, at his considerable best.
To sum up, an enjoyable and stimulating anthology that Elgarians everywhere should try and hear.
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