1930年代小提琴協奏曲,第一集 (巴伯/貝爾格/ 哈特曼)
吉爾.夏漢 小提琴
大衛.羅伯森 指揮
紐約愛樂管弦樂團
The 1930s was an incredibly rich decade for the violin concerto, thriving on what was the uncertainty of the age. Over 30 violin concertos materialized across the decade with well over a dozen, from Stravinskyand Berg's through to Barber's and Britten's concertos all commanding iconic status within the violinist's repertory.
Gil Shaham is the leading violinist of his generation. He was awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant in 1990, and in 2008 he received the coveted Avery Fisher Prize. In 2012, Gil was named "Instrumentalist of the Year" by Musical America, citing his "special kind of humanism". Combine this "humanism" with a flawless technique and his generosity of spirit, and the musical results are nothing short of inspired.
CD1. Gil's recording of the Barber Violin Concerto displays his trademark rich soulfulness as well as the sounds of urban America when called for, skyscrapers, sirens, clearly manifest themselves in the last movement. The weeping, if not lamenting, solo violin in the Berg concerto, harmonized with very poignant 12-tone chords, reveals emotionally charged heart on sleeve mourning in this recording. For Hartmann's Concerto funebre Gil is reunited with acclaimed Sejong Soloists, with whom he has recorded Mendelssohn's octet and Haydn concerti (CC08), the New York Times observing from a concert performance of the Hartmann that Shaham "perfectly characterised the work's anguished and occasionally angry spirit".
CD2. Stravinsky's Violin Concerto is a concerto with which Gil and conductor David Robertson have performed together countless times. The result is an interpretation which is luminous, light and dancing, The Times noting from this performance that "Shaham's interpretation was exceptionally spirited and fresh, always at one with the incisive accompaniment from Robertson's orchestra." Benjamin Britten's concerto is arguably the most challenging to play on this collection and is arguably the most sobering work here, and shows another side of Shaham's musical personality; a work with a martial-like drama, and for the most part a forceful bordering on violent execution of the work unfolds, interspersed, where called for, an ethereal sound world bordering on the surreal; the tonal ambiguity at the end of the third movement positively haunting. In concert the Chicago Classical Review notes, "This is music that fits Gil Shaham like a well-tailored glove."
1 SAMUEL BARBER Violin Concerto, Op.14 i Allegro
2 SAMUEL BARBER Violin Concerto, Op.14 ii Andante
3 SAMUEL BARBER Violin Concerto, Op.14 iii Presto in moto perpetuo
4 ALBAN BERG Violin Concerto i a) Andante
5 ALBAN BERG Violin Concerto i b) Allegretto
6 ALBAN BERG Violin Concerto ii a) Allegro
7 ALBAN BERG Violin Concerto ii b) Adagio
8 KARL AMADEUS HARTMANN Concerto funebre i Introduktion (Largo)
9 KARL AMADEUS HARTMANN Concerto funebre ii Adagio
10 KARL AMADEUS HARTMANN Concerto funebre iii Allegro di molto
11 KARL AMADEUS HARTMANN Concerto funebre iv Choral (Langsamer Marsch)
12 IGOR STRAVINSKY Concerto in D i Toccata
13 IGOR STRAVINSKY Concerto in D ii Aria I
14 IGOR STRAVINSKY Concerto in D iii Aria II
15 IGOR STRAVINSKY Concerto in D iv Capriccio
16 BENJAMIN BRITTEN Violin Concerto in D minor, Op.15 i Moderato con moto - agitato - Tempo primo -
17 BENJAMIN BRITTEN Violin Concerto in D minor, Op.15 ii Vivace - animando - largamente - Cadenza -
18 BENJAMIN BRITTEN Violin Concerto in D minor, Op.15 iii Passacaglia: Andante Lento (un poco meno mosso) |
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