AULIN Violiin Concertos Nos 1-3
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Tor Aulin
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: CPO
Magazine Review Date: 07/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 76
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CPO777 826-2
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra No 1 |
Tor Aulin, Composer
Andrew Manze, Conductor Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra Tor Aulin, Composer Ulf Wallin, Violin |
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra No 2 |
Tor Aulin, Composer
Andrew Manze, Conductor Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra Tor Aulin, Composer Ulf Wallin, Violin |
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra No. 3 |
Tor Aulin, Composer
Andrew Manze, Conductor Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra Tor Aulin, Composer Ulf Wallin, Violin |
Author: Andrew Farach-Colton
Aulin didn’t think much of himself as a composer, and his output is small, but the violin concertos are well worth getting to know. Sweetly tuneful and finely wrought, they’re all stained with a delicate yet touching strain of melancholy that seems to reflect what we known of Aulin’s personality. What’s most striking about them, perhaps, is their conspicuous lack of flamboyance. The solo parts are elaborate and demanding, yes, yet even the most intricate passages convey a sense of expressive, musical purpose.
The lyrical First Concerto (1889), written for Sauret and published under the title Concert Piece, is an extended single movement whose connected sections are all in slow and moderate tempos. The Second (1892) shows a richer use of orchestral colour and a wider range of emotional temperature. Aulin loves the play of major and minor, and his frequent shifting between these modes helps give his music its distinctive flavour. The Third Concerto (1896) is the real gem, however. Where some of the developmental working-out of ideas in the Second becomes repetitive, the Third is absorbing from start to finish. And with its subtly Nordic harmonic colouring, it’s easy to hear this concerto as a stepping stone between Bruch’s (an obvious influence) and Sibelius’s. The dancelike finale is a veritable parade of delightful tunes.
These works have all been recorded before but I believe this is the first time they’ve appeared together on a single disc. I retain a soft spot for Arve Tellefsen’s 1974 account of the Third with an incendiary Leif Segerstam (on a long-gone EMI LP), but Ulf Wallin is an equally effective advocate. He sneaks sinew into his silky tone where called for, and even finds moments of rapture in the music’s reflective lyricism – try the end of the Third’s slow movement, for example. Andrew Manze and the Helsingborg Symphony provide warm-hearted, characterful support and the recorded sound is excellent. Enthusiastically recommended.
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