Happy Birthday
Ideal musical dessert after an evening’s heavy listening, with a mass of humorous asides and some exquisite playing
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Peter Heidrich, Ladislav Kupkovic, Franz Waxman, Vato Kakhidze, Adrien-François Servais, Alfred Schnittke, Teddy Bor
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Nonesuch
Magazine Review Date: 4/2003
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 67
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: 7559-79657-2

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Polka |
Alfred Schnittke, Composer
Alfred Schnittke, Composer Gidon Kremer, Violin Kremerata Baltica |
Elegy in G (in honour of Ivan Samarin) |
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Kremerata Baltica Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Composer |
Variations on Auld Lang Syne |
Franz Waxman, Composer
Franz Waxman, Composer Gidon Kremer, Violin Louis Lortie, Piano Marta Sudraba, Cello Ula Ulijona, Viola |
Souvenir |
Ladislav Kupkovic, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Kremerata Baltica Ladislav Kupkovic, Composer |
Variations on 'God Save the King' |
Adrien-François Servais, Composer
Adrien-François Servais, Composer Gidon Kremer, Violin Marta Sudraba, Cello |
Variations on "Happy Birthday" |
Peter Heidrich, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Kremerata Baltica Peter Heidrich, Composer |
Blitz Fantasy |
Vato Kakhidze, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Kremerata Baltica Lasma Muceniece, Vocalist/voice Vato Kakhidze, Piano Vato Kakhidze, Composer |
McMozart eine kleine bright moonlight night musik |
Teddy Bor, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Kremerata Baltica Teddy Bor, Composer |
Author: Rob Cowan
Tbilisi-born Vato Kakhidze provides the mellowest strand with his Blitz Fantasy (1999) – ‘so titled because it was composed in a very short time’ – folk-inspired, richly harmonised, melancholic and subtly seasoned with a pinch of jazz. Schnittke’s racy opening Polka (1979) was composed in a trice for Gennadi Rozhdestvensky’s son, and Peter Heidrich’s ‘Happy Birthday’ Variations (1994) is a Face the Music-style sequence fashioned ‘in the manner of…’ Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Schumann and a host of varied genres. A real hoot, though not as much as Franz Waxman’s ‘Auld Lang Syne’ Variations, composed for a 1947 New Year’s Party and premièred on the night by Jascha Heifetz, William Primrose, Gregor Piatigorsky and Waxman himself at the piano. Waxman’s 13-minute, four-movement Piano Quartet calls on Mozart, Beethoven and Bach for the rib-tickling first three movements while the finale – a spot of real genius – is a ‘Hommage to Shostakofiev’, ‘Shosta…’ quoting his First Symphony and Piano Trio, ‘…ofiev’, his Second Violin Concerto.
The Paganini disciples Servais and Ghys provide ‘God Save the King’ Variations (c1850), not especially memorable as music but exceptionally well played by cellist Marta Sudraba and, in particular, Kremer himself. Teddy Bor’s 1991 McMozart’s Eine Kleine Bricht Moonlicht Nicht Musik takes the opening of Mozart’s first movement and threads it, rondo-like, among various Celtic songs. Tchaikovsky’s amiable if repetitive Elegy dates from 1884 and was later re-used as part of his Hamlet incidental music, and Ladislav Kupkovic’s Souvenir of 1971 superimposes gypsy-style gestures atop the bouncing strings accompaniment to Strauss’s Perpetuum mobile.
But, really, you have to hear it for yourself…the flashes of wit, the sighs, the zany juxtapositions, the many seductive shades and colours. One’s listening attitude should reflect the spirit in which this CD was made: in other words, listening for fun – the sort of fun that also makes you ponder, at least momentarily. And of course there’s the playing, which is consistently first-rate.
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