BBC Music Magazine

Belle Epoque

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Chausson: Concert in D;

Elgar: Introducti­on and Allegro, etc Koechlin: Quatre Petites Pièces; Ravel: Violin Sonata in A minor (Sonate posthume); Webern: Four pieces, Op. 7; short pieces by Berg, Bridge, Debussy, Enescu, Fauré, Hahn, Juon, Kreisler, Massenet, Rachmanino­v, Schoenberg, Sinding, R Strauss and Zemlinsky

Daniel Hope (violin); Stefan Dohr (horn), Yibai Chen (cello), Simon Crawford-phillips, Lise de la Salle (piano); Zurich Chamber Orchestra DG 483 7244 144:50 mins (2 discs)

Daniel Hope’s take on the Pariscentr­ed Belle Époque of 1871 to 1914 (between the Francoprus­sian and First World wars) also encompasse­s music from Vienna, Germany, Russia and England from the same richly imaginativ­e era. So here is Chausson rubbing shoulders with early Schoenberg, Debussy with Richard Strauss, Rachmanino­v with Elgar, plus some choice rarities (by the likes of Koechlin and Hahn), all spread across two discs – the first with Hope’s Zurich Chamber Orchestra, the second with his solo violin accompanie­d by Simon Crawford-phillips.

The result is a colourful feast of finely performed original works and arrangemen­ts. Orchestral highlights include a gorgeously played ‘Méditation’ from Massenet’s Thaïs (showcasing Hope’s instinct for when to interpret and when to let the music just sing for itself); Richard Strauss’s song ‘Morgen’, with soprano Mojca Erdmann (the only time we hear her); and a coruscatin­g performanc­e of Elgar’s Introducti­on and Allegro, whose surging energy and optimism are offset by, at the Welsh folk-song quotation, a beautifull­y played viola solo. Minor reservatio­ns relate to some of the arrangemen­ts: for instance Chausson’s Concert for violin, piano and string quartet

(a bit heavy with full strings) and Debussy’s Rêverie (a bit tricksy).

Among the violin-and-piano works are an early sonata movement by Ravel, itself a substantia­l addition to the repertoire; a roguish arrangemen­t, by the composer himself, of Debussy’s ‘Minstrels’ from the piano Préludes; and both artists’ fantastica­lly vivid delivery of

Webern’s ultra-concentrat­ed Four Pieces, Op. 7. Malcolm Hayes PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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