Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or
view the MP3 Album.
| ||||||||||||||||||
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best violin concertos of the last 50 years,
This review is from: Nicholas Maw: Violin Concerto (Audio CD)
I had the good fortune of meeting Nicholas Maw in person whenhe visited UC Santa Barbara to give lectures on his music and critiquestudent compositions. He presented us this Violin Concerto as a pre-release -- we followed the hyper-detailed, precisely orchestrated score in utter amazement while listening to this astounding work. OK, so it's not 100% neo-romanticism -- this is a piece of contemporary music... but it shows a decisive break with modernism in its lyrical warmth-- the melodies are not always 'singable' but do they need to be? I was especially impressed by Maw's use of slow-moving chords as accompaniment in the cadenza, within which the violin almost seems to tread water. There's plenty of slow, lush music to balance fast and furious concertante textures... Joshua Bell is Joshua Bell-- John Corigliano said he "plays like a god". That's definitely true here... but there's also ample oppurtunity for him to "play like the devil" as well as you'll hear! My only quibble with Maw is that sometimes his immense refinement and polish suck the 'fun' out of the music (he tends to be very serious and brooding). There are certain moods his music simply refuses to convey... such as affectionate simplicity or anything-goes liberalism or riotous humor... I'll be looking for these in the upcoming opera, Sophie's Choice, where the nature of the drama suggests occasion for at least some of these underexplored latent emotions. One last note... it's true this CD is too short-- we deserve another Maw piece for balance. But for the record, Maw told us when visiting that the record label didn't want to release the piece at all because they didn't have anything else to put with the piece-- not wanting a 10 year delay, Maw reluctantly suggested it be released by itself for a discounted price... This is great music and worth the price ... I hope my comments were helpful.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good yes, but great?,
By
This review is from: Nicholas Maw: Violin Concerto (Audio CD)
I wonder how opinions of this concerto vary between people who read the liner notes and those who did not. Unfortunetly, I read them. They are the single most pompous, delusional, and (consequently) destructive notes to a release I have ever read. Who could they possibly be aimed at? Just to set things straight, Maw is suggested to be Brahms reincarnated, comparing the to at least six times. Really comparing them as composer equals and suggesting this concerto takes its supposed rightful place alongside the likes of, and I quote, "Maw's concerto for violin and orchestra (1993) clearly belongs in the company of the great lyrical concerto's of Beethoven (!), Mendelssohn (!!), Brahms (!!!!!), Berg (!!!!!!!!), Stravinsky (!!!!!!!!!!!!), Prokofiev (!!!!!), Walton(!!!!), and Barber (!!!!!!!!!!)." It continues...."It seems that Maw may indeed be the greatest living master of the romantic aesthetic, a Brahms for our time."
The next paragraph begins...... " Like Brahms, Nicholas Maw..." several sentences later..... "Maw (like Brahms).....is a prophet for a new generation(!!!!!!!)......" If you still arent as flabbergasted as I was upon reading this it then goes on to say that because Schoenberg saw in Brahms a great source of inspiration so consequently "Nicholas Maw's music is likely to have a profound effect on large-scale symphonic music of the twenty-first century." With linear-notes on this unbelievable level, this disc and work really never had a chance to be taken unbiased. My real concern is whether Maw read this beforehand and actually believes this,or if he opened it up after release and thought to himself, "I am screwed". Either way, this concerto must now be judged on what it presupposes to be---one of the greatest of all time----which it is not.....by a longshot....It is unfortunate because it is good. Among the conservative school in our modern world it is one of the better concerto's I have heard lately----but that is a very specific and small school and even then it is not the best. Maw's music is wonderful. I prefer the Odyssey, with Rattle at the helm of the CBSO to this piece and also Maw's miniature Life Studies, Piano Trio, Ghost thingy. They are all better examples of Maw's true aesthetic, which is not as romantic as this concerto suggests---it is a modern violin concerto that will appeal to much of the remaining classical masses---which I believe is a good thing----I mean, any modern piece of music that will attempt to alleviate the chaotic situation of the Boulez school and try to bring audiences back cant be that bad a thing. I wish I never read the linear notes because it made me study this piece under more scrutiny that it could take, and I suppose that any paid critic would feel the same way. I do recommend it still as an example of accessible modern music.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Maw Scores Big (Again),
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Nicholas Maw: Violin Concerto (Audio CD)
Nicholas Maw composes slowly and has therefore presented himself to the public through a few works only. An Argo LP from the 1970s offered his "Life Studies" for string orchestra, Bergian in their language, which is to say: marginally atonal and expressive while communicating an obvious and comprehensible sequence of emotional states and progressions. Maw really scored big (in every sense of the phrase) with his "Odyssey," released at the beginning of the 1990s by EMI as part of their British Composers series. (It is, unfortunately, no longer in the catalogue.) "Odyssey," to describe it briefly, is a ninety-plus-minute orchestral work in six parts but played without break. It represents Maw's "rediscovery" of tonality and owes something (but not decisively) to earlier twentieth century composers such as Shostakovich (Fourth Symphony) and Walton (First Symphony). But Maw is sui generis. The comparisons don't tell you much. Sony has now published Maw's Violin Concerto, in four movements, from 1993, played here by Joshua Bell as soloist the London Philharmonic under Sir Roger Norrington. Like "Odyssey," the Concerto is a big work, symphonic in concept, undoubtedly "modern" but just as comprehensible (and beautiful, in its rugged way) as the earlier score. The quite conscious model of the Concerto is the Brahms Second (for piano). It would be perfectly fair in Maw's case as in Brahms' to say that this is really a symphony with an important concertante part for the soloist. The sequence of movements - slow, fast, slow, fast - suggests the seriousness of the overall mood. Maw likes to "evolve" his music and its themes and textures out of basic cells, introduced with an improvisatory or tentative feeling at the beginning of a work. That is what happens here, as, in the opening "Prelude," against a bass-register grumbling in the orchestra, the violin offers the pregnant intervals out of which the great tapestry will be woven. The horns have an important role in Maw's sense of orchestral color. (This is also true in "Odyssey.") The first horn participates as a kind of second soloist in the Concerto's "Prelude." The second movement bears the title of "Scherzo," and is full of subterranean energy, breaking occasionally through the surface of the music to erupt into salience. The third movement, "Romanza," returns to the moodiness of the "Prelude." The last movement is a vast dance, in which Maw transforms properties of the first three movements. Something of a Franckian journey from darkness to light has taken place, although in Maw the light at the end of the journey is not unadulterated by shadow. Given the propensity nowadays of recording companies to offer new CDs briefly and then delete them from the catalogue, it would be wise to get this one while it remains in the bins. Look closely under "M." Joshua Bell's name is more prominent on the booklet than the composer's, and the words "violin concerto" appear in smaller print than the proper names. The measure is somewhat short, a mere forty-one minutes. The entire "Life Studies" might have been added as a filler. Never mind. It's worth the price anyway.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
Tags Customers Associate with This Product(What's this?)Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|
|