STRAVINSKY Music for Violin, Vol 2
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Igor Stravinsky, Ilya Gringolts
Genre:
Chamber
Label: BIS
Magazine Review Date: 08/2018
Media Format: Super Audio CD
Media Runtime: 76
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: BIS2275
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Ballad |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer Peter Laul, Piano |
Divertimento |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer Peter Laul, Piano |
Elegy |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer |
Pastorale |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Casey Hill, Oboe Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer Juan Ferrer, Clarinet Scott MacLeod, Cor anglais Steve Harriswangler, Bassoon |
Suite italienne |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer Peter Laul, Piano |
Tango |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer Peter Laul, Piano |
Variation d’Apollon |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Dima Slobodeniouk, Conductor Galicia Symphony Orchestra Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer |
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra |
Igor Stravinsky, Composer
Dima Slobodeniouk, Conductor Galicia Symphony Orchestra Igor Stravinsky, Composer Ilya Gringolts, Composer |
Author: Rob Cowan
The featured version of the Pastorale for violin and winds brings a folklike dimension to the piece and it’s good to have ‘Apollo’s Variation’ from Apollon et les Muses as a sort of supplement to the Violin Concerto. Brief though it is (just 3'00"), it contains some of Stravinsky’s most eloquent writing for the instrument. In the concerto’s first ‘Aria’ Gringolts weaves his way among his orchestral colleagues like a glow-worm careering through woodland thickets. Dima Slobodeniouk’s Orquesta Sinfónica de Galicia are alert to detail throughout the work whereas Laul is at his best in the Suite italienne – a version of the Pulcinella music not to be confused with the technically more demanding Suite for violin and piano included in Vol 1 – where the lissom and lyrical slant of Gringolts’s approach is appealing. His chording in the affecting unaccompanied Elégie (originally for viola but here played a fifth higher) is immaculate and he offers a cockily smiling account of the Tango where Laul also enters fully into the spirit.
Returning to the Violin Concerto, I should also mention a memorable version by Zhi-Jong Wang with the Philharmonia under Thomas Sanderling (Accentus – to be reviewed in the next issue), recorded just a couple of months after this Gringolts performance, utterly different in style, vibrant, warm and expressive where Gringolts is svelte, bright and ethereal. Wang’s coupling is a romantically inclined account of the Sibelius Concerto, so if it’s the Concerto you want rather than an all-Stravinsky programme, Wang will also do nicely; but when it comes to choosing a thorough survey of Stravinsky’s violin music, Gringolts’s mastery of the composer’s idiom makes his CD and its earlier companion credible front-runners, or at the very least level-pegging with the excellent though rather less comprehensive Marwood collection. BIS’s SACD sound is superb.
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