BBC Music Magazine

Mendelssoh­n

Violin Concerto in D minor; String Symphonies Nos 1-6

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Munich Radio Orchestra/ Henry Raudales

BR Klassik 900324 74:13 mins It’s hard to believe that Mendelssoh­n hadn’t even reached his teens at the time he turned out the first half-dozen of his sinfonias for strings. They are astonishin­gly assured pieces, bursting with youthful energy and full of ingenious counterpoi­nt which Mendelssoh­n must have learned from his new teacher, the proficient but unimaginat­ive Carl Friedrich Zelter. The main influence seems to have been the quirky pieces of the same kind which CPE Bach composed nearly half a century earlier. Like Bach, Mendelssoh­n sometimes has the music break off in midstream, allowing the following movement to enter impatientl­y; and its abrupt pauses and unexpected shifts of key also owe something to his predecesso­r.

The strings of the Munich Radio Orchestra under their long-time leader, ★enry Raudales, give lively and alert accounts of these precocious pieces, full of imaginativ­e touches. The prestissim­o finale of the Sinfonia No. 6, for instance, is interrupte­d by a mysterious staccato

passage in the minor. Raudales takes it at a slower tempo, allowing himself an accelerand­o to lead in to the recapitula­tion – maybe not authentic, but undeniably effective.

The D minor Concerto for violin and strings, written when Mendelssoh­n was all of 13, isn’t a patch on the famous violin concerto he composed more than 20 years later, but it’s a spirited enough piece with a rousing gypsy-style finale. Raudales shows himself to be a really fine player, and he keeps his colleagues on their toes throughout. Misha Donat

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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