SCHOENBERG; BARTÓK Piano Concertos
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Béla Bartók, Ernst Krenek, Arnold Schoenberg
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Odradek
Magazine Review Date: 02/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 74
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ODRCD339
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra |
Arnold Schoenberg, Composer
Arnold Schoenberg, Composer Atvars Lakstigala, Conductor Liepaja Symphony Orchestra Pina Napolitano, Piano |
Begleitungsmusik zu einer Lichtspielszene, 'Accomp |
Arnold Schoenberg, Composer
Arnold Schoenberg, Composer Atvars Lakstigala, Conductor Liepaja Symphony Orchestra |
Symphonic Elegy - In memoriam Anton Webern |
Ernst Krenek, Composer
Atvars Lakstigala, Conductor Ernst Krenek, Composer Liepaja Symphony Orchestra |
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 3 |
Béla Bartók, Composer
Atvars Lakstigala, Conductor Béla Bartók, Composer Liepaja Symphony Orchestra Pina Napolitano, Piano |
Author: Rob Cowan
Delicacy, or something akin to it, is a quality I would have welcomed rather more of in the first movement of Bartók’s Third Concerto, which sounds darker than usual, as if the music had fallen prey to the predominantly sombre mood of the preceding orchestral pieces. Schoenberg’s largely pensive Accompaniment to a Cinematographic Scene, with its allusions of ‘danger, fear and catastrophe’, here starts ppp while the later episodes – again superbly recorded (try the bass drum at 4'14") – raise the alarm. Krenek’s Symphonic Elegy for string orchestra (in memory of Webern) features some extremely expressive string-playing, though it turns more argumentative at around the midway point. So Bartók follows on the heels of some pretty angst-ridden music. Again the bass drum makes an impressive showing (at 0'52" into the finale) but it’s the Adagio religioso slow movement that comes off best, especially the tortured climax at 9'14" (note the prominent tam-tam at 9'43"), with sweetly singing strings returning to intensify the mood.
Strictly speaking, given the unusual programming, comparisons are irrelevant, though harking back to the great Zoltán Kocsis under Iván Fischer returns us to the sort of crisp, darting inflections that Bartók’s Third Concerto cries out for, while viewed overall Mitsuko Uchida and Pierre Boulez provide the more urgent and compellingly rigorous account of the Schoenberg Concerto. Still, Pina Napolitano and the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra do well and, as I’ve already suggested, Odradek’s sound is superb.
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