BBC Music Magazine

Richard Strauss and the Viennese Trumpet

-

Works by Beethoven, Bruckner, Fux, Mahler, Schubert, R Strauss, Webern and Zemlinsky

Jonathan Freeman-attwood (trumpet), Chiyan Wong (piano)

Linn CKD 621 61:17 mins

It can’t have been easy finding a title for this oddly wonderful collection of transcript­ions and concoction­s for trumpet and piano. ‘Richard Strauss and the Viennese trumpet’ doesn’t quite hit the mark, unless Jonathan Freemanatt­wood’s instrument is of Viennese provenance, and there’s no hint of that in the booklet notes. The other composers all have stronger Viennese links than Strauss in his younger years, to which we are asked to ascribe this sonata newly fashioned by Freeman-attwood and Thomas Oehler. It’s by no means a straight arrangemen­t of the Violin Sonata; soon we’re off to song pastures relatively unfamiliar, while the outer sequences of the central Andante cantabile are a quirky appropriat­ion of the 19-part string hymn in Also sprach Zarathustr­a originally blossoming into 19 string parts; the intervenin­g bluster derived from the song ‘Liebeshymn­us’ is less successful. The rondo pastiches one of Strauss’s horn concerto finales, with Zerbinetta in relatively unflashy mode for contrast.

Freeman-attwood’s brilliantl­yrecorded high lines and judiciousl­y-vibratoed singing prove companiona­ble for the whole duration, with contrast in a Fux ‘mash-up’ by Timothy Jones (who also makes Beethoven’s delicious ‘God Save the King’ piano variations sit well with the trumpet added), some especially lovely sounds in the third movement of Schubert’s otherwise fairly routine G minor Violin Sonata and an insightful sequence of three songs by

Bruckner, Zemlinsky and Mahler followed by the blithest Webern you ever heard. Chiyan Wong sounds as if he’s soft-pedalling throughout, but his playing is stylish too. David Nice PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom