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 ·
Shostakovich
Shostakovich - Cello Concerto No.1
Shostakovich - Cello Sonata
Han-Na Chang; London Symphony Orchestra / Pappano
EMI 332 4222

Release date February 2006

Several recent concerto projects – notably Harmonia Mundi’s excellent Dvorák series – have coupled a concerto with a major chamber work. In 2003, the Korean cellist Han-Na Chang recorded a superb pairing of Prokofiev’s Symphony-Concerto and the Cello Sonata for EMI, with Antonio Pappano and the LSO. She has followed this with an equally collectable Shostakovich CD, coupling the First Cello Concerto with the Cello Sonata. Any new recordings of the First Cello Concerto are likely to be put in the shade by Rostropovich’s electrifying 1959 recording, made a few weeks after the premičre while on tour in America (with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra). Han-Na Chang can’t match Rostropovich’s superhuman power – probably no cellist in history could – but she is enormously impressive, and in no sense out-muscled by Pappano’s full-on accompaniment. Like Rostropovich, with whom she studied (and indeed recorded the Rococo Variations at the age of 13!), Chang takes a very serious view of this piece. Although Shostakovich described the opening movement as having the character of a ‘jocular march’, in Chang’s hands it sounds edgy and obsessive. Whether or not you agree with Joachim Braun’s view that the concerto belongs to a ‘dissident’ group of works, centred around the song-cycle From Jewish Folk Poetry, it’s clear from this performance that desperation is always close to the surface of the music. The LSO, hugely experienced in this repertoire, produce playing of walloping impact. Antonio Pappano joins Chang as accompanist in the 1934 Cello Sonata, a beautiful and entirely characteristic piece. Once again Chang is superb, playing with tremendous bite in the Mahlerian scherzo, and she and Pappano have a lot of fun with the Keystone Kops music in the finale. Full, punchy sound and good liner notes by Eric Roseberry. Not to be missed!

Sandy Matheson