Rawsthorne Violin Concertos Nos 1 & 2. Fantasy Ov. Cortèges.
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Alan Rawsthorne
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: 9/1998
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 64
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 8 554240
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra No. 1 |
Alan Rawsthorne, Composer
Alan Rawsthorne, Composer BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Lionel Friend, Conductor Rebecca Hirsch, Violin |
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra No. 2 |
Alan Rawsthorne, Composer
Alan Rawsthorne, Composer BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Lionel Friend, Conductor Rebecca Hirsch, Violin |
Cortèges |
Alan Rawsthorne, Composer
Alan Rawsthorne, Composer BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra Lionel Friend, Conductor |
Author: Andrew Achenbach
Be honest now: who could possibly have foreseen that we would have had rival budget versions of both Rawsthorne violin concertos appearing within almost a year of each other? Valuable as that earlier BBC Radio Classics anthology remains, enthusiasts should waste no time in snapping up this new Naxos CD, containing as it does music-making of perceptive dedication and impressive polish.
Rawsthorne completed his First Violin Concerto in 1947, dedicating the score to Walton (listen for the tongue-in-cheek quotation fromBelshazzar’s Feast just before the end). Cast in just two movements, it is a lyrically affecting, creation that weaves quite a spell, especially in a performance as dignified and consistently purposeful as the present one. However, the revelation (for this listener, at any rate) comes with the Second Concerto of 1956. Pleasing as the 1968 Parikian/Schwarz broadcast account undoubtedly is, Rebecca Hirsch and Lionel Friend locate a deceptive urgency and symphonic thrust in the opening Allegretto that genuinely compel. If anything, the succeeding Poco lento wears an even more anguished, nervy demeanour, the music’s questing mood very well conveyed. By contrast, the finale (a theme and variations) proceeds in serene, almost carefree fashion, its witty coda forming a delightfully unbuttoned conclusion to a genuinely striking, much-underrated work.
As a curtain-raiser, Naxos give us the fantasy overture, Corteges. Commissioned by the BBC and premiered at the 1945 Proms by the LSO under Basil Cameron, it is an approachable, well-wrought essay, pitting an eloquent Adagio processional (“wistfully expressive rather than tragic in tone”, as annotator Sebastian Forbes astutely observes) against an irrepressible Allegro molto vivace tarantella (echoes here of Rawsthorne’s own exuberant Street Corner Overture from the previous year). The composer develops his material with customary skill, and Friend draws a committed and alert response from the BBC Scottish SO (who seem to enjoy the experience hugely).
Boasting a spacious, bright and admirably balanced sound picture (no attempt to spotlight the soloist), here is an enormously rewarding issue as well as a bargain of the first order. Encouragingly, there’s more Rawsthorne in the Naxos pipeline.'
Rawsthorne completed his First Violin Concerto in 1947, dedicating the score to Walton (listen for the tongue-in-cheek quotation from
As a curtain-raiser, Naxos give us the fantasy overture, Corteges. Commissioned by the BBC and premiered at the 1945 Proms by the LSO under Basil Cameron, it is an approachable, well-wrought essay, pitting an eloquent Adagio processional (“wistfully expressive rather than tragic in tone”, as annotator Sebastian Forbes astutely observes) against an irrepressible Allegro molto vivace tarantella (echoes here of Rawsthorne’s own exuberant Street Corner Overture from the previous year). The composer develops his material with customary skill, and Friend draws a committed and alert response from the BBC Scottish SO (who seem to enjoy the experience hugely).
Boasting a spacious, bright and admirably balanced sound picture (no attempt to spotlight the soloist), here is an enormously rewarding issue as well as a bargain of the first order. Encouragingly, there’s more Rawsthorne in the Naxos pipeline.'
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