Stravinsky / Prokofiev: Violin Concertos

Stravinsky / Prokofiev: Violin Concertos cover $35.00 Out of Stock
2-4 weeks
add to cart

IGOR STRAVINSKY / SERGEI PROKOFIEV
Stravinsky / Prokofiev: Violin Concertos
Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin), London Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladimir Jurowski

[ Naive / CD ]

Release Date: Monday 2 September 2013

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

Gramophone and BBC Award-winner Patricia Kopatchinskaja records exclusively for Naïve. Releases to date have included Beethoven's Violin Concerto with Philippe Herreweghe, a CD entitled 'Rapsodia' which explores the roots of George Enescu's music with examples of Moldovan and Romanian folk music. Her most recent release was an all-Hungarian disc featuring concertos by Bartók, Ligeti and Eötvös which has won the concerto category in the Gramophone Awards 2013.

Patricia's high profile in the UK has been enhanced by the recent James Naughtie interview in BBC Music Magazine plus there's a summary of PR activity below.

The two violin concertos coupled on this recording display as many affinities as they do divergences. Both stem from creators in conflict with their native Russia - one choosing to return there, the other settling permanently in exile; both belong to the aesthetic of the 'return to order' observed from 1920 onwards and characterised by the reappropriation of models from the past. If Prokofiev preserves the traditional bases of the concerto, he combines them with a search for a new lyricism. As for Stravinsky, he reworks tried and trusted models while offering a deliberately neutral, distanced expressivity.

"I can't remember when I enjoyed a CD more than this. Patricia Kopatchinskaja - I'll refer to her as KP from here on if you don't mind - is a young Moldovan-born violinist, who is really a stupendous talent. The programme on this disc gives her ample opportunity to display that. From the start, it is clear that there is a lot more to her than glittering technical accomplishment. That quality is present in spadefuls, but is simply used to back up a truly outstanding imagination. She projects the character of these two works exceptionally vividly. The key to this may be suggested by her witty little vignette in the note booklet, where she imagines herself at a masked ball. There she meets two intriguing characters who turn out to be the 'souls' of the two concertos on this disc.

As the first 'soul' says, the Stravinsky begins with a slap. It is, I suppose, a 'neo-classical' work, but one dominated by the composer's glorious sense of humour and fun. KP enters into it with joyous abandon, so that the whole thing does indeed become a huge musical party. It's hard to imagine a better performance than this, and it's followed up by a cadenza on track 5 which has, in point of fact, quite little to do with the Stravinsky, yet continues the general high spirits. In this concoction of her own, KP is joined by the leader of the LPO, Pieter Shoeman; the pair of them are clearly having a wonderful time, and the enjoyment is infectious. The concerto does have its more serious moments, and these she delivers with beauty and sensitivity, providing the necessary depth of characterisation.

The Prokofiev is a somewhat darker work - or certainly one with more shadows. Here, I was impressed with the concentration shown by the young soloist. The first movement can seem somewhat episodic, but that is not a problem here, and the thoughtfulness of the main theme and the glorious lyricism of the second are bound together into a convincing whole. The slow movement is now - justifiably - famous, even reaching the status of becoming one of the small number of 'modern' works heard on Classic fm. KP approaches it in an entirely fresh way. Listen to the daring pianissimo of the opening, almost entirely without vibrato, making the whispered entry of the orchestra with the same music all the more magical. The excellence of the playing here is a good point to emphasise that the orchestra's contribution to the disc is of the very highest order, as is the accompanying by the conductor Vladimir Jurowski.

The twitchy finale is also given tremendous colour and vitality. The castanets - which I suppose may have been a polite nod to the Spanish audience of the Madrid première - sound not so much like reminders of Spanish folk music as of dancing skeletons, an idea once again suggested in KP's little story.

There is a sense of discovery, of spontaneous re-creation of these two masterpieces. Totally stylish yet wholly new; great playing and a truly outstanding issue." (Recording of the Month MusicWeb Dec 2013)

"The pungency of her playing is what thrills the most, from the opening chord's slap in the face...Jurowski and the LPO bring similar bite to the orchestral component, with each instrumental line clear and glinting. The performance is irresistible, from first to last...This is a violinist with something more important to offer than dazzling technique. It's called character." The Times, 25th October 2013 *****

"From the start, it is clear that there is a lot more to her than glittering technical accomplishment. That quality is present in spadefuls, but is simply used to back up a truly outstanding imagination...There is a sense of discovery, of spontaneous re-creation of these two masterpieces. Totally stylish yet wholly new; great playing and a truly outstanding issue." MusicWeb International, 4th December 2013

"Kopatchinskaja brings [virtuosity] to the [Stravinsky] in spades, but she also shatters the image of the work as a neo-classical homage to Bach...Her whole approach to Stravinsky...brings his world close to Prokofiev's...where Kopatchinskaja seems to be feeling her way into the music...A wonderful disc." BBC Music Magazine, January 2014 *****

"One feels that with every phrase she has succeeded in making the [Prokofiev] concerto her own...Throughout both concertos, conductor and orchestra appear to support with enthusiasm Kopatchinskaja's vision of the music, with many distinguished solo contributions...Not to be missed." Gramophone Magazine, January 2014

Tracks:

Prokofiev:
Violin Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 63

Stravinsky:
Violin Concerto in D