McAlister Matheson Music Contact us Order form Home page
About us Discount Scheme Special Offers Reviews Gramophone Editor's Choice Top Ten Newsletter Recommended Recordings Concerts in Edinburgh

CD Reviews

A · B · C · D · E · F · G · H · I · J · K · L · M · N · O · P · Q · R · S · T · U · V · W · X · Y · Z · Collections

Bartok Mackerras
Bartók - Music for Strings, Percussion & Celesta
Bartók - Divertimento
Kodály - Dances of Galánta
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Mackerras
Linn CKD234

Release date August 2004

Bartók's pair of masterpieces written for Paul Sacher's Basle Chamber Orchestra makes an obvious coupling on record. Sir Charles Mackerras's new version with the SCO comes hard on the heels of Nikolaus Harnoncourt's fine recording with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe. The contrast of approach between the two is particularly evident in the Divertimento. I've often noticed that while foreign - especially American - performers tend to emphasise the strikingly powerful, chunky rhythms to be found in Bartók, Hungarian performers tend to treat the rhythms with a lighter touch, bringing out the lyricism in the music; compare, say, the approaches of the Hungarian and Juilliard Quartets to the string quartets and you'll soon see what I mean. Sir Charles's approach is close to the native Hungarian examples; for instance, that of János Rolla and the Franz Liszt Chamber Orchestra on Hungaroton. Harnoncourt, perhaps surprisingly given his mid-European roots, is much more angular - 'modern' if you like. At a tempo several notches below Bartók's prescribed quaver=88 Sir Charles achieves an extraordinary atmosphere in the work's molto sostenuto second movement, especially in the rustling 'nature music' at the return of the principal theme (at Bar 56). It's a fine account of one of Bartók's most genial inspirations, although in the wide open spaces of the Usher Hall it is not always possible to hear the contrast between the concertino and ripieno passages with ideal clarity. In a recent interview, Harnoncourt observed that the Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste is '...more difficult than Le Sacre' adding that Ferenc Fricsay demanded 25 rehearsals for it, insisting that the work couldn't be done with less. Neither of the new recordings avoids a sense of strain in this fiendishly hard piece; perhaps after all it is better - safer anyway - to do it with a slightly larger body of strings. Unlike Harnoncourt, Sir Charles includes a bonus - and a substantial one - in the shape of Kodály's lovely Dances of Galánta. It's a fine showcase for the SCO's excellent principal clarinet, Maximiliano Martin, who shapes the memorable rondo theme exquisitely. The Kodály was recorded in Greyfriars Kirk, and is I think the best recording I've heard from that venue.

Reviewed by Sandy Matheson