Lutosławski reviews
Lutosławski • R Schumann • Tchaikovsky: Cello Concertos
Lutosławski: Symphonies Nos 2 & 3
Hannu Lintu completes his Lutosławski symphony cycle in style
Lutosławski: Cello Concerto; Dutilleux: Tout un monde Iointain
Lutosławski • Penderecki: Complete music for violin and piano
Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra perform Lutosławski & Brahms
Lutosawski’s Concerto for Orchestra was composed using a Bartókian model and incorporating folk music in order to satisfy the authorities in communist Poland at a time (1954) when the doctrine of socialist realism was still in place. But Lutosawski preserved his integrity in a piece that also points towards some of his later stylistic traits, and in this newest version of an often-recorded work Miguel Harth-Bedoya steers a skilful line in reconciling these various elements.
The Lutoslawski Quartet perform Grazyna Bacewicz's Complete String Quartets - 1
Lutosławski
Krystian Zimerman has recorded Lutosławski’s Piano Concerto before, even for the same label: as dedicatee, he not only gave its premiere in Salzburg in 1988 but made the first recording under the composer’s baton soon afterwards. He has lived with the work ever since, and over a quarter of a century on his performances of it mix complete authority with fresh, questing spirit, as if he were laying out the notes for the first time. So there is not just room but need for another recording from him, especially with such outstanding forces as the Berlin Philharmonic.
Lutosławski
A Panufnik & Lutosławski Quartets
The striking opening of Andrzej Panufnik’s First Quartet – a powerfully attacked unison followed by a series of fragmentary conversations – immediately shows the intensity of this performance and the richness of the recording. Sonority and instrumental colour are as important as melody and harmony: it’s fearsomely exposed writing, and the Tippett Quartet barely puts a foot wrong in the harmonics, glissandi, rustling tremolandos, and gradually emerging passion, before the music subsides back on to the note where it started.
Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works, Vol. 4
Penderecki • Lutoslawski
Lutoslawski Orchestral Works, Vol. 3
On this latest Lutosawski release from Chandos there is a welcome disconnect between the first work and the rest of the programme. It opens with the Little Suite (1950), which predates even Lutosawski’s popular Concerto for Orchestra and shows the young composer already grappling with – and slightly circumventing – the demands of socialist realism. Based on folk melodies collected in south-east Poland, its bracing colours receive a performance of fresh vitality here from the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Edward Gardner.
Lutosławski
The Symphonic Variations from 1938 already show the young Lutosławski’s expertise in colourful orchestration. Here Edward Gardner and the BBC Symphony, backed up by glittering sound, do this work proud, from the folk-like opening flute theme, through its varied treatments. Better known are the Paganini Variations, usually heard in their original two-piano version, rather than this much later concertante arrangement. Louis Lortie is an ideal soloist, with the clarity of touch familiar from his recordings of the French repertoire, but also the power for the bigger gestures.
Lutoslawski: Chantefleurs et Chantefables
Lutosławski’s Chantefleurs et Chantefables is one of his best-loved scores. It makes a fitting climax to this programme of music for solo voice and orchestra, the second disc in Edward Gardner’s Lutosławski series. Premiered at the Proms in 1991, Lutosławski’s penultimate work consists of nine miniatures conjuring up animals and plants from a child’s perspective, and the BBC SO’s performances here sparkle brilliantly. Lucy Crowe deploys an impressive palette of soprano colours.
LutosŁawski: Concerto for Orchestra
As chief of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Latvian conductor Mariss Jansons has made it his mission to broaden Munich’s experience of East European music. All three performances here were recorded live in 2008 and ’09, and Lutosławski’s Concerto for Orchestra lives up to its title in a performance where every musician indeed plays like a soloist.
Lutoslawski: Orchestral works
Classic recordings under the composer’s taut direction, which remain consistently impressive and, in the Concerto for Orchestra and later masterpieces such as Livre and Mi-parti, truly thrilling. Anthony Burton
Lutoslawski: Orchestral Works Vol 1
The BBC SO had a long association with Lutosawski, but made only a few commercial recordings with him as conductor. One of them was Chain 3, which they revisit here, with sound clearer than the 20-year-old DG version with the composer in charge, though there’s little to choose between them as performances.
Christian Poltéra plays Dutilleux & Lutoslawski
In programming this pair of concertos Christian Poltéra inevitably courts comparison with the 1975 EMI disc of Rostropovich, for whom both works were written.
We can dismiss thoughts of Swiss elegance vying with Russian wildness: both players do wildness and elegance with equal conviction, and in technique there’s nothing to choose between them.
Gershwin, Lecouna, Copland, Dvor‡k, Novacek, Ravel, Liebermann, Liszt, Lutoslawski, Ginastera, Rachmaninov, Stravinsky
disc, the fresh-faced Irish-American
siblings and their canny management
haven’t changed their admirable tune.
Brushing aside the few mildly cheesy
moments first – Jeffrey Shumway’s
five-piano interlacing of familiar
spirituals according to Copland
and Dvo?ák, an arrangement of a
Rachmaninov romance which starts
off promising the big tune from the
Second Concerto, and some rather
abrupt leaps between numbers from
Stravinsky’s Firebird – the rest is in no
Lutoslawski, Yuste, Debussy, Poulenc, Nielsen, Romero
Scottish Chamber Orchestra,
Maximiliano Martín, has an
attractive tone, reliable intonation
and nimble technique. All that’s
missing here, recorded with fidelity,
is an incisive, aggressive edge.
Without it, the two slow numbers
among Lutos?awski’s five Dance
Preludes come off better than the
fast movements with which they
alternate, the withdrawn opening of
Debussy’s Rapsodie is more appealing
than its explosive end, and the