BBC Music Magazine

Bologne (Saint-georges)

-

Symphonies Concertant­es, Opp. 9 & 10; Symphony in G Yury Revich, Libor Je ek (violin), Pavla Honsová (viola); Czech Chamber Philharmon­ic Orchestra Pardubice/michael Halász

Naxos 8.574306 63:34 mins

Peerless fencer, boxer, swimmer, swordsman, skater, marksman, abolitioni­st, soldier and dancer, not to mention innovative virtuoso violinist and leading conductor. Few composers have had a more remarkable or diversely accomplish­ed life than Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saintgeorg­es.

Born in Guadeloupe in

1745 to a black enslaved mother and a plantation owning French father, he moved in the highest echelons of French society and was renowned across Europe until Napoleon’s racist attempt to erase him from history.

His surviving output is relatively modest, but certainly not lacking in quality as is apparent from the five works on Naxos’s third disc devoted to Bologne (a shame they persist in mis-spelling his name as ‘Boulogne’). This newcomer boasts four of Bologne’s eight Symphonies Concertant­es, a genre much in vogue in 1770s Paris, capped by his only true symphony. Violinists Yury Revich and Libor Je ek clearly relish their solo parts in the Op. 9

Symphonies Concertant­es, though placing them further apart in the mix would have brought out their interplay more clearly. Joined by violist Pavla Honsová for the Op. 10 pair, the extended unaccompan­ied passage towards the end of the second where their three lines interweave is delightful­ly perky.

There are a few tutti passages where a greater sense of direction from the orchestra would be welcome. Overall, though, Michael Halász and the Czech Chamber Philharmon­ic bring grace and vigour to the Symphonies Concertant­es while the Symphony bounces along full of charm. Christophe­r Dingle PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom