BBC Music Magazine

The British Project

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Elgar: Sospiri; Britten: Sinfonia da Requiem; Walton: Symphonic Suite ‘Troilus and Cressida’ (arr. Palmer); Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra/mirga Gra inyt -tyla

DG 486 1547 70:31 mins

The Lithuanian conductor Mirga Gra inyt -tyla brings a fresheared approach to four English masters of orchestral writing. It probably takes an ‘outsider’ to reveal such startling juxtaposit­ions: the wistful strains of Elgar’s Sospiri followed by the bludgeonin­g might of Britten’s Sinfonia da Requiem presents a contrast in character and in colour, Elgar’s restrained string and harp scoring an effective foil to Britten’s fiery and gleaming orchestral palette. The same jolt happens in reverse when Walton’s vibrantly scored Troilus and Cressida (in the form of the Symphonic Suite compiled by Christophe­r Palmer) is followed by the serene strains of Vaughan Williams’s all-strings Tallis Fantasia.

The Fantasia, rapt and mysterious, receives the most successful performanc­e. I am less convinced by those of its companions. The Elgar is an arrangemen­t of a salon piece, so it’s perhaps unreasonab­le to expect every conductor to find its yearning heart as did Barbirolli in his classic New Philharmon­ia Orchestra recording; still, Gra inyt -tyla’s players appear to treat portamento­s as a stylistic tic rather than a means of expression. The Britten starts well, and Gra inyt -tyla’s unorthodox accelerand­o in the first movement’s developmen­t section is effective; but the performanc­e loses steam in the ‘Dies irae’, as over-cautious articulati­on precludes the runaway juggernaut conjured by Britten’s own recorded account. The too-deliberate pacing of that movement’s ‘explosive’ coda lacks shock value, nor is there any sense of exhausted relief in the final ‘Requiem aeternum’. The Walton is more successful, but again the overdelibe­rate playing of woodwind arabesques and Gra inyt -tyla’s too plodding approach to tempo shortchang­es the music’s energy and rhythmic ‘spring’. Daniel Jaffé PERFORMANC­E ★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

 ?? ?? A fresh approach: Mirga Gra inyte˙-tyla conducts British classics
A fresh approach: Mirga Gra inyte˙-tyla conducts British classics
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