EMI
Classics Today - Your Online Guide to Classical Music
Search Reviews
Discographies and Collections
Welcome
Classical World News
Concert Reviews and Features
Ad Index
Link to ArkivMusic.com

ROBERTO GERHARD
Harpsichord Concerto; Piano Concerto; Nonet
Ursula Dütschler (harpsichord); Albert Attenelle (piano); various

Orquestra simfònica de Barcelona i nacional de Catalunya

Lawrence Foster

Auvidis-Montaigne- 782107(CD)
Reference Recording - This One

rating

The recent upsurge in interest in Roberto Gerhard's music on disc must warm the heart of every lover of this great modern composer. The virtues of the two competing series of recordings, one on Chandos, the other on Auvidis Montaigne, at times have been complimentary. While generally excellent, the Chandos series has not as yet given any attention to the larger chamber works such as the Nonet, and its recording of the Harpsichord Concerto was its one spectacular failure to date. Gerhard's music is exceptionally difficult to perform, and his aural imagination was so sensitive and that an idiomatic reproduction of the detailed indications in his scores requires very extensive preparation. The Harpsichord Concerto demands hair-trigger reflexes from the soloist, and also requires the most delicately sensitive of accompaniments. When it gets them, as here, the results are magical, an evocative tapestry of sound that mingles the night music of Bartók with memories of the Spanish Romantic Nationalists as seen through the expressionism of the Second Viennese School.

And through it all, there is that exquisite formal control and emotional urgency of utterance that is uniquely Gerhard. Sure, it's "difficult" music, but so very, very complete, and thus so satisfying to anyone willing to give it the time it deserves. The Nonet, another late masterpiece scored for the unusual combination of wind quintet plus trumpet, trombone, tuba, and accordion, brilliantly displays Gerhard's ability to take an apparently disparate collection of instruments and create from them a veritable sonic cosmos. Finally, the transitional Concerto for Piano and Strings predates Gerhard's late masterpieces, and shows his debt to Bartók most clearly. As with the Harpsichord Concerto, these performances all do the music proud, and anyone who cares about the best contemporary music really should hear them.

--David Hurwitz



JOSEPH HAYDN
MICHAEL HAYDN
Jasper de Waal (horn); Jörgen van Rijen (trombone)
Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra
Henk Rubingh
Channel Classics

THE BALKAN PROJECT
Songs & Dances arranged by various composers, including Carlos Rafael Rivera, Vojislav Ivanovic, Boris Gaquere, Atanas Ourkouzounov, others
Cavatina Duo--Eugenia Moliner (flute); Denis Azabagic (guitar)
Cedille

ALAN HOVHANESS
Trinity College of Music Wind Orchestra
Keith Brion
Naxos

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
Malin Hartelius, Martina Janková (soprano); Anna Bonitatibus (mezzo-soprano);
Javier Camarena (tenor) Ruben Drole (baritone); Oliver Widmer (bass-baritone)
Zurich Opera House Chorus
& Orchestra
Franz Welser-Möst
Arthaus Musik

RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
The Choir of Clare College Cambridge
The Dmitri Ensemble
David Willcocks
Albion Records


Search Reviews
ABOUT US ABOUT THE RATINGS WELCOME HOME

Review Digest

© 1999-2010 ClassicsToday.com. All rights reserved.