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Volume 25 Issue 9 - July / August 2020

July/August issue is now available in flipthrough HERE, bringing to a close 25 seasons of doing what we do (and plan to continue doing), and on stands early in the week of July 5. Not the usual bucolic parade of music in the summer sun, but lots, we hope, to pass the time: links to online and virtual music; a full slate of record reviews; plenty new in the Listening Room; and a full slate of stories – the future of opera, the plight of small venues, the challenge facing orchestras, the barriers to resumption of choral life, the challenges of isolation for real-time music; the steps some festivals are taking to keep the spirit and substance of what they do alive. And intersecting with all of it, responses to the urgent call for anti-racist action and systemic change.

July/August issue is now available in flipthrough HERE, bringing to a close 25 seasons of doing what we do (and plan to continue doing), and on stands early in the week of July 5. Not the usual bucolic parade of music in the summer sun, but lots, we hope, to pass the time: links to online and virtual music; a full slate of record reviews; plenty new in the Listening Room; and a full slate of stories – the future of opera, the plight of small venues, the challenge facing orchestras, the barriers to resumption of choral life, the challenges of isolation for real-time music; the steps some festivals are taking to keep the spirit and substance of what they do alive. And intersecting with all of it, responses to the urgent call for anti-racist action and systemic change.

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ut she kept performing and composing in secret. For many years<br />

following her death her music remained virtually unknown, even in<br />

the Netherlands.<br />

Plave’s CD contains Bosmans’ complete works for cello and piano,<br />

music that reflects a personal style that mixed German Romanticism<br />

with French Impressionism. The 1919 Cello Sonata is a four-movement<br />

work with a strong, brooding opening movement. The Trois<br />

Impressions from around 1926 – I. Cortège; II. Nuit Calme; and III. En<br />

Espagne – feature a quite lovely middle movement and some dazzling<br />

piano writing in En Espagne that not only reflects Bosmans’ abilities<br />

as a pianist but also draws terrific playing from Sato.<br />

Two short pieces – Chanson and the lovely Arietta – complete<br />

the CD. Plave gives effective and committed performances, strongly<br />

supported by Sato’s fine accompaniment.<br />

Interestingly, all nine tracks appear to be available on YouTube<br />

under Top Tracks – Leah Plave.<br />

There’s another terrific CD of the two<br />

Shostakovich Violin Concertos, this<br />

time with the brilliant and always<br />

exciting Alina Ibragimova with the<br />

State Academic Symphony Orchestra<br />

of Russia ‘Evgeny Svetlanov’ under<br />

Vladimir Jurowski (Hyperion CDA68313<br />

hyperion-records.co.uk).<br />

The Concerto No.1 in A Minor Op.77<br />

was written for David Oistrakh in 1947/48, but withheld due to the<br />

infamous Zhdanov decree and not premiered until October 1955. It’s<br />

a four-movement work, with an ethereal, uneasy opening Nocturne,<br />

a demonic Scherzo and a massive central Passacaglia leading to the<br />

famous, towering solo cadenza. Ibragimova is superb throughout,<br />

opting to play the opening theme of the following grim-humoured<br />

Burlesque on the violin, as originally scored by Shostakovich<br />

before he re-scored it for orchestra alone at Oistrakh’s request to<br />

enable the soloist to at least wipe his brow. It’s the first commercial<br />

recording thus.<br />

The Concerto No.2 in C-sharp Minor Op.129 was written in 1967 for<br />

Oistrakh’s 60th birthday, albeit a year early. There’s simply beautiful<br />

playing from Ibragimova in the middle movement, and another tough<br />

cadenza handled superbly.<br />

Great sound, great balance, dazzling playing and interpretation all<br />

add up to an outstanding disc.<br />

Violinist Katherine Hunka is the soloist<br />

as well as the director of the Irish<br />

Chamber Orchestra on a new CD of music<br />

for strings by Piazzolla, Schubert and<br />

Schnittke (Orchid Classics ORC100130<br />

orchidclassics.com).<br />

Leonard Desyatnikov’s arrangement of<br />

Piazzolla’s hauntingly beautiful The Four<br />

Seasons of Buenos Aires adds direct quotes<br />

from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons in what is almost a recomposition. The<br />

