Gramophone Classical Music Awards 2020: the full report

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Gidon Kremer and Kremerata Baltica win coveted Recording of the Year for Weinberg symphonies

Tonight the Gramophone Classical Music Awards presented international talent with the industry’s top recording prizes. As Joyce DiDonato put it in her acceptance speech: ‘It goes without saying that I miss being in the same room with you all at this moment in time, but it doesn’t diminish what we’ve been doing behind the scenes - what we’re doing today to come together and still bring music to the forefront of our lives.’

In this unique year, Gramophone’s ceremony moved online with Gramophone’s Editor-in-Chief James Jolly joined by mezzo-soprano Kate Lindsey in the stunning setting of Glyndebourne to present a virtual celebration of this year’s recording crème-de-la-crème.

The Gramophone Classical Music Awards were presented in association with Apple Music, E Gutzwiller et Cie Banquiers, and official charity partner, Help Musicians UK.

The much-coveted Recording of the Year prize went to Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra with Gidon Kremer and Kremerata Baltica for their debut recording on Deutsche Grammophon of Mieczysław Weinberg’s Symphonies Nos 2 & 21. Weinberg (1919-96) is a Polish composer, once reportedly described by Shostakovich as ‘the best composer you’ve never heard’, whose music is enjoying something of a renaissance, in large part thanks to this recording, released in Weinberg’s centenary year. In an interview with Gramophone, Mirga said ‘When I think about recording, I feel a sense of responsibility about the fact that what we do stays there forever. Maybe one day I can dream about recording Mahler, but right now I have a feeling that we already have so much of that sort of thing. There’s much less … let’s call it “need” for another Beethoven cycle, than there is for the discovery of Weinberg’s music.’

Israeli-American violinist and conductor Itzhak Perlman was bestowed with the Lifetime Achievement Award. One of his students from Juilliard, Randall Goosby, gave a heartfelt speech about studying with ‘the greatest violinist who’s ever lived’, and the composer John Williams also paid tribute to Perlman in a speech, saying ‘This Award is certainly the reflection of decades of many great recordings that you’ve made […] It’s recognition of this great work that this Award comes to you as it should. I hope you can enjoy the significance of it, and recognise that these recordings have reached millions of people around the world who love you and love the spirit of the art that you’ve given them for so long.’

Having already won this year’s Instrumental Award for his Sony Classical recording of Beethoven piano sonatas, Igor Levit was also named 2020’s Artist of the Year. Levit’s highly acclaimed Beethoven was deservedly lauded by press and public alike, putting Levit firmly on the map as one of the great Beethoven interpreters of our time. In a statement about the sonata cycle, Levit said, ‘For me, this recording is a conclusion of my past 15 years. The literally life-changing encounter with the Diabelli Variations at the age of 17, which is effectively still ongoing, the daily engagement with Beethoven's sonatas, with Beethoven as a person, with myself, with the world in which I live - all that has also led to this recording.’ 

Welsh soprano Natalya Romaniw was named Young Artist of the Year. Following an impressive season of major role debuts including Cio-Cio San in the acclaimed Anthony Minghella Madam Butterfly for English National Opera (ENO) and the title role in Tosca and Iris with Scottish Opera. Last week she also starred in ENO’s highly anticipated ‘Drive & Live’ performance of La bohème, in which critics praised her ‘heartfelt’ Mimì. 

The Philadelphia Orchestra is this year’s Orchestra of the Year, an Award presented with Apple Music. The Orchestra was 23 years old when the first issue of Gramophone was published and has a long-held recording legacy of great renown. Re-energised by a conductor of extraordinary talent and great charisma, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, thousands of people have championed this deserving winner of the only award decided entirely by public vote, in a campaign supported by Apple Music playlists and Gramophone podcasts.

Only in its second year, the newly created award for Concept Album goes to ‘From the Ground Up: The Chaconne’ by Hugo Ticciati and o/modernt. The Award celebrates imaginative A&R, ear-catching programming and, above all, faultless execution, all of which is found in this album in which Ticciati has surrounded himself with instrumentalists ‘so at one with the chaconne repertoire’ (Gramophone). Particular mention also goes to the Shakespearean verses performed by actor Sam West, alongside Baba Israel’s energised rap poetry. 

This year’s Label of the Year is Alpha Classics, whose output over the past 12 months has been so exemplary, it has been impossible to ignore. With releases ranging from ‘What’s Next Vivaldi’? with Patricia Kopatchinskaja to Sarah Willis’s ‘Mozart y Mambo’ as well as this year’s Beethoven 250 and Recital Award winners, the label has continued to sign stellar artists over the past year, producing records of the highest quality underpinned by the inspired A&R of Alpha’s Didier Martin.

Gramophone gave its Special Achievement Award to Robert Bahr, the visionary founder of the hugely respected Swedish label BIS. The pianist Ronald Brautigam said in a video message during the ceremony, ‘If there’s anyone in the music industry who absolutely deserves this it’s got to be you.’ Robert said in his acceptance speech, ‘I prefer to take this as a tribute, not only to me, but to all classical record producers that there are. There are quite a number of them – and very good too […] It’s been my great, great pleasure to get to work with these people, to get to know them, to befriend them, to compete with them, to be inspired by them, and hopefully have inspired some of them myself.’

This year’s Awards also featured a special Beethoven 250 Award that went to the pianist Martin Helmchen, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin and Andrew Manze for their recording of Beethoven’s Piano Concertos Nos 2 and 5 on Alpha. Martin Helmchen accepted the Award in a speech, saying ‘recording something like this only makes sense in mutual spirit of curiosity, being willing to find these pieces as if they were new to us and discover the hidden mysteries that are still there, and that was exactly the spirit that made this whole project so inspiring and so exciting. It was a pure joy […] It is a privilege and I’m very grateful to be part of it.’

Danielle de Niese reveals the winner of the 2020 Recording of the Year Award alongside co-presenters James Jolly and Kate Lindsey at Glyndebourne

Broadcast on the Gramophone website & social media channels, as well as medici.tv, the event featured performances from winners past and present, including Bertrand Chamayou (winner of last year’s Recording of the Year), Igor Levit, Benjamin Grosvenor, Alexandre Kantorow, Natalya Romaniw & Lada Valešová, Carolyn Sampson & Joseph Middleton, and Stile Antico.

James Jolly, Gramophone’s Editor-in-Chief, said: ‘We may have been robbed of the opportunity to celebrate these award-winning artists, projects and creators in the physical company of our friends in the music world for the first time in over 40 years. But, spurred on by the constraints of putting on a major event in the midst of a pandemic, we rose to the challenge and proved that the music plays on and the artistry of these hugely talented individuals can be celebrated in style even when apart.’

Visit Gramophone Awards to find out more about this year's winners and to read the original Gramophone reviews

Gramophone’s Awards issue is published on October 7 and contains full information on the Awards and Award winners.

Gramophone’s special Awards podcasts are available on Apple Podcasts and wherever you find your podcasts, and features comment and discussion about all the Award winners.

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