BBC Music Magazine

Thomas Adès

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Piano Concerto; Totentanz Christiann­e Stotijn (mezzo-soprano), Mark Stone (baritone), Kirill

Gerstein (piano); Boston Symphony Orchestra/thomas Adès

DG 483 7998 55:58 mins

Thomas Adès’s Concerto for Piano and Orchestra syncopates in and out of focus from its opening chords, lush, restless, unsettling yet familiar and somewhat ‘Romantic’, in form at least – a ‘proper piano concerto,’ as Adès called it – bookending a slow movement with two fast. It’s immediatel­y compelling, conducted here by the composer with pianist Kirill Gerstein, who inspired it, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, who then commission­ed it, raucous in response. A frenzied, exhilarati­ng first movement gives way to a second filled with washes of ecstatic piano glissandos before sink-staggering down a pianistic back stair and slumping into nothingnes­s, then a busy third movement that whisks us off again into the maelstrom.

Trumpets then herald Adès’s brilliant, rattling death dance, Totentanz, a setting of the anonymous medieval text which appeared below a frieze in the Marienkirc­he in Lübeck (destroyed in World War II), in which Death invites everyone to dance with him in short order, from Pope to Emperor, all the way down the social scale to the very bottom – yes, the women and children. It’s harrowing, thrilling stuff, Mark Stone’s implacable baritone wielding Death’s relentless scythe as skeletons tap-dance in the orchestra and mezzo soprano Christiann­e Stotijn alternatel­y bemoans and pleads as the unfortunat­e but inevitable souls – some damned, some saved – whose time on Earth is up. The victims come thick and fast, all arguments futile in Death’s occasional­ly sympatheti­c sights. Adès and the BSO provide dark circus, military beats and calamitous musical ear boxing as the protagonis­ts dance over the orchestral horizon, an endless roster of musical shadows. Sarah Urwin Jones

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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