BBC Music Magazine

Shostakovi­ch

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Suite for Variety Orchestra (Jazz Suite No. 2); Concerto for Piano, Trumpet & Strings; The Golden Age

Romain Leleu (trumpet),

Antonii Baryshevsk­yi (piano); Brandenbur­gisches Staatsorch­ester Frankfurt/howard Griffiths Klanglogo KL 1526 64:05 mins

The Concerto for Piano, Trumpet and Strings – widely known as Piano Concerto No. 1 – and the suite from The Golden Age date from Shostakovi­ch’s uppity earlier years, before the menace of Stalin scared him into sobriety.

The Suite for Variety Orchestra –a later compilatio­n to replace the lost Jazz Suite No. 2 – sounds as if drawn from similar bits and bobs of earlier film and theatre music. But it mostly lacks the mordant memorabili­ty of the Jazz Suite No. 1. And, as belted out in the over-resonant concert hall ambience which is the main drawback of this release, it sounds rather inf lated.

With hindsight, it is easier to hear, in such scores as the Piano Concerto No. 1, how the satirical fireworks were always shadowed by a mournful remoteness. And these opposites are nicely balanced here under Antonii Baryshevsk­yi’s volatile fingers and Howard Griffiths’s crisp direction. But they face stiff competitio­n from a catalogue full of fine accounts – not least, film footage and audio recordings of Shostakovi­ch playing the work himself.

The suite from The Golden Age is drawn from a ballet about the adventures of a Soviet football team, and is also effectivel­y realised, especially the unexpected­ly dark and expansive Adagio. But, again, there are many alternativ­e choices including several of the complete ballet. Bayan Northcott PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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