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Volume 26 Issue 7 - May and June 2021

Meet some makers (of musical things) - a live filmed operatic premiere of a Handel oratorio?; 20 years of Summer Music in the Garden, short documentary film A Concerto is a Conversation; choirs Zooming in to keep connection live; a watershed moment for bridging the opera/musical theatre divide; and more than 100 recordings listened to and reviewed since the last time.

Meet some makers (of musical things) - a live filmed operatic premiere of a Handel oratorio?; 20 years of Summer Music in the Garden, short documentary film A Concerto is a Conversation; choirs Zooming in to keep connection live; a watershed moment for bridging the opera/musical theatre divide; and more than 100 recordings listened to and reviewed since the last time.

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tradition, tinged with Lithuanian folk elements <strong>and</strong> a hint of early-<br />

20th-century modernism.<br />

The Lithuanian Vilnius Quartet, founded in 1965, gives wonderfully<br />

sympathetic performances, beautifully recorded with a full, resonant<br />

sound quality on a gorgeous CD.<br />

Peter Sheppard Skærved continues his<br />

fascinating exploration of outst<strong>and</strong>ing<br />

violins with The Great Violins Vol.4:<br />

Girolamo Amati, 1629, performing the Six<br />

Partias for solo violin from 1715 by Johann<br />

Joseph Vilsmaÿr (1663-1722) (Athene ATH<br />

23210 naxosdirect.com/search/ath23210).<br />

The Partias, all consisting of eight, nine<br />

or ten very short movements, are described<br />

as “an extraordinary bridge” from the solo compositions of German<br />

composers like Biber to the later masterpieces of Bach <strong>and</strong> Telemann.<br />

They receive beautifully nuanced performances in a generous CD of<br />

almost 82 minutes.<br />

As always, Sheppard Skærved’s booklet essay is remarkably erudite<br />

<strong>and</strong> informative, examining the use of scordatura <strong>and</strong> the emotional<br />

effects attached to specific key signatures in order to underst<strong>and</strong> the<br />

physical <strong>and</strong> emotional structure of the music.<br />

The 20-year-old Swedish violinist Johan<br />

Dalene, winner of the 2019 Carl Nielsen<br />

Competition, is joined by Norwegian<br />

pianist Christian Ihle Hadl<strong>and</strong> on Nordic<br />

Rhapsody, his second CD on the BIS<br />

label (BIS-2560 naxosdirect.com/search/<br />

bis-2560).<br />

A dazzling Presto from Sinding’s Suite im<br />

alten Stil Op.10 sets the tone for a recital<br />

bursting with strong, brilliant tone <strong>and</strong> outst<strong>and</strong>ing technique, with<br />

Hadl<strong>and</strong> an excellent partner. Stenhammar’s Two Sentimental<br />

Romances Op.28, three of the Six Pieces Op.79 by Sibelius, Nielsen’s<br />

Romance in D Major, Rautavaara’s Notturno e Danza <strong>and</strong> Grieg’s<br />

Sonata No.1 in F Major Op.8 complete an impressive recital disc from<br />

a player from whom we will clearly be hearing a lot more in<br />

the future.<br />

On A French Connection violinist Daniel<br />

Rowl<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> pianist Natacha Kudritskaya<br />

present what the violinist calls “two<br />

wonderful, luscious, gorgeously romantic<br />

pieces, one a perennial favourite, the<br />

other still all too rarely heard” (Champs<br />

Hill Records CHRCD157 champshillrecords.co.uk).<br />

The latter is Chausson’s Concerto for<br />

Violin, Piano & String Quartet, the duo being joined by violinists<br />

Francesco Sica <strong>and</strong> Asia Jiménez Antón de Vez, violist Joel<br />

