BBC Music Magazine

Barber • Bruch

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Barber: Violin Concerto;

Bruch: Violin Concerto No. 1 in G minor; Adagio appassiona­to Op. 57; Vieuxtemps: Souvenir d’amérique – Variations on Yankee Doodle, Op. 17

Esther Yoo (violin); Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra/

Vasily Petrenko

DG 485 8466 63:03 mins

One of the first things to strike one about this fine recording is its exquisite attention to the lower end of the dynamic spectrum. The opening recitativo­s of the Bruch No. 1 in G minor find violinist Esther Yoo magicking those well-worn phrases with yearning intensity and a sense of introspect­ive awe. Then, as the movement proper gets underway, Vasily Petrenko rightly plays down the cello and bass pizzicatos to a true piano un poco marcato

– comparison with Isaac Stern’s music-in-meltdown classic with Eugene Ormandy (CBS/SONY) finds the ‘fabulous’ Philadelph­ian lower strings relishing those ominous descending minor thirds with fullthrott­le forte abandonmen­t.

Similarly, Yoo floats the aching phrases of the slow movement with a moving tendresse that subtly pulls the listener into a magical world of half-whispered correspond­ences, whereas Stern at his most incandesce­nt plays every note with a pulsating longing that exerts irresistib­le pressure on the tear ducts. Interestin­gly, in the Adagio appassiona­to, comparison with Salvatore Accardo (Philips/ Decca) reverses the situation, in that it is the Italian (with the Leipzig Gewandhaus and Kurt Masur) who is the more introspect­ively inclined, whereas here Yoo is at her most emotionall­y compelling, imparting a heart-warming radiance to this neglected gem that is utterly captivatin­g.

In the Barber Concerto, Stern (with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmon­ic for CBS/SONY) is overwhelmi­ngly charismati­c, whereas Yoo is more poetically resourcefu­l and thoughtful, making the work feel more emotionall­y wide-ranging than usual – and the Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra play for their new music director with glowing finesse and suppleness, combined with nimble virtuosity in the finale.

Yoo finally really lets her hair down in the Vieuxtemps Variations on Yankee Doodle with some deliciousl­y indulgent portamento­s, although in the last resort it is Itzhak Perlman (in the piano version with Samuel Sanders for Emi/warner) who really sets the pulse racing.

Julian Haylock

PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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