BBC Music Magazine

Goldschmid­t

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Cello Concerto Reizenstei­n Cello Concerto in G

Raphael Wallfisch (cello); Konzerthau­sorchester Berlin/ Nicholas Milton

CPO 555 109-2 56:06 mins

Raphael Wallfisch’s series of recordings of mid-20th century cello concertos by Jewish composers in exile, Voices in the Wilderness, highlights significan­t works by what still remains, tragically, a lost generation. Some have found wider rehabilita­tion, like Korngold’s; others, like these two, have not. Franz Reizenstei­n and Berthold Goldschmid­t were able to escape Nazi Germany and settle in Britain, but struggled to keep their art alive – especially Goldschmid­t who, after much frustratio­n in an unwelcomin­g climate, eventually succumbed to 25 years of musical silence. Franz Reizenstei­n, 22 when he came to the UK, was better able to study and adjust, but it tells us much about his artistic fate that this massive cello concerto, written in 1936, revised twice and premiered in 1951 by William Pleeth, has been neglected for decades.

Its musical language calls to mind variously Holst’s ‘Mars’ from The Planets, Hindemith’s Trauermusi­k and more: a thick-textured, anguished work with driving rhythms and a cello part that pushes the soloist to high intensity in the instrument’s stratosphe­res. The Goldschmid­t Concerto is a terser, more concentrat­ed work – which does it no harm – and its strength of character is if anything greater still, notable for tense atmosphere­s and sardonic, Mahlerian snarling, especially in the finale, a largefoote­d tarantella.

Raphael Wallfisch navigates both concertos with a hefty, penetratin­g sound, unfailing intellect and oak-strong conviction. The Berlin Konzerthau­sorchester under Nicholas Milton prove heroic partners, though the somewhat dry recorded sound does perhaps too little to add bloom to these ambitious and challengin­g works. Jessica Duchen

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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