Waterman <strong>and</strong> cellist Maja Bogdanović in a passionate performance to<br />

open the disc.<br />

World-premiere recordings of effective arrangements of three<br />

Debussy Preludes by Craig White precede the “perennial favourite”:<br />

the Franck A Major Sonata. It does indeed turn up regularly on CD,<br />

but is nevertheless always welcome, especially in warm, sensitive<br />

performances like this.<br />

Cellist Yi-wen Zhang <strong>and</strong> pianist Nanyi<br />

Qiang have been collaborating since<br />

2002 <strong>and</strong> founded the DUO SHU in 2019.<br />

Their self-titled debut CD on the Blue<br />

Griffin label features two songs by Fauré,<br />

Schumann’s Five Pieces in Folk Style<br />

Op.102, Rachmaninoff’s Vocalise Op.34<br />

No.14, Dvořák’s Four Romantic Pieces<br />

Op.75 <strong>and</strong> Bartók’s Romanian Folk Dances,<br />

together with Longing for SHU by Weijie<br />

Gao (BGR581 bluegriffin.com).<br />

It’s a very pleasant disc with some passionate playing, particularly<br />

in the Dvořák, with a singing cello tone <strong>and</strong> crystal-clear piano<br />

playing, although the double-stopping passages in the cello sound a<br />

bit laboured in places.<br />

Chances are you’ve never heard Boccherini<br />

cello concertos sound the way they do on<br />

Cadenza, the new CD from cellist Sonia<br />

Wieder-Atherton that features the concertos<br />

No.3 in D Major G476, No.4 in C Major G477<br />

<strong>and</strong> No.6 in D Major G479 in small combo<br />

arrangements by Wieder-Atherton <strong>and</strong><br />

cimbalom player Françoise Rivall<strong>and</strong>. The<br />

other players are Amaryllis Billet (violin),<br />

Rémi Magnan (double bass) <strong>and</strong> Robin Billet (bassoon) (ALPHA667<br />

naxosdirect.com/search/alpha667).<br />

Wieder-Atherton says that incorporating the cimbalom results in<br />

our “hearing the dances, the infinite colours <strong>and</strong> the bursts of<br />

rhythmic music,” but it does seem an odd way to present Boccherini,<br />

especially when you add the lengthy cadenzas from various contributors<br />

with – at times – cimbalom, drones <strong>and</strong> finger cymbals, <strong>and</strong><br />

musical material from H<strong>and</strong>el <strong>and</strong> Stravinsky.<br />

Guitarist Aaron Larget-Caplan follows<br />

up his 2010 CD New Lullaby – 14<br />

Enchanting Ways to Fall Asleep with<br />

Nights Transfigured – Vol.2 of the New<br />

Lullaby Project, a second collection of short<br />

pieces by 14 different composers written<br />

for Larget-Caplan between 2009 <strong>and</strong> 2020<br />

(Stone Records 5060192781106 stonerecords.co.uk).<br />

Don’t be misled by the title. Although there’s obviously a general<br />

sense of calm throughout the CD, this isn’t a disc of music for children<br />

but a fascinating collection of exquisite contemporary miniatures for<br />

classical guitar that explore a wide range of musical languages <strong>and</strong><br />

often employ extended guitar technique, all of it beautifully played<br />

<strong>and</strong> recorded.<br />

Greek guitarist Pavlos Kanellakis is the<br />

soloist on Kaleidoscope, a recital of worldpremiere<br />

recordings of works by George<br />

Kontogiorgos (Naxos 8.579084 naxosdirect.<br />

com/search/8579084). The music is essentially<br />

tonal <strong>and</strong> very accessible.<br />

The five-movement Sea Vespers from 2015<br />

takes melodies from the composer’s songs<br />

from the 1960s <strong>and</strong> 1970s. Kanellakis is<br />

joined by cellist Vangjel Nina in the four-movement Cansonata from<br />

thewholenote.com/listening<br />

Romantic Cello<br />

Thomas Chartré <strong>and</strong> Serhiy Salov<br />

Through its interpretation<br />

of Brahms, Schumann <strong>and</strong><br />

Jenner, “The duo communicates<br />

musical intricacies effortlessly,<br />

compellingly <strong>and</strong> with a great<br />

sense of colour <strong>and</strong> style.”<br />

Yegor Dyachkov<br />

Rossini – 6 Sonate a Quattro<br />

Mark Fewer, Joel Quarrington,<br />

Yol<strong>and</strong>a Bruno, Julian Schwarz<br />

Written in 1804, these works were<br />

commonly performed by wind<br />

quartet. In 1954 Rossini’s original<br />

manuscripts were discovered<br />

showing the arrangement for<br />

string quartet.<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>May</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>June</strong> <strong>2021</strong> | 31

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