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ClicMag

Rezension ClicMag N° 38 Mai 2016 | Pascal Edeline | May 1, 2016 La fluidité de la phrase et le raffinement sonore situent le Konzertstück op....

Une fois de plus, Holliger concilie l'aspect réfléchi, apollinien, de la lisibilité des lignes et l'aspect dionysiaque de la ferveur, de l'effusion lyrique émanant comme une voix unanime des solistes et de l'orchestre, mais sa direction solaire magnifiant le contraste et la clarté pourrait laisser de marbre les nostalgiques des timbres fondus, des legato sinueux, des élans remontant des profondeurs obscures, des tensions intériorisées, des paysages nimbés de mystère.
www.pizzicato.lu

Rezension www.pizzicato.lu 31/03/2016 | Guy Engels | March 31, 2016 Marc Coppey: Cello-Poesie

Kann das gut gehen? Aus so viel Legato kann eigentlich nur musikalische Pampe werden. Zugegeben, ich war zu Beginn skeptisch. Doch schon bald ließ ich mich eines Besseren belehren, ließ ich mich vom Farbenrausch begeistern und fesseln, den Marc Coppeys Cello verströmt. Coppey lässt seinen Bogen geschmeidig gleiten, zieht nie voll durch, macht nie Druck. Das Instrument kann frei atmen und seine schöne Kantabilität voll entfalten. Coppeys Musizieren hat etwas Sinnliches, ein inneres Feuer, das Haydns Musik jenes wunderbare Glimmen verleiht, jenes geheimnisvolle Licht, dem man willig folgt.

Die Interpretationen sind klar strukturiert, die Technik ist brillant, der Dialog mit dem Orchester makellos. Nur in dieser Einvernehmlichkeit, dem blinden Verständnis und Vertrauen können die vielen poetischen Glanzlichter gesetzt werden.

Dies gilt übrigens nicht nur für die beiden Haydn-Concerti sondern in gleichem Maße für das A Dur-Konzert von C.P.E. Bach.

Flexible, supple and sensually poetic performances of Cello Concertos by Haydn and CPE Bach.
Fanfare

Rezension Fanfare April 2016 | Peter Burwasser | April 1, 2016 This is volume five of Audite’s survey of the complete symphonic music of...

This is volume five of Audite’s survey of the complete symphonic music of Edvard Grieg, and not surprisingly, it continues to delight with excellent performances and wonderful surprises from the corners of this great composer’s output (not to mention the very familiar Peer Gynt music). This edition features two works for orchestra and voice, including six songs for soprano, and one for baritone. The six orchestral songs are a grouping of early works with piano accompaniment that the composer orchestrated in Copenhagen in 1895. They are exceptionally beautiful, with, typically for Grieg, a strong folk influence. Swedish soprano Camilla Tilling sounds very much in her element here, with her light bodied, lyrical soprano capturing the mood of the music nicely. The song for baritone, Den Bergtekne (The Mountain Thrall) was written for orchestra and voice, the only such example in Grieg’s output, according to the program notes. Norwegian singer Tom Erik Lie renders the music with the gravity of a Schubert song. The two Lyric Pieces, as well as the Norwegian Dances, are also orchestrations of familiar piano music. The Lyric Pieces sound a bit overweight in this garb, but the Norwegian Dances, originally for piano four hands, translate well.

No surprises here as far as Aadland and his Cologne musicians are concerned, and that’s a good thing, because previous releases have also featured lusty, deeply committed performances. Great engineering from Audite, also as usual (and I am only hearing it in standard CD playback). This is a terrific series.
Fanfare

Rezension Fanfare April 2016 | Huntley Dent | April 1, 2016 Two illustrious pianists with star-crossed careers are honored here, and acquit...

Two illustrious pianists with star-crossed careers are honored here, and acquit themselves with honor. The eminent Hungarian pianist Annie Fischer made her Swiss debut in Zurich when she was 14, but she was forced to spend the Nazi era in Sweden, as a Jewish artist in exile, and once she returned home in 1946, her touring outside Hungary was limited. This account of the Schumann Piano Concerto from 1960 was her only appearance at the Lucerne Festival; she had played the same work at her Zurich debut three decades previously. (Fischer appeared only once at the Salzburg Festival also, with the Bartók Piano Concerto No. 3 under Solti.)
Her playing is so adroit and natural—to the point of sounding effortless—that one easily believes Schumann was one of Fischer’s favorite composers. Her well-balanced interpretation flows in perfect accord with Giulini, who included among his talents the skills of a great accompanist. The Philharmonia, honed by Karajan since its founding, plays with a lovely, rounded tone. Perhaps the finale is a bit too relaxed and self-contained to fit Schumann’s marking of Allegro vivace, but this is a flawless reading in which cultivation and Romanticism are beautifully merged. Fischer is still undervalued outside Hungary, and this live performance is a major addition to her discography.

Leon Fleisher’s fate was to lose the use of the last two fingers of his right hand only months after this appearance at the Lucerne Festival in the summer of 1962 (the highly unreliable program notes attribute the onset of paralysis to a condition called “pianist’s neurosis”—let’s hope something was lost going from German to English). He was one of the brightest lights among post-war American pianists, and even though Fleisher was a pupil of Artur Schnabel’s, he approaches the Beethoven Second Piano Concerto with the cool, crystalline touch of Horowitz, who had a profound effect on that entire generation. The passagework is stunning, not just for clarity but also for the nuance Fleisher adds even when moving at top speed. His complete Beethoven concerto cycle with Szell has never left the catalog since the early 1960s, and on this occasion they remain aligned in preferring a fleet, Haydnesque approach, albeit with a fairly robust-sounding orchestra; there is minimal rubato and no slow down for second themes. The atmosphere of a live concert adds an extra touch of exuberance from both conductor and soloist.

