Little needs to be said about the career of Jacqueline Du Pré www.jacquelinedupre.net/jdupre/whoisjdp.htm
. She was born in Oxford, England, studied under the cellist William Pleeth, participated
in a Pablo Casals masterclass and undertook short-term studies with Paul
Tortelier in Paris. Du Pré made her Wigmore Hall debut in March 1961, at age
16, playing sonatas by Handel, Brahms, Debussy and de Falla, and a solo cello
suite by Bach. Her concerto début was on 21st March 1962 at the
Royal Festival Hall playing the Elgar Cello Concerto with the BBC Symphony
Orchestra under Rudolf Schwarz. Her brilliant career was tragically cut short,
in the early 1970’s, by the onset of multiple sclerosis. Du Pré died in London
on 19th October 1987 at the age of just 42.
Bruno Leonardo Gelber
www.valmalete.ch was born in Buenos
Aires, of Austrian and French-Italian parents. His father was a violinist and
his mother a pianist. He made his first public appearance at age five and later
studied with Vincenzo Scaramuzza. At the age of fifteen he played the Schumann
Concerto under Lorin Maazel. He later studied with Marguerite Long in Paris and
went on to win 3rd Prize in the Long-Thibaud Competition. Gelber has played
under the direction of conductors such as Ferdinand Leitner, Klaus Tennstedt,
Eric Leinsdorf, Kurt Masur, Sergiu Celibidache, Sir Colin Davis, Charles
Dutoit, Bernard Haitink, Lorin Maazel, Mstislav Rostropovich, Riccardo Chailly,
Christophe Eschenbach and Esa-Pekka Salonen.
Both of these fine artists are brought together on a new
release from Audite www.audite.de who are celebrating their own 40th
anniversary this year. Audite have continued to issue historic recordings using
original master tapes. On this disc we have Du Pré playing the Schumann Cello
Concerto coupled with Gelber playing the Brahms First Piano Concerto. Both are
accompanied by the Radio Symphony Orchestra, Berlin conducted by the young Gerd
Albrecht (b.1935).
Audite 95.622 |
Both of these recordings were made on the same day, live in
Berlin. Although the recordings are both mono and have a slightly hollow sound,
they come up extremely well and, such is the acoustic, the lack of stereo is
hardly noticeable. A special point of interest in the Schumann is that Du Pré
adds a third movement cadenza, something not included in her 1968 EMI
recording.
Right from the start of
the Schumann Cello Concerto in A
minor, Op.129 you just know that this is something special, with Du Pré
drawing so much emotion from the music. But it is not just emotional pull that
dominates; it is Du Pré’s sheer technique and bravura that stands out. There is
nicely taut and attentive orchestral accompaniment from Albrecht and the Radio
Symphony Orchestra, Berlin, seemingly at one with every nuance from Du Pré. Those
lovely deep cello notes struck by Du Pre are terrific. The music just sings
magnificently and, of course Du Pre’s tone is wonderful. The second movement Langsam is gorgeously done where all of
Du Pré’s sonority is matched by Albrecht and his orchestra and in the finale, Sehr lebhaft, Du Pré seems even more to throw
her all into the music. The dovetailing of cello and orchestra is brilliantly
done. The substantial cadenza just
before the coda is superbly played.
Being something of an admirer of the Bulgarian born pianist,
Alexis Weissenberg (1929-2012) I have
always placed his performance of Brahms’
Piano Concerto No.1 in D minor, Op.15 with Guilini and the London Symphony
Orchestra as the finest currently available. It was with this in mind that I
was keen to hear Gelber.
Gerd Albrecht opens with a granite-like maestoso, carefully paced, letting it unfold naturally, like a
brooding beast waiting to be unleashed. When Bruno Leonardo Gelber enters there
is a lovely flow and swell to the music before it soon builds in some
magnificently craggy playing. When it subsides, Gelber is curiously clipped in
his phrasing but this only serves to create more tension. There is poetry
galore and times when Gelber really lets the music flow forward almost falling
over itself. When, halfway through, the opening theme is re-stated, those
chords are tremendous, such power and a formidable technique. Albrecht works so well with Gelber, with some
lovely orchestral touches. At times Gelber rivals Weisenberg in his colossal
reading. Albrecht works wonders in the adagio drawing some lovely playing form
the RSO, Berlin, such lovely phrasing. Gelber creates a beautiful flow, pushing
ahead just enough to create a pull on the music. In this movement, more than
anywhere else, Gelber shows his sensitivity and control, with playing of
subtlety and poetry. Such is the intensity that he never loses focus and always
takes you along with him. In the Rondo
allegro, Gelber nicely points up the music with some rhythmically clipped phrasing,
building to some fearsomely dramatic playing. The coda is terrific.
The 22 year old Gelber certainly had a formidable technique
with such freedom and fluency. There is audience noise between the movements of
the Brahms and the final applause is kept in. Whether this performance can dislodge
Weisenberg I’m not sure. It certainly runs him close.
Audite have done a great service in making these
performances available. No admirer of these artists will want to miss these
great performances.
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