Catch-up guide | Five great wines from the classic 2023 vintage

Despite the compact disc crisis, classical music recording still survives quite well. The Press has selected five little gems to enjoy without moderation, including three first-rate orchestral creations.




Alessandrini rhymes with Monteverdi

Most of those who have encountered Monteverdi’s madrigals have lost their teeth, especially the British ensembles, whose disembodied purity floats light years away from the flesh-and-blood theater of the Cremonese composer. Undertaken around thirty years ago, the masterful complete nine books of madrigals by Rinaldo Alessandrini and his Concerto Italiano are finally published in full by Naïve. If the temporal extent of the process inevitably causes some – forgivable – disparities in the rendering, whether in terms of staff or sound recording, the physical commitment of the singers and the adequacy between the text and the vocal color leave you speechless. One of the boxes of the year!

Monteverdi – tutti i madrigali

Classical music

Monteverdi – tutti i madrigali

Rinaldo Alessandrini

Naïve, Believe Group

Lars Vogt, still alive

Some testimonies of the art of pianist Lars Vogt are still emerging here and there since his tragic and premature death in September 2022 at the age of 51, including his moving recording of Concertosbone 9 And 24 by Mozart, which we praised here at the beginning of the month, but also a disc dedicated to the chamber music of Schubert (on Ondine). The German musician is far from being new to the Viennese composer, and it shows. The different pieces, including the two trios and the Sonata “Arpeggione” (version for cello and piano), made with two lifelong accomplices, brother and sister Christian and Tanja Tetzlaff (violinist and cellist respectively), breathe life.

Shubert – Chamber Works

Classical music

Shubert – Chamber Works

Christian Tetzlaff, Tanja Tetzlaff and Lars Vogt

Ondine

Altinoglu ignites Franck

Franck is another composer who is difficult to do justice to. Her Symphony in D minor, recorded many times, is no exception. The music of the Belgian composer exiled in Paris, who never succeeded in making an operatic career, is infused with a fire which contrasts with the Epinal image of “Pater seraphicus” attached to the musician during his lifetime. One of the competitors in the running for the succession of Kent Nagano, the Frenchman Alain Altinoglu has in some way solved the squaring of the circle (at Alpha) by digging into the chromatic meanders of the score without sacrificing the main line and without losing lyricism. The Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra ideally brings the Franckist orchestration to life, all in chiaroscuro. As a complement, the “Symphonic Piece” of the oratorio Redemption and the symphonic poem The cursed hunter.

Franck – Symphony in D minor – Redemption – The cursed hunter

Classical music

Franck – Symphony in D minor – Redemption – The cursed hunter

César Franck, Alain Altinoglu

Alpha Classics

Tchaikovsky shines in the city of steel

Pittsburgh may only be 27e largest city in the United States, its symphony orchestra, which has included the Reiner, Maazel and Prévin of this world, is a jewel among the country’s orchestras, particularly since the arrival of the Austrian Manfred Honeck at its head in 2007. Their latest recording achievement is the Symphony no 5 by Tchaikovsky (under the Reference label), which they already recorded in 2006 (interesting but less successful) when the conductor was part of the selection process which would soon place him at the head of the Pennsylvanian phalanx. This new version is a miracle of cohesion and enthusiasm, all in a recording that ideally highlights the orchestral paste of the Russian composer. The conductor, who, unusually, signs the text of the libretto, also offers an arrangement of Five pieces for string quartet by Schulhoff.

Tchaikovsky – Symphony no 5 & Schulhoff – Five pieces

Classical music

Tchaikovsky – Symphony no 5 & ​​Schulhoff – Five pieces

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Manfred Honeck

Reference Recordings

A vibrant Roman panorama

The three great symphonic cycles of Respighi (Pines of Rome, Fountains of Rome And Roman festivals), among the peaks of orchestral writing in the 20the century, depict, in a sort of Italian impressionism, different elements of the folklore of the Italian capital (Trevi Fountain, Janiculum pines, Epiphany festival, etc.). It is a true work of craftsmanship that the American conductor Robert Treviño engages in these three scores in a new recording (Ondine) made with the National Symphony Orchestra of the Italian Broadcasting, of which he is the principal guest conductor . Far from making a cold mosaic (like Ozawa at Deutsche Grammophon), he emphasizes in abundance the sensual Respighian poetry. Fascinating !

Respighi – Roman Trilogy

Classical music

Respighi – Roman Trilogy

Ottorino Respighi, RAI National Symphony Orchestra, Robert Treviño

Ondine


source site-53