resulting work is extremely effective, drawing sumptuous playing<br />

from Hunka that is stylistic, warm and impassioned. The ensemble<br />

matches her in a vividly successful re-imagining of Piazzolla’s highly<br />

personal sound.<br />

Schubert’s lovely Rondo in A Major for Violin and String Orchestra<br />

D438 shows clear influence of Mozart’s violin concertos. The Schnittke<br />

work is Moz-Art à la Haydn from 1977, described in the notes as<br />

combining “an unfinished fragment by Mozart – his Pantomime<br />

Music K446 – with the theatricality of Haydn’s Farewell Symphony.”<br />

The noise of the players changing positions is deliberately audible,<br />

complete with heavy footsteps, wailing and crying!<br />

A beautifully idiomatic performance of Oblivion, one of Piazolla’s<br />

most celebrated and traditional tangos, provides a lovely close to an<br />

excellent CD.<br />

The London-based Russian violist Yuri<br />

Zhislin is the conductor and arranger as<br />

well as the soloist on Russian Colours, a<br />

CD of music from the Russian Romantic<br />

era arranged for string orchestra and<br />

featuring his own ensemble, the Camerata<br />

Tchaikovsky (Orchid Classics ORC100136<br />

orchidclassics.com).<br />

Zhislin is the fine soloist in his own transcription<br />

of Alexander Glazunov’s Concerto in E-flat Major for Alto<br />

Saxophone and String Orchestra Op.104 from 1934, a fairly brief fourmovement<br />

work that doesn’t appear to lose anything in the transcription,<br />

the warmth of the viola – especially in the middle register<br />

– being very close to the saxophone timbre.<br />

Anton Arensky’s three-movement String Quartet No.2 in A<br />

Minor Op.35 from 1894 is the other major work, its second movement<br />

Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky proving so popular that<br />

Arensky himself arranged it for string orchestra as Op.35a. It’s the<br />

only track on the CD not arranged by Zhislin.<br />

Three perennial favourites complete a beautifully played and highly<br />

enjoyable CD: the Andante from Tchaikovsky’s String Quartet No.1<br />

from 1871; Borodin’s Nocturne from his 1881 String Quartet No.2; and<br />

Rachmaninoff’s 1912 Vocalise Op.34.<br />

Maxim Rysanov is the viola soloist and also<br />

conductor of the Sinfonietta Riga on Viola<br />

Concerto/String Symphony ‘Voices’ featuring<br />

music by the Latvian composer Pēteris Vasks<br />

(BIS 2443-SACD naxosdirect.com).<br />

The Concerto for Viola and String<br />

Orchestra from 2014/15 was dedicated to<br />

Rysanov and premiered by him in 2016;<br />

the performance here is a world premiere<br />

recording. It’s a quite beautiful, highly tonal and deeply emotional<br />

work, in which Vasks “returns to two essential concepts: chant and<br />

monologue.” The opening movement rises to the heights of serenity<br />

and despair, with the second movement a joyful – but still minor-key<br />

– contrast. Despair seems to be the dominant factor in the final two<br />

movements.<br />

The Symphony for Strings was written in 1991 as Latvia, Estonia<br />

and Lithuania were breaking free from the crumbling Soviet Union.<br />

“The new beginning was difficult,” says Vasks. Certainly the work<br />

reflects that feeling, with tenuous openings to both the first and the<br />

fairly hostile middle movement, followed by a quite brutal third movement<br />

which eventually dies away to nothing.<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

Is This ~Nois<br />

~Nois<br />

Winner of top prizes from the<br />

Fischoff and M-Prize competitions,<br />

saxophone quartet ~Nois releases<br />

its debut album featuring the<br />

music of Chicago composers<br />

Frankenhorn<br />

Audrey Ochoa<br />

Trombonist Audrey Ochoa is<br />

a rising star on the Canadian<br />

jazz scene – she is decidedly<br />

captivating and original, and has<br />

dedicated herself to expertise<br />

while remaining relevant and lighthearted.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>July</strong> and <strong>August</strong> <strong>2020</strong> | 43

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