Page 326 - Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Coverage Book 2023-24
P. 326

31 March 2024



               Musical no man’s lands


               Two violin concertos fail to inspire
               LEBRECHT'S ALBUM OF THE WEEK
               31 March, 2024
               By

                   •  Norman Lebrecht






               ★★★☆☆/★★☆☆☆


               Writing a violin concerto is no easy matter. Look no further than Beethoven, who composed
               just the one and turned it into all-out war between soloist and orchestra. Other romantic-era
               composers took note and never attempted a second concerto — or, if they did, never
               succeeded. Mendelssohn, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Dvorak, Sibelius, Elgar put all they had to
               say in one violin concerto. The stock of concertos has remained small as a result, and not for
               want of trying. Every few months, an ambitious violinist will retrieve a lost score from
               oblivion in the hope of increasing the supply.


               The Belgian Eugène Ysaye (1858-1931), a legendary violinist, made two early attempts — a
               Poème for violin and orchestra and a full-blown violin concerto. Both have been unearthed
               by the French virtuoso Philippe Graffin and recorded with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic
               Orchestra.

               The results are agreeable, but that’s as far as it goes. After a few minutes of ticking off
               themes by Mendelssohn and Brahms, the works meander into a no man’s land where the
               listener can detect neither purpose nor personality. There is nothing wrong with these scores
               except a lack of urgency. Maybe that’s why Ysaye left them to be finished by other hands.

               Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924), a powerful pianist and mighty intellectual, was an imposing
               composer of orchestral works. But when he tried to write a violin concerto in the same D-
               major key as Brahms he fell head-first into an imitative trap. His line of argument is enticing
               and the instrumental test considerable. There is even an English folksong in the opening
               movement. But no sooner does the piece start to flow than the shadow of Brahms falls heavy
               on the hand and Busoni beats a retreat. Francesca Dego plays beautifully for 23 minutes, with
               the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Dalia Stasevska. They follow up with the
               Brahms concerto which, even in an under-characterised performance, eclipses all that went
               before. So it goes.
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