BBC Music Magazine

Un violon à Paris

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Works by JS Bach, Chaplin, Chopin, Debussy, Grappelli, Korngold, Kreisler, Massenet, Schubert, Schumann et al Renaud Capuçon (violin),

Guillaume Bellom (piano)

Erato 9029652001 80:13 mins

During France’s first lockdown in 2020, violinist Renaud Capuçon and pianist Guillaume Bellom got together via the miracles of modern technology and performed a different piece on social media every day in order to help raise music lovers’ spirits around the world.

This in turn inspired the present album, a 22-strong collection of predominat­ely reflective miniature arrangemen­ts ranging from Schubert’s ‘Ständchen’ and the Aria from Bach’s Third Orchestral Suite to Chaplin’s ‘Smile’ (from Modern Times) and ‘O mio babbino caro’ from Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi.

Once upon a time, the prevailing tendency with such items was to give it all you’ve got – to pack about as much tonal luxuriance, nonchalant brilliance, interpreta­tive suavity and emotional resonance as one could into a piece lasting around three minutes. Interestin­gly, the results were often more revealing about the various players musical procliviti­es than their bread-and-butter, mainstream repertoire.

Capuçon accordingl­y produces an elegantly sustained, warm sound, inflected by a mediumpace­d, medium-width vibrato, and phrases everything to exquisite perfection. Where he parts company with the general tendency is the touching intimacy he and Bellom create, a million miles away from the concert-hall projection normally favoured in material of this type.

Compared to the near hysteria often whipped up in Massenet’s ‘Méditation’, for example, they tantalise the senses by never overstatin­g the obvious. Some may prefer something a little more hotblooded in this repertoire, yet taken on its terms this is one of the most radiantly beautiful violin albums of recent years. Julian Haylock PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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