ELGAR; BRUCH Violin Concertos
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Rachel Barton Pine, Max Bruch, Edward Elgar
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Avie
Magazine Review Date: 03/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 76
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: AV2375
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra |
Edward Elgar, Composer
Andrew Litton, Conductor BBC Symphony Orchestra Edward Elgar, Composer Rachel Barton Pine, Composer |
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra No. 1 |
Max Bruch, Composer
Andrew Litton, Conductor BBC Symphony Orchestra Max Bruch, Composer Rachel Barton Pine, Composer |
Author: Andrew Farach-Colton
Andrew Litton, who stepped in on short notice, does a splendid job, in any event. And he and Pine seem to be of the same mind, homing in on the music’s wistful qualities. One gets a strong whiff of melancholy right from start, thanks to Litton’s careful observation of the diminuendo marking in the two-bar phrase that follows the main motif. Pine, for her part, allows the music to ask its questions without trying to answer them for us. Listen, for instance, at 5'12" in the same movement, where she allows one to feel Elgar searching through a maze of elusive harmonies.
Only once does Pine go her own way rather than Elgar’s, and that’s when the violin takes up the ‘Windflower’ theme at 6'25". Pine plays it with catch-in-the-throat tenderness that’s ravishing, to be sure, but it’s hardly semplice as Elgar indicates. Zehetmair, for one, demonstrates that exquisiteness and simplicity are not mutually exclusive (Hallé, 8/10). Otherwise, though, Pine’s interpretation is as emotionally satisfying as it is dazzling. The slow movement is mysteriously veiled and luminous, providing a palpable sense of the music’s darker undercurrents.
The American violinist is most impressive, perhaps, in the finale, where her easy virtuosity sends sparks flying, though never at the expense of the long line. She makes expressive sense of even the thorniest passages, as at 3'00", with a sense of deeply felt, improvisatory grace. Elgar wrote that his concerto ‘enshrined a soul’, and particularly in the finale Pine seems to embody that soul, dancing and soaring above the orchestra. The long cadenza is expertly paced, and then the coda plunges ahead with thrilling inevitability.
Bruch’s G minor Concerto is certainly not what I’d choose to hear after the Elgar, although the performance is wholly persuasive in its mittel-European heartiness. The outer movements abound with snap and spice, and the Adagio has a warm solemnity that, one might argue, offers a foretaste of Elgarian nobilmente. The recorded sound is glorious, with a near-ideal balance between soloist and orchestra.
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