UK Naxos Quotes February 2005
8.557428 Brahms Symphony No. 1
“The performances, though,
have the same uncomplicated virtues as those she conducted on the south coast;
sharp-profiled rhythms, clean-cut textures and neat, if just occasionally perfunctory,
phrasing, combine to keep the music moving forwards at all times. Exuberant
in the Academic Festival Overture, starkly dramatic in the Tragic, the orchestral
playing is consistently first class.” - Andrew Clements, The Guardian, 4/02/05
“Alsop brings to the opening
of the symphony an unusual intensity, a quality that characterises the whole
of this bold and insightful account. The slow movement is beautifully phrased
and the celebrated brass chorale in the finale is followed by a silky-smooth
statement of the famous string melody.” - Jeremy Nicholas, Classic FM Magazine,
March 2005
“There’s much to admire
here: the brisk drama she brings to the first movement, her fine generation
of tension on the way to the recapitulation; the sympathy and intimacy with
which she treats the inner movements. As it is, anyone needing a first-rate
budget Brahms First may snap it up with confidence.” - Calum MacDonald, BBC
Music Magazine, March 2005
“The sound is full, warm
and accommodating. These are humane, affectionate performances from which browsers
and bargain-minded first-time buyers should derive a good deal of pleasure.”
- Richard Osborne, The Gramophone, March 2005
“Marin Alsop is one of those
conductors whose individual style is sufficient to justify yet another Brahms
cycle. Here, with the LPO at its sweet-sounding best, she delivers a warm and
shapely reading of the First. Refusing to be hurried, she sculpts the gorgeous
solos in the slow movement with loving care. It’s a gigantic, uplifting performance.
Her dark-hued account of the Tragic Overture and rousing reading of the Academic
Festival Overture have just as much finesse, and the recording is first class.”
- Stephen Pettitt, The Sunday Times, 20/02/05
“Marin Alsop makes a welcome
return to the traditional European repertoire with the launch of a complete
cycle of Brahms’s symphonies for the ever-enterprising budget-price label Naxos.
And it gets off to a very promising start with this sweeping, richly detailed
account of the first symphony, its majestic themes expansively realised, the
composer’s inner angst never far beneath the surface. With the Academic and
Tragic overtures thrown in as a welcome bonus, this is the start of a
series that should prove well worth collecting.” - Anthony Holden, The Observer,
27/02/05
8.557499 Stravinsky Oedipus Rex; Les Noces
“The Oedipus is a powerful
account, driving home the fateful tragedy of the plot. Martyn Hill is a lyrical
Oedipus, making light of Stravinsky’s cruelly demanding writing, and Jennifer
Lane is a thrilling Jocasta. The singing from Simon Joly’s handpicked choruses
in both works is superb. Naxos is on to a winner here.” - Matthew Rye, The
Daily Telegraph, 5/02/05
8.557520 Schoenberg Concerto for String Quartet and Orchestra
“At the heart of this second
volume in Naxos’s Schoenberg series are two vocal treasures. Though the composer’s
chamber reduction of The Song of the Wood-Dove inevitably sacrifices
something of the original’s sumptuous late-Romantic grandeur, there’s an equal
gain in delicacy and intimacy, as this sensitive, impassioned performance shows.”
- Stephen Johnson, BBC Music Magazine, March 2005
8.559192 Cowell Piano, Chamber and Vocal Works Vols. 1
8.559193 Cowell Piano, Chamber and Vocal Works Vols. 2
“Naxos’s two Cowell releases
in its American Classics series make rewarding listening. The repertoire’s cross-section
is well-chosen. The performances by Continuum date from 1984 and the early 1990s;
their fire and beauty still burn brightly.” - Geoff Brown, The Times, 4/01/05
8.557530 Webern Symphony
“Craft’s reading of the
Symphony is thoughtful: following the metronome marks, he makes the Variations
finale go by in an intellectual flash. The Six Pieces for Large Orchestra are
brooding and colourful; the soprano Jennifer Welch-Babidge is compelling in
diverse canons, rhymes and songs. The quartet with tenor saxophone sounds as
wonderfully weird as ever.” - Paul Driver, The Sunday Times, 27/02/05
8.559414 Brubeck The Gates of Justice
“It’s a heartfelt piece,
performed with great devotion and energy.” - Philip Clark, Classic FM Magazine,
March 2005
“In overall performance
terms, however, the entire show is stolen by the glorious clarion-like voice
of cantor Alberto Mizrahi. The sound is spacious but never unwieldy.” - Roger
Thomas, BBC Music Magazine, March 2005
8.557491 Canteloube Chants d’Auvergne
“Véronique Gens delivers
a fittingly understated performance.” - Philip Clark, Classic FM Magazine,
March 2005
“Here’s a bargain. Her bright,
limpid and very French-sounding soprano has a freshness ideally suited to this
lovely, melodious, innocent music. Naxos has recorded a winner with the stylish
Lille orchestra.” - Hugh Canning, The Sunday Times (CD of the Week), 13/02/05
“Véronique Gens is the sensational
French soprano most often heard in Baroque repertoire, but here she pours herself
into the sensuous syrup of Canteloube’s Songs of the Auvergne. …with Gens’s
gorgeous, light yet earthy singing, it is a good bargain.” - Andrew Clarke,
The Independent, 19/02/05
8.557570 Tippett A Child of Our Time
“Faye Robinson, Sarah Walker
and Jon Garrison are splendid.” - David Cairns, The Sunday Times, 13/02/05
“Reissued to mark the centenary
of his birth, this 1991 recording benefits from eloquent soloists as well as
Birmingham’s prime choral and orchestral forces.” - George Hall, The Independent
on Sunday, 20/02/05
“The orchestra plays skilfully,
sympathetically, and with an appropriate bleakness of colour as it illustrates
the grey tones of Tippett’s own libretto. Even if this weren’t such a steal
at under a fiver, this CD should be on everyone’s shelves.” - Christopher Morley,
Birmingham Post, 21/02/05
8.557480 Rawsthorne Symphonies Nos. 1-3
“The performances under
David Lloyd-Jones are first rate.” - Andrew Clements, The Guardian, 18/02/05
“A massive repertoire-led
bargain. This is an ideal release for collectors.” - Music Week, 26/02/05
8.557040 British Guitar Music
“Graham Devine, who plays
with great sensitivity, strikes me as an ideal artist to continue Bream’s musical
legacy. On the evidence presented here, this young virtuoso has a very bright
future indeed. A fine recording – and at the usual Naxos bargain-basement price.”
