Tippett Concerto for Double String Orchestra; Berg Violin Concerto
Tippett may be unusual fare but this is a fine display of Kempe’s BBC work
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Leoš Janáček, Alban Berg, Michael Tippett
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: BBC Music Legends/IMG Artists
Magazine Review Date: 9/2007
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 78
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: BBCL4215-2

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Double String Orchestra |
Michael Tippett, Composer
BBC Symphony Orchestra Michael Tippett, Composer Rudolf Kempe, Conductor |
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, 'To the memory of an angel' |
Alban Berg, Composer
Alban Berg, Composer BBC Symphony Orchestra Edith Peinemann, Violin Rudolf Kempe, Conductor |
Sinfonietta |
Leoš Janáček, Composer
BBC Symphony Orchestra Leoš Janáček, Composer Rudolf Kempe, Conductor |
Author: Arnold Whittall
Did his mastery of mainstream European orchestral music leave Rudolf Kempe at a loss when confronted with Tippett’s Utopian synthesis of Tudor polyphony and English folksong in the Concerto for Double String Orchestra? Not a bit of it. There may be a bustling, Hindemithian weight to the first movement’s busy textures, an unexpected but not inapposite touch of Straussian opulence in the slow movement, and a lack of truly sprung rhythm in the finale. But this reading never sells Tippett short, and even in a rather airless recording, the symphonic ambitions that underpin the music’s pastoral and pictorial elements are very well realised.
The sound quality in the Berg Concerto is similarly constrained, yet the strengths of the performance cannot be denied. By some standards Edith Peinemann may appear self-effacing, but her technique is secure, her commitment to the piece absolute: in music which has ample flamboyance built in she is never timid or tentative. Kempe ensures that the first movement flows effortlessly around its evocations of the dance, and even if you prefer the later stages of the second movement to move on a bit more than they do here, Kempe’s flair for balancing the music’s intricate moods and even more intricate strands of texture is admirable. With a lively and eloquent account of Janácek’s Sinfonietta thrown in, clear as a bell despite the limitations of the recording, this is a refreshing disc: a reminder of the all-round virtues of the BBC SO in its post-Boulez phase, and of Kempe’s special ability to bring not just care but a degree of charisma to performances of 20th-century classics.
The sound quality in the Berg Concerto is similarly constrained, yet the strengths of the performance cannot be denied. By some standards Edith Peinemann may appear self-effacing, but her technique is secure, her commitment to the piece absolute: in music which has ample flamboyance built in she is never timid or tentative. Kempe ensures that the first movement flows effortlessly around its evocations of the dance, and even if you prefer the later stages of the second movement to move on a bit more than they do here, Kempe’s flair for balancing the music’s intricate moods and even more intricate strands of texture is admirable. With a lively and eloquent account of Janácek’s Sinfonietta thrown in, clear as a bell despite the limitations of the recording, this is a refreshing disc: a reminder of the all-round virtues of the BBC SO in its post-Boulez phase, and of Kempe’s special ability to bring not just care but a degree of charisma to performances of 20th-century classics.
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