BBC Music Magazine

NIELSEN

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Flute Concerto; Clarinet Concerto; Aladdin Suite

Samuel Coles (flute), Mark van de Wiel (clarinet); Philharmon­ia Orchestra/ Paavo Järvi

Signum Classics SIGCD 477 69:21 mins

Carl Nielsen’s two late woodwind concertos are performed here by the Philharmon­ia Orchestra with its own principals, in live recordings

(no applause) at the Royal Festival Hall in London. Both works were conceived as portraits of their first soloists. Samuel Coles neatly personifie­s the fastidious Gilbert Jespersen, maintainin­g elegance and integrity in response to the intrusions of the orchestra, including a particular­ly obnoxious bass trombone. The controlled orchestral playing and the natural sound balance create a nice sense of chamber-music interplay between the soloist and his colleagues – including, sensibly, a solo violin rather than a whole section for the flickering runs at 2:35 in the first movement. Mark van de Wiel is equally convincing as the choleric Aage Oxenvad, responding angrily to the orchestra, and in the virtuoso cadenzas equally capable of picking a fight with himself. Unfortunat­ely, the side drum, which frequently eggs him on, all but disappears from the balance at lower dynamic levels.

A rival account of the concertos by the New York Philharmon­ic with its principals under Alan Gilbert, on Dacapo, boasts equally fine solo and orchestral playing, but the recording shines more of a spotlight on the soloists (and on a larger-than-life trombone). That disc completes the set of Nielsen’s concertos with an outstandin­g account of the Violin Concerto by Nikolaj Znaider. This one adds a colourful studio recording of the Suite from the music for the play Aladdin, with its Ivesian depiction of ‘The Marketplac­e in Ispahan’ in four superimpos­ed, unrelated strands of music. Anthony Burton

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