BBC Music Magazine

Very British

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Britten: Simple Symphony;

Elgar: Serenade for Strings; Salut d’amour; Romance, Op. 1; Two Pieces, Op. 13; Idylle; La Capricieus­e; Rosemary; Carissima; Adieu;

Karl Jenkins: Palladio – Allegretto; Warlock: Capriol Suite Metamorpho­sen Berlin/wolfgang Emanuel Schmidt (cello) Sony Classical G010004546­0061 (digital only) 78:07 mins At a quick glance, this latest album from the sumptuous string players of Metamorpho­sen Berlin might not seem to offer much for veteran collectors of British music beyond the quirky German perspectiv­e found in the garrulous booklet notes. On matters of interpreta­tion, though, the ebullient account of Britten’s Simple Symphony should tickle everyone’s ears. Launched with a dashingly fast ‘Boisterous Bourrée’, given ballast by a deeply felt ‘Sentimenta­l Sarabande’, this is the kind of performanc­e that should stop anyone taking Britten’s buoyant youthful creation for granted.

The romantic ache inside Elgar’s music also strikes a responsive chord with this orchestra, co-founded 11 years ago by Wolfgang Emanuel Schmidt and Indira Koch. The Serenade for Strings, its intervals judiciousl­y oiled with slippery hints of portamento, radiates warmth enough, though the temperatur­e rises higher still in Schmidt’s arrangemen­t of nine of Elgar’s ‘salon’ morsels, many originally conceived with a solo violin in mind.

In every case Schmidt relocates the music’s heart to his own instrument, the cello. His burnished, throbbing tone could probably melt an iceberg. As Salut d’amour gave way to ‘Rosemary’, ‘Carissima’ and the rest, I felt I wasn’t so much listening as guiltily eating my way through a box of luxury chocolates. The tastebuds don’t get such a ravishing from Warlock’s Capriol Suite or Karl Jenkins’s little earworm, Palladio, but that’s probably just as well. All in all, with its full-bodied playing and open emotions, this is an album that should redefine what it means to be ‘very British’. Geoff Brown PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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