Unlike Fischer, Fleisher returned several times to Lucerne, twice to play concertos for the left hand by Ravel and Prokofiev, then twice more, in 2008 and 2012, for solo recitals after he recovered the use of both hands. It’s worth nothing that on the second half of this 1962 concert Szell led a very fine reading of the Brahms First Symphony, previously released in Audite’s admirable series devoted to Swiss Radio broadcasts from the Lucerne Festival. Every installment to date has been warmly received by Fanfare critics.

Despite a few egregious passages, the program notes contain useful information. The recorded sound, which favors the piano considerably, is very good for a mono radio broadcast, affording a rich timbre to the instrument even if the orchestra is a bit thin and edgy, but only a bit. Artistically, the archives have yielded up two must-listen performances.
American Record Guide

Rezension American Record Guide May / June 2016 | Alan Becker | May 1, 2016 Many will be familiar with Fischer’s 1960 studio recording of the Schumann...

Many will be familiar with Fischer’s 1960 studio recording of the Schumann with Klemperer. This one with Giulini dates from the same year and comes to us from the Lucerne Festival. The performances are similar, though few will be surprised that the sound (particularly the orchestra strings) is better on the studio recording. Still, both are more than acceptable, particularly if you like Fischer’s more aggressive way with the concerto.

Fleisher’s way with the Beethoven is already well known from the studio set with Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra. That set is one of the marvels of Beethoven performance and has a recording that leaves nothing to be desired. This Beethoven 2 is similar, though few could make claims for its supremacy as an orchestral recording. The ad hoc ensemble plays well for Szell, and the piano sound here is quite good.

Could I recommend purchase of this recording? Well, yes and no. It is certainly a must for admirers of these artists who must have every recording they ever made. No if you already have the studio recordings. Still, I was seduced once again by Fleisher’s marvelous playing.
Der neue Merker

Rezension Der neue Merker 26. April 2016 | Dr. Ingobert Waltenberger | April 26, 2016 Robert Schumann hat Hochkonjunktur, gemeinsam mit Brahms ist er aktuell ein...

Alexander Lonquich am Flügel bringt genau jenen melancholisch-jubelnden Ton, jenes fantastische Fabulieren voller zarter Farben ein, „polarisierend zwischen Trotz und Melancholie auf der einen, Traum und Sehnsucht auf der anderen Seite.“ Heinz Holliger als Seele des Unterfangens ist ein idealer Dirigent und Begleiter, der sich dem Schumann‘schen Kosmos beeindruckend anverwandt hat.
The New Listener

Rezension The New Listener 09/04/2016 | Oliver Fraenzke | April 9, 2016 Perlen des Nordens

Eivind Aadland geht dem Orchesterwerk dieses grandiosen Komponisten auf den Grund, gemeinsam mit dem WDR-Sinfonieorchester Köln spielte er es auf fünf CDs für audite ein. Das Orchester spielt klar und durchhörbar, der Dirigent verzichtet auf alle unnötigen Romantizismen und überdehnte Tempi rubati. [...] Es entstehen vielfarbige Schattierungen und das Ganze wird nicht wie viel zu häufig zu hören in einem einzigen monochromen „Grieg-Klang“ verschmolzen.
The New Listener

Rezension The New Listener 09/04/2016 | Oliver Fraenzke | April 9, 2016 Perlen des Nordens

Eivind Aadland geht dem Orchesterwerk dieses grandiosen Komponisten auf den Grund, gemeinsam mit dem WDR-Sinfonieorchester Köln spielte er es auf fünf CDs für audite ein. Das Orchester spielt klar und durchhörbar, der Dirigent verzichtet auf alle unnötigen Romantizismen und überdehnte Tempi rubati. [...] Es entstehen vielfarbige Schattierungen und das Ganze wird nicht wie viel zu häufig zu hören in einem einzigen monochromen „Grieg-Klang“ verschmolzen.
The New Listener

Rezension The New Listener 09/04/2016 | Oliver Fraenzke | April 9, 2016 Perlen des Nordens

Eivind Aadland geht dem Orchesterwerk dieses grandiosen Komponisten auf den Grund, gemeinsam mit dem WDR-Sinfonieorchester Köln spielte er es auf fünf CDs für audite ein. Das Orchester spielt klar und durchhörbar, der Dirigent verzichtet auf alle unnötigen Romantizismen und überdehnte Tempi rubati. [...] Es entstehen vielfarbige Schattierungen und das Ganze wird nicht wie viel zu häufig zu hören in einem einzigen monochromen „Grieg-Klang“ verschmolzen.
The New Listener

Rezension The New Listener 09/04/2016 | Oliver Fraenzke | April 9, 2016 Perlen des Nordens

Eivind Aadland geht dem Orchesterwerk dieses grandiosen Komponisten auf den Grund, gemeinsam mit dem WDR-Sinfonieorchester Köln spielte er es auf fünf CDs für audite ein. Das Orchester spielt klar und durchhörbar, der Dirigent verzichtet auf alle unnötigen Romantizismen und überdehnte Tempi rubati. [...] Es entstehen vielfarbige Schattierungen und das Ganze wird nicht wie viel zu häufig zu hören in einem einzigen monochromen „Grieg-Klang“ verschmolzen.

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