BBC Music Magazine

From Brighton to Brooklyn

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Works by Beach, Bridge,

Britten, Coleridge-taylor, Copland, Price and Schoenfeld Elena Urioste (violin),

Tom Poster (piano)

Chandos CHAN 20248 71:29 mins Married couple Elena Urioste (American) and Tom Poster (British) arranged this recital as a demonstrat­ion of their love for the music of each others’ country. Perhaps this idea looked cute on paper, though it would still need a stronger selection of music to bring this album anywhere near essential listening. There are certainly some attractive moments: I’d single out their treatment of Copland’s delicately bluesy Nocturne, first of his early Two Pieces, written in Paris in 1926. Frank Bridge’s Cradle Song, high-grade salon music, is also attractive, while Florence Price’s lightly humorous Elfentanz should please anyone who appreciate­s dancing elves.

All these pieces have simple textures, with lyricism dominant. But when textures get busier and crowded, Urioste’s violin can be hard to hear, as in parts of Paul Schoenfeld’s Four Souvenirs of

1990. At least its hectic final square dance is a winner; not so the third movement, a supine pastiche of old-time Tin Pan Alley. Elsewhere, the pair fail to make a case for the scrawny kind of grotesquer­ie found in Britten’s Op. 6, while Bridge’s other salon pieces, and three more by Amy Beach, are the kind of music that glides past the ears without ever penetratin­g. Poster’s playing, tidy and muscular, survives the selection of pieces quite well, but aside from the billowing phrases of Coleridget­aylor’s Ballade, Urioste’s usually lustrous tone and romantic soul can’t find much of an outlet in this lightweigh­t transatlan­tic parade. Geoff Brown

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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