- John Brunning, Classic FM Magazine, March 2005
“Graham Anthony Devine is
very much his own man, infusing his playing with a freedom and rhythmic vitality
born of years of teaching and playing throughout South America. This kind of
playing, allied with a beautiful tone and a searching musical intelligence,
sets up a nice frisson which perfectly complements the Spanish flavour with
which Lennox Berkeley’s surfeit of English restraint is riddled. Wonderful stuff.”
- William Yeoman, The Gramophone, March 2005
8.554842 Scarlatti Complete Keyboard Sonatas Vol. 7
“His [Scherbakov’s] are
full-blooded readings that take these stunning miniatures by the scruff of the
neck and don’t let go for a second. Scherbakov sounds as though he is reeling
from the excitement of a fresh discovery and compels us to listen along with
him.” - Julian Haylock, Classic FM Magazine, March 2005
“This latest selection –
one of the best so far – calls on the skilful young Russian pianist Konstantin
Scherbakov, whose pert, agile playing courts some startling dynamic extremes.
Scherbakov offers virtuoso Scarlatti and makes full re-creative use of the piano’s
expressive resources.” - Rob Cowan, The Independent, 21/02/05
8.557268 Bach Goldberg Variations
“Thank goodness, then, for
Jenö Jandó whose freshness and unforced musicianship ensure that the music never
collapses under the weight of its own expressive force.” - Julian Haylock,
Classic FM Magazine, March 2005
“Here, the pianist Jenö
Jandó does full justice.” - Colin Anderson, What’s on in London, 9/02/05
8.557589 Boccherini Cello Concertos Vol. 3
“Raphael Wallfisch proves
to be a most stylish and sympathetic performer. He has the necessary technical
armoury to cope with the fearsomely difficult writing in each concerto, but
also delivers a wonderfully expressive melodic line in the slow movements.”
- Erik Levi, BBC Music Magazine, March 2005
8.660105-06 Kálmán Die Csárdásfürstin
“This new recording boasts
a youthful cast and a cracking performance from Yvonne Kenny. Bonynge, in his
element here, catches the Viennese spirit without affectation or pomposity.”
- Andrew Stewart, Classic FM Magazine, March 2005
“He [Bonynge] brings out
to the full Kálmán’s highly charged rhythms, every detail of the exotic orchestration,
and the contrasts of mood between the fiery big numbers and the moments of melancholy
and sadness in the Acts 1 and 2 finales. This is magnificent operetta conducting!
His cast, too, is wholly admirable. Yvonne Kenny provides the vocal strength,
fire and beauty required by the title role, and the young soprano Mojca Erdmann
proves an attractive Stasi. At the low Naxos price, this is a quite wonderful
bargain.” - Andrew Lamb, The Gramophone (Editor’s Choice), March 2005
8.557432 Sammartini Il pianto degli Angeli della Pace
“Ferrari conducts with a
feel for the flow.” - Rick Jones, Classic FM Magazine, March 2005
8.557714 Wagner Opera Choruses
“This disc shows shows that
the company is still on fine form, and can make a healthy, rousing sound.” - Warwick
Thompson, Classic FM Magazine, March 2005
6.110075-76 Kalman The Gypsy Princess
“A superb new recording,
with Richard Bonynge conducting, features Yvonne Kenny in the leading role,
excellently supported by Michael Roider and Mojca Erdmann. Orchestral excerpts
from other Kalman operettas male attractive bonus tracks. In superb surround-sound
if you have the equipment and also as standard CD.” - David Denton, Yorkshire
Post, 18/02/05
8.110763 Beethoven Piano Sonatas Vol. 9
“The Ninth volume in Naxos’s
reissue of Schnabel’s pre-war Beethoven cycle, comprising the great final trilogy
of sonatas, shows few of the pianist’s faults and all of his transcendent virtues.
All three works receive riveting performances, but the C minor is particularly
memorable.” - David Cairns, The Sunday Times, 20/02/05
8.110300-01 Verdi La Traviata
“Maria Callas’s great recordings
live again, modern technology revitalising the 1050s sound when the young singer
was in her golden era. The sound is better than we dare hope, and at this price
a pure gift.” - David Denton, Yorkshire Post, 18/02/05
Naxos Music Quotes and Symphonic Poems– Naxos.com
|