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- From: rtut@troi.cc.rochester.edu (Raymond Tuttle)
- Subject: Two new discs with Igor Kipnis on Chesky - reviews
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.003827.22486@galileo.cc.rochester.edu>
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- Nntp-Posting-Host: troi.cc.rochester.edu
- Organization: University of Rochester (Rochester, NY)
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 92 00:38:27 GMT
- Lines: 87
-
- I don't think that the world has been screaming for still more
- recordings of Vivaldi's "Four Seasons," but a new one from Chesky
- Records (CD78) has enough interesting features to escape redundancy
- and excel in a crowded marketplace.
-
- The performers are an ensemble from the Connecticut Early Music
- Festival, led from the keyboard by harpsichordist Igor Kipnis. The
- violin solos are played by Jorg-Michael Schwarz. They play Vivaldi's
- work on antique instruments, or their replicas, with just one person
- per part.
-
- Now, I know that many people, including myself, are tired of anemic
- "original instruments" butchering music from the Baroque, Classical,
- and even the Romantic eras, as if the existence of the instruments
- were sufficient justification for listless and uninspired performances
- or recordings (usually from England). It's a pleasure to report that
- Kipnis and Co. have recorded a "Four Seasons" with guts, and I don't just
- mean violin strings.
-
- The booklet reproduces the four sonnets that Vivaldi wrote to
- accompany his four concertos, and even lets the listener know, by
- means of timings, which specific parts of the music illustrate which
- specific portions of the text. Zephyrs breathe, brooks murmur, dogs
- bay, storms rage and drunkards snore with an uncannily pictorial
- vividness, thanks to Kipnis and the Connecticut Early Music Festival
- Ensemble. This, after all, is program music, and they don't shirk their
- illustrative duties.
-
- Technically, the musicians sound like they are playing the hell out of
- their instruments - people who want a merely pretty "Four Seasons"
- should look elsewhere. These performances are gritty, giddy and very
- exciting. The relatively small size of the ensemble does nothing to
- lessen the music's impact; in fact, it is a bonus to hear each of
- Vivaldi's parts in such bold relief.
-
- The disc is brought to a total timing of over 62 minutes with two more
- concertos by Vivaldi; his Flute Concerto in D, Op. 10, No. 3 ("Il
- Gardellino," or "The Goldfinch") sings happily under the fingers of
- soloist and CEMF co-founder John Solum, and his Harpsichord Concerto
- in A, RV 780, receives its first recording here. This latter work is
- actually the composer's adaptation of a concerto for violin and cello
- (RV546). It's a hard-driven little concerto, and Kipnis and the CEMF do
- it to a turn.
-
- Chesky's recording was made in Harkness Chapel at Connecticut College
- and it sounds great. Much as I appreciate Chesky's work reissuing great
- performances from the past, I applaud their new recordings even more
- strongly. Of all the "Four Seasons" that I have heard, I would
- recommend this one for the excellence of both the performance and the
- recording. I hope that Chesky has the opportunity to record more with
- these artists.
-
- Kipnis solos on another recent Chesky release (CD75), this one
- containing 15 harpsichord sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti. Mr. Kipnis
- plays a total of five different Hubbard & Broekman instruments
- designed after historical Flemish, German, Italian, English and French
- models. Each has its own timbre, as is made clear by Chesky's
- recording, which eschews the very close miking typical of so many
- harpsichord discs. In fact, Chesky cautions listeners not to play this
- disc too loudly in order to appreciate the differences between models.
-
- With Kipnis' selection of Scarlatti sonatas on an Angel CD apparently
- out of print, this disc is especially welcome. Kipnis is an intelligent
- player, and knows how to present this music in all its charm and
- variety. The faster sonatas display his crackling virtuosity, and the
- mellower ones have plenty of sensitivity. Both the pairing of sonatas
- and the alternation between different instruments make this disc very
- easy to listen to in one sitting, even for those who normally don't
- respond to the harpsichord.
-
- The informative program notes to both of these releases are a huge
- improvement over what Chesky has offered in the past. Could it be that
- Chesky is launching a strike against Dorian Records to claim the status
- of America's best audiophile label? This should be fun.
-
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- --
- **************************************** Raymond S. Tuttle
- "Dunkel ist das Leben, ist der Tod," University of Rochester
- but it's nothing to get depressed about! (still with his two little
- **************************************** white mice).
-