Znaider, LSO, Pappano, Barbican

ZNAIDER, LSO, PAPPANO, BARBICAN Perfect depth and communication in Beethoven and Elgar

Perfect depth and communication in Beethoven and Elgar

Anger and fear in Elgar, introspection in middle-period Beethoven: these are undervalued qualities in each composer’s music. Yet such moods were vividly present in two hyper-nuanced interpretations last night. It was easy to believe that no other solo violinist in the world today strikes a finer balance between sweet tone in the upper register and overall strength than Nikolaj Znaider; and on this evidence it sounded as if Antonio Pappano, a perfect concerto partner and a master of symphonic light and shade, might have made an even better choice of LSO Music Director than Simon Rattle.

Coote, CBSO, Wilson, Symphony Hall Birmingham

COOTE, CBSO, WILSON, SYMPHONY HALL BIRMINGHAM Sonic ecstasy and symphonic power in an all-British programme

Sonic ecstasy and symphonic power in an all-British programme

Can it be true? Was this really the CBSO’s first performance of Bax’s The Garden of Fand? OK, Bax is hardly mainstream repertoire, and if Oramo or Rattle had conducted it, someone would have remembered. Further back in the orchestra’s 96-year history, though, surely Adrian Boult or George Weldon must have been tempted? The records are vague.

DVD: Ken Russell - The Great Composers

DVD: KEN RUSSELL - THE GREAT COMPOSERS Two of the greatest films about composers ever made, plus an interesting flop

Two of the greatest films about composers ever made, plus an interesting flop

The earliest film collected here, 1963’s Elgar, stands up incredibly well. Some of its quirks were imposed from above: fledgling director Ken Russell was initially employed by the BBC’s Talks Department and was discouraged from using actors in his documentaries. So Elgar is packed full of reconstructions of scenes from the composer’s life, though the actors never speak and there are no close ups.

Classical CDs Weekly: Elgar, Silvestrov, Hideko Udagawa

CLASSICAL CDS WEEKLY  A very English song cycle, Ukranian piano sonatas and a Japanese violinist tackles Baroque music both old and new

A very English song cycle, Ukranian piano sonatas and a Japanese violinist tackles Baroque music both old and new

 

Elgar: Sea Pictures, Polonia, Pomp and Circumstance Marches 1-5 Alice Coote, Hallé/Sir Mark Elder (Hallé)

Prom 75: The Dream of Gerontius, VPO, Rattle

A glowing ending to the Proms season with a celebration of British musical richness

And so it ends – with angels and archangels and “heart-subduing melody”. The Proms might not officially finish till tomorrow night, but this penultimate concert is always the true close of the season, and what better or more fitting an ending – especially on this most poignant anniversary – than Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius.

Prom 17: Hallé, Elder

PROM 17: HALLÉ, ELDER Valuable Proms premiere for Vaughan Williams’ equivocal vision of utopia

Valuable Proms premiere for Vaughan Williams’ equivocal vision of utopia

Roger Wright may be gone from the BBC Proms, replaced for now by a committee, but his legacy lives on. His zeal to recover areas of English musical culture that may be considered the festival’s birthright resulted last night in a first Proms performance of Sancta Civitas, which Vaughan Williams late in life accounted the favourite of his choral works.

The Dream of Gerontius, RSNO, Oundjian, Usher Hall, Edinburgh

THE DREAM OF GERONTIUS, RSNO, OUNDJIAN, USHER HALL, EDINBURGH Big-bottomed Elgar masterpiece just falls short of splendour

Big-bottomed Elgar masterpiece just falls short of splendour

To close its 2014-15 season the Royal Scottish National Orchestra chose the choral masterpiece that Elgar preferred not to call an oratorio, The Dream of Gerontius. Performances in Scotland are rare, whether this is because of Presbyterian unease with Catholic sentiment, or the unfashionable nature of big-bottomed Anglican choral textures, it is difficult to say. North of the border we are more likely to turn to Brahms’ German Requiem for spiritual consolation.

Ehnes, Armstrong, Wigmore Hall

EHNES, ARMSTRONG, WIGMORE HALL Flawless violin-and-piano duo in rich programme of works from around 1915

Flawless violin-and-piano duo in rich programme of works from around 1915

Violinists either fathom the elusive heart and soul of Elgar’s music or miss the mark completely. Canadian James Ehnes, one of the most cultured soloists on the scene today, is the only one I’ve heard since Nigel Kennedy to make the Violin Concerto work in concert, in an equally rare total partnership with Elgarian supreme Andrew Davis and the Philharmonia. Last night he found the same emotional core in the Violin Sonata at the end of a colossal programme with a no less extraordinary but much less widely known companion, the American pianist Andrew Armstrong.