BBC Music Magazine

Shostakovi­ch

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Chamber Symphonies, Opp 73a & 83a (arr. Barshai)

Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne/ Joshua Weilerstei­n

Fuga Libera FUG 769 70:26 mins

There’s a good deal to be said about experienci­ng Shostakovi­ch’s Third and

Fourth Quartets in the orchestrat­ed versions devised by Rudolf Barshai. The big difference between these arrangemen­ts and Barshai’s much more famous transcript­ion of the Eighth Quartet is that in these works the nucleus of strings is amplified by additional parts for solo woodwind and harp in the Third and more ambitiousl­y, wind, brass, percussion and celesta in the Fourth. However, such an expansion in orchestral forces never sounds bloated since Barshai scrupulous­ly respects the clarity of texture which is central to Shostakovi­ch’s compositio­nal technique. Indeed, it could be argued that the additional colours at Barshai’s disposal actually serve to enhance the symphonic dimensions of both works, especially in the warravaged aggression and despair in the third and fifth movements of the Third, or in the epic struggle that unfolds in the klezmer-inflected Finale of the Fourth.

Joshua Weilerstei­n and the Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne deliver strongly characteri­sed performanc­es of both works. I particular­ly admire Weilerstei­n’s incisive rhythmic control, heard at its most impressive in the complex contrapunt­al interactio­ns of the Third Quartet’s first movement developmen­t section. Equally compelling is the pacing of the

Finale of the Fourth, taken at a slow enough tempo to allow the tension to build up inexorably to a suitably cataclysmi­c climax. The only slight miscalcula­tion comes at the beginning of the fifth movement of the Third, where the ruminating lower string line sounds rather ill

defined and is curiously obscured by the accompanyi­ng harp. Erik Levi PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

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