[ Chandos / CD ]
Release Date: Friday 1 November 2013
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.On this disc, we feature the works of three composers - Vincent d'Indy, Ernst Krenek, and Erwin Schulhoff - who all in the mid- to late-1920s adopted neoclassicism and chose to write works in the neo-baroque concerto grosso style, using a combination of a small orchestra and a small group of soloists. D'Indy wrote the Concert, his last orchestral piece, at the age of seventy-five. It combines a lean scoring and strong, lucid instrumental lines with romantic harmonic colouring. The disc also features the world premiere recording of the Concertino that Krenek wrote before he was forced, as a 'degenerate' artist, to leave Austria in 1938. In the Concerto doppio, Schulhoff turns to the concerto grosso because of its affinity with jazz, a musical genre that greatly influenced him, allowing him to break free from more conventional musical forms. The works are performed by the Academy of St Martin in the Fields led by Sir Neville Marriner, who are joined by the flautist Karl-Heinz Schütz, violinist Christoph Koncz, cellist Robert Nagy, and the pianist Maria Prinz who in 2011 came up with the idea behind this disc.
"The (Krenek) concertino immediately shows itself to be of much more rounded edges than the Schulhoff, with an interplay between the three solo instruments that displays the elegance, grace and humour that characterises the whole work. There is a clear jazz influence in the piano part, while the violin gets the sad tunes. I really enjoyed it, by some distance the best of the three works, but amazingly, this is its premiere recording. An interesting mix then, well played and recorded throughout, with the Krenek being the undoubted highlight. " (MusicWeb Oct 2013)
Indy:
Concerto for Flute, Cello, Piano and Strings
Krenek:
Concertina for Flute, Violin, Piano and Strings
Schulhoff:
Concerto doppio
for Flute and Piano