[ Decca / CD ]
Release Date: Friday 19 July 2019
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Nicola Benedetti's new album on Decca Classics features premiere recordings of two works written especially for her by jazz musician Wynton Marsalis: Violin Concerto in D and Fiddle Dance Suite for Solo Violin.
Benedetti performs Violin Concerto in D with The Philadelphia Orchestra under the baton of Cristian Măcelaru who has collaborated with the violinist to perform the work six times. The concerto was co-commissioned by the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO), Ravinia, LA Philharmonic, National Symphony Orchestra Washington, Gewandhausorchester Leipzig and Netherlands Radio Philharmonic. Benedetti performed the world premiere with the LSO under conductor James Gaffigan in London in November 2015.
Marsalis' Violin Concerto in D is in four movements and draws on the entire sweep of Western violin pieces from the Baroque era to the 21st Century. It explores Benedetti's and Marsalis' common musical heritage in Celtic, Anglo and Afro-American folk music and dance. The work revels in the magic of virtuosity and takes inspiration from Nicola's life as a travelling performer and educator. Each of the four movements reveals a different aspect of Nicola's dream which becomes a reality through the long-form storytelling of the performance
"Marsalis gives his muse, Nicola Benedetti, plenty to get her teeth into. A couple of big cadenzas tap into her Celtic roots and show off her technical prowess…[Fiddle Dance Suite] sits somewhere between Bach's unaccompanied Partitas and a Celtic shindig…though the jazzer's personality is reflected in the way it feels like music created in the playing of it. Honestly, it's hard to believe it's written down at all." Gramophone
"Benedetti lend[s] every drop of her skill and artistry to a monster confection fondly written for her by Wynton Marsalis, the jazz trumpeter and composer who has moved so far beyond the eight-bar blues that he has written an oratorio lasting two and a half hours." Times
"I really enjoyed both these intriguing, unusual and incontrovertibly spectacular pieces. I truly hope they find a life beyond the release of this disc. Who would have thought that a trumpet master could have written so idiomatically and pungently for solo violin?" MusicWeb Recommended
Wynton Marsalis (*1961)
Violin Concerto in D Major
Rhapsody
Rondo Burlesque
Blues
Hootenanny
Nicola Benedetti, Philadelphia Orchestra, Christian Măcelaru
Fiddle Dance Suite
Sidestep Reel
As the Wind goes
Jones' Jig
Nicola's Strathspey
Bye-Bye Breakdown