BBC Music Magazine

Schoenberg & Brahms Violin Concertos

Malcolm Hayes is mightily impressed by Jack Liebeck’s performanc­e of this pair of violin concertos with the BBC Symphony

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‘Liebeck plays with astonishin­g command, allowing the music’s expression to speak with real freedom’

Brahms • Schoenberg

Brahms: Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 77; Schoenberg: Violin Concerto, Op. 36

Jack Liebeck (violin);

BBC Symphony Orchestra/ Andrew Gourlay

Orchid Classics ORC100129

77.15 mins

Propaganda, hostile or otherwise, regarding Schoenberg’s 12-note method of compositio­n has been a major distorting mirror around his music for almost a century now. So a release of this quality, while welcome in its own right, also amounts to a useful corrective in the sense that it enables each listener to assess the contents without someone else’s agenda trying to inf luence the situation.

Completed in 1936, a few years after its composer’s self-exile from Nazi Germany to the US, Schoenberg’s Violin Concerto is a radical but far from overstride­nt attempt to fuse together classical tradition and his personally evolved 12-note idiom. The result has strong links with the between-thewars, mildly modernist manner of composers like Hindemith and Kurt Weill.

That said, it isn’t always easy listening. Schoenberg must have been in ironic mode when he was asked why, in a work of this kind, he wasn’t composing in the style of Verklärte Nacht any more, and responded: ‘I am. But no one notices.’ The issue isn’t so much the music’s fairly benign modernism, more the combinatio­n of this with its compulsive hyper-invention – a manifestat­ion of the composer’s technical mastery, but sometimes a taxing listen for all that. The same is true of earlier, still essentiall­y tonal works like the symphonic poem Pelleas and Melisande and the Chamber Symphony No. 1, where this drive never lets up for long.

Then again, if you can accept the composer’s unyielding terms, there’s a rewarding experience on offer here too. When he wants, Schoenberg can allow into his music a lyrical streak that’s genuinely appealing – as in the second of the Violin Concerto’s three movements, where the soloist’s winsome opening theme is gently and beautifull­y recalled in the later stages. The orchestra’s accompanim­ent combines technical density with a unique Schoenberg­ian brand of sonic transparen­cy, as in the first movement’s closing bars. And while the finale is again packed with close-focus invention, it also has a kind of off-the-wall, freeflowin­g manner that’s another Schoenberg trademark.

All this presents fearsome technical demands to the work’s soloist. Jack Liebeck responds with astonishin­g command, allowing the music’s expression to speak with a real degree of freedom, even fantasy, so that

Liebeck finds beautiful light and shade in the quieter moments of the Brahms concerto

the solo part can interact with similarly deft accompanim­ent by the orchestra. The same qualities shine throughout a stellar interpreta­tion of Brahms’s masterwork. Liebeck’s approach here, while powerful and forthright, also finds beautiful light and shade in the quieter moments, and the finale’s dialogue scintillat­es between soloist and orchestra alike. Instead of Joseph Joachim’s first-movement cadenza (today virtually standard), Liebeck plays Fritz Kreisler’s – an exercise in relentless and rather baleful double-stopping that might not work so well for all, but a legitimate choice.

The recording finds a near-perfect balance between spaciousne­ss and detail, conveying every intricacy within a natural perspectiv­e. PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

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 ??  ?? Fearless virtuoso: Jack Liebeck takes on Schoenberg with aplomb
Fearless virtuoso: Jack Liebeck takes on Schoenberg with aplomb

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