BBC Music Magazine

Reformatio­n

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Mendelssoh­n: Symphony No. 5 (Reformatio­n); Stravinsky:

Ragtime; Fanfare for a New Theater; plus pieces by JS Bach/webern, Debussy/ravel, R Schumann/

Britten and Tarrodi

*Daniel Frankel, Yiva Larsdotter (violin), Samuel Coppin (cello), John Axelsson, Tom Poulson (trumpet); Västerås Sinfoniett­a/simon Crawford-phillips db Production­s DBCD187 56:49 mins

For all the spirited playing by the Swedish musicians of the Västerås Sinfoniett­a, or the driving force of their music director Simon Crawford-phillips, the individual performanc­es here are not this album’s chief selling point. Instead it is the programme’s smorgasbor­d: a buffet-style spread offering Mendelssoh­n’s meaty Reformatio­n Symphony, a spoonful of Schumann’s Violin Concerto, palette cleansers like Stravinsky’s Rag-time and Webern’s arrangemen­t of Bach’s Ricercar from The Musical Offering, and a final colourful, pungent dessert of Debussy’s Tarantelle Styrienne orchestrat­ed by Ravel.

The clue to the mystery lies in the collection title’s play on words, with Mendelssoh­n’s symphony commission­ed for the 300th anniversar­y of the Augsburg Confession (a milestone in Martin Luther’s Protestati­on Reformatio­n) followed by works not so much reformed as re-formed. Schumann’s spoonful – the lovely slow movement (soloist, Daniel Frankel) – gets in through Britten’s recently discovered tweaking of its indecisive last bars. Webern’s pointillis­t colours bring a fresh perspectiv­e to Bach; and so on, through the heady whirl of Ravel’s Debussy, to the sharp corners of Stravinsky’s 1964 Fanfare for a New Theatre and the disruptive clatter of Ragtime – not music, I suspect, that Martin Luther would have enjoyed. The brain is stimulated; the ears are teased; but for how many playings? Geoff Brown PERFORMANC­E ★★★ RECORDING ★★★

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