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Bela Bartók: Concerto for Orchestra; 3 Village Scenes; Kossuth
Bela Bartok, Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
Bela Bartók: Concerto for Orchestra; 3 Village Scenes; Kossuth
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

A new recording of a work as often recorded as the Concerto for Orchestra should offer something unusual, as well, and this disc does. Kossuth, a 20-minute symphonic poem, was the 22-year-old composer's first major orchest...  more »

     
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Amazon.com
A new recording of a work as often recorded as the Concerto for Orchestra should offer something unusual, as well, and this disc does. Kossuth, a 20-minute symphonic poem, was the 22-year-old composer's first major orchestral composition. The conception owes much to Richard Strauss and the style to Liszt, but there are plenty of hints of material that show up in his mature works. The Village Scenes is a particularly exciting choral-orchestral expansion of a work originally for voices and piano, and the Concerto of course, is enormously popular. Fischer is a firm and skilled conductor, and his orchestra is made up of Hungary's finest players. The performances are thoroughly convincing; unlike many non-Hungarians, these players seem to take the composer's folk-based rhythms for granted, and do not exaggerate them. Despite enormous competition, this well-recorded performance of the concerto, along with the rarities also included, is well worth investigating. --Paul Turok
 

CD Reviews

SYNOPSIS OF A CAREER
DAVID BRYSON | Glossop Derbyshire England | 07/08/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"First - the quality of the recording. Bartok even more than most 20th century composers benefits from vividness and presence in the recorded sound. This 1997 production is wholly admirable in this respect, and all the way through each of the three items presented at that. This would have been wasted on indifferent playing, but no danger of anything of the kind. The Budapest Festival Orchestra strikes me as a superb ensemble, with solo instruments giving the fullest support to Bartok's claim to have written a `concerto' for them, and a brilliant blend of tone in all the countless ways in which composer calls for that.



In the first item there is a chorus as well. The Village Scenes (Wedding, Lullaby, Lads' Dance) are the composer's own arrangement of what had started as songs for solo voice and piano. The work is from the composer's maturity, written after the uncompromising Miraculous Mandarin, and it embodies a special combination of his interests by that stage. He had painstakingly collected and categorised folk-songs from the entire Balkan region, and these naturally form the basis of the pieces. The style in other respects is `modernistic' without being forbidding, and it is possible to detect some influence of Stravinsky, but that may be so or not. The combination of styles possesses a special attractiveness of its own, and these little pieces are much easier for a new listener to come to terms with than is the slightly forbidding Miraculous Mandarin. The production has not seen fit to give us the words, and I can't imagine why not. No doubt the general idea of each song is fairly obvious, but the texts are short and this seems a slightly pointless saving.



Next up is the Concerto for Orchestra itself, and the full effect of the recording is felt with the entrance of the full orchestra. The opening will give you at once the sense of what is to follow, with the tone awesomely impressive and the sense of perspective in the sound completely superb. So it goes on. The percussion sound at the start of the allegretto second movement is usually captured well, sometimes very well indeed, but I doubt I ever heard it sound as good as this. The brass tone in the Elegy is noble and affectingly beautiful, and the strings in the Intermezzo have a sumptuous depth to them. The finale barrels along at top speed, as of course it should, and the sheer distinctness of the busy violin writing is a pleasure to hear. This disc is a Gramophone magazine 'Critics' Choice', and no wonder. I just thought that the phrase quoted from the citation `...the players are being driven to the very limits of their abilities...' makes it all sound more effortful and strenuous than it seemed to me. I hear no sense of being driven at all. No doubt the orchestral parts are more demanding, even for today's players, than are those in, say, Messiah, but it is all handled not just with aplomb but with a near-contemptuous ease.



One thing that I hope will do a lot to commend this release is the early symphonic poem Kossuth. Lajus Kossuth made an abortive attempt in the mid-19th century to achieve independence for Hungary from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the theme represents Bartok's early patriotic sentiments before his outlook turned internationalist. In size, in the way it is put together and in style generally the work is strongly reminiscent of the contemporary works of Strauss. In musical worth it seems to me also that it can stand up in such company, and I would call it enormously superior to Schoenberg's Pelleas und Melisande. It is not a work one hears very often, for no good reason that I can think of, and Fischer and the Budapest Festival players do it proud.



One way and another this disc seems to me to have a great deal to commend it. Just as a performance, this seems to me a Concerto for Orchestra easily equal to Solti's (and not greatly different in approach), and it has a clear edge in recorded quality. The Village Scenes are fascinating, but the inclusion of Kossuth ought to be a marketing master-stroke. What this combination of works does is to pinpoint three distinct stages of a great composer's career right up to his deathbed. The liner-note is quite helpful in taking us through his life-story in outline, and in general I think this is the version of the much-performed Concerto for Orchestra that I would give my recommendation to, partly for itself, partly for what comes with it."
Bartok's development in a golden nutshell
I. J. J. Nieuwland | Amsterdam | 04/18/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"First of all, these are first-rate performances. Fischer's Concerto for Orchestra may well be the best recording currently in the catalogue. But what makes this recording stand out is that it offers such a complete picture of Bartok's artistic development, from nationalism through folk-oriented music to the style he found in the Concerto. Meanwhile, even in the Brahms/Straussian symphonic poem Kossuth (1904), you are frequently reminded of what was to come in later, more evidently Bartokian works, like the Concerto. It is a wonderful programmatic piece that has languished in obscurity for far too long.
Fischer's Budapest Festival Orchestra (nomen non est omen) effortlessly takes all the melodic turns of the Concerto without ever appearing rushed or succumbing to power play. If you haven't got a Bartok CD yet, make sure this is the first one."
A Definitive Recording of Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra
John Kwok | New York, NY USA | 05/17/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Ivan Fischer's splendid reading of Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra is among the finest I have heard; only Solti's recording with the London Symphony Orchestra - which I have not yet heard - might be better. Indeed, I have seen this recording listed elsewhere as among this work's definitive readings. The Budapest Festival Orchestra plays with ample enthusiasm and warmth, without forsaking technical excellence. Philips' sound engineers have made a vibrant, well-balanced recording. If you have room for only one reading of Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra in your collection, then this CD is it."