| |

Opus
Number Zoo
Ibert,
Berio, Ligeti & others
The
Galliard Ensemble
Playing
time 65 mins.

£11.99 * / $18.50
Free Delivery Worldwide
All major currencies
* subject
to exchange rates
|
|
|
Editor's Choice - Gramophone Magazine, May 2002
Pure
pleasure. These are 32 shortish movements here, mostly light but not slight,
brief but not insubstantial. It is immediately obvious that the Galliard
Ensemble are enjoying themselves greatly, and by this I don't mean that
they play with rumbustious joviality (except where required, of course).
It's more a question of knowing that the very tricky staccato ostinato
figures in the thrid of Ligeti's Bagatelles make a conderful contrast
to the elegantly lyrical melody if they're played with absolute but unassertive
precision, or that a hint of raucousness makes an irresistible difference
to the last of Farkas's Old Hungarian Dances. It means that Ibert and
Hindemith, though both writing genial music for the same combination of
instruments, should sound quite differnet, and in Hindemith's slow movement
it means realising that his tempo direction, 'peaceful and simple', demands
that the beautiful long line should unfold smoothly, without fancy phrasing
or unnecessary rubato.
This,
in short, is wind quintet playing of great distinction. With this repertory
Galliard might seem to be ploughing an easier furrow than on their first
disc for Deux-Elles, of chamber music by Birtwistle, but in fact it takes
just as much skill, though of a different kind, to work out how much archetypal
Ligeti there is in the Bagatelles alongside so much obvious Stravinsky
and Bartok. And of a third kind to underline the sly humour of Horman
Hallam's dance parodies: his 'Quick-step' is obviously danced in evening
dress to a wind-up gramophone; his 'Waltz' is of the New Orleans, not
the Viennese variety. There is more than parody to Eurico Carrapatoso's
adroit homages and more than humour to Berio's charming sequence of animal
stories.
From
this admirable recorded disc you also get a very good idea of how enjoyable
the Galliard's public concerts must be. Strongly recommended.
Michael
Oliver.
|