Haydn Cello Concertos. Sinfonia Concertante. Adagio cantabile

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Joseph Haydn

Label: Red Seal

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 75

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 09026 68578-2

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra No. 1 Joseph Haydn, Composer
Chamber Orchestra of Europe
Joseph Haydn, Composer
Roger Norrington, Conductor
Steven Isserlis, Cello
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra No. 2 Joseph Haydn, Composer
Chamber Orchestra of Europe
Joseph Haydn, Composer
Roger Norrington, Conductor
Steven Isserlis, Cello
Symphony No. 13 Joseph Haydn, Composer
Chamber Orchestra of Europe
Joseph Haydn, Composer
Roger Norrington, Conductor
Steven Isserlis, Cello
Sinfonia Concertante Joseph Haydn, Composer
Chamber Orchestra of Europe
Douglas Boyd, Oboe
Joseph Haydn, Composer
Marieke Blankestijn, Violin
Matthew Wilkie, Bassoon
Roger Norrington, Conductor
Steven Isserlis, Cello
What a versatile artist Steven Isserlis is. Having made his name as a sympathetic interpreter of a wide variety of romantic and modern music, here he shows he can be just as persuasive in eighteenth-century repertoire. His stylistic awareness is evident in beautiful, elegant phrasing, selective use of vibrato and varied articulation, giving an expressive range that never conflicts with the music’s natural language. In the cello concertos he is helped by an extremely sensitive accompaniment, stressing the chamber musical aspects of Haydn’s pre-London orchestral writing. The soft, intimate sonority at 3'06'' in the first movement of the D major is a typical example. The Adagios are taken at a flowing speed, but Isserlis’s relaxed approach means they never sound hurried. The Allegro molto finale of the C major Concerto, on the other hand, sounds poised rather than the helter-skelter we often hear.
In his understanding of the music, Isserlis is a long way ahead of Han-na Chang, whose version places the emphasis on fine, traditional-style cello playing. Mork’s vivacious, imaginative performances characterize the music very strongly, but my preference would be for Isserlis’s and Norrington’s lighter touch and greater refinement. And this is not taking into account the extras – the lovely symphony movement (a cello solo throughout) and what many may find the highlight of the disc – the Sinfonia concertante. The first movement’s tuttis have, I think, excessively prominent added dynamics that detract from the music’s vigour and grandeur, but the serenade-like Andante, the robust and witty finale and, throughout, the conversational exchanges of the four soloists, are an unalloyed delight.'

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