Moeran: Cello Concerto, Serenade / Falletta
Composed for his wife, Peers Coetmore, the concerto is suffused with the spirit of Irish folk song, but also contains an edge to the harmony that places it far beyond the droopy musings of the English ācow patā school. Guy Johnstonās playing here is as fine as in any version yet recorded; and with tempos marginally fleeter than the competition on Chandos, this version may well become the reference recording for the work. Credit for that certainly goes equally to JoAnn Falletta, who also offers the scintillating neo-classical Serenade in its original version containing eight movements instead of the usual six.
The program concludes with two charming miniatures, Whythorneās Shadow, and Lonely Waters, the latter with its folk-song motto sung quite prettily at the end by Rebekah Coffey (thereās also a purely orchestral version). Excellent, well-balanced engineering completes this wholly recommendable release.
-- David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
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Moeran: Cello Concerto, Serenade / Falletta
Moeran: Cello Concerto, Serenade / Falletta
Composed for his wife, Peers Coetmore, the concerto is suffused with the spirit of Irish folk song, but also contains an edge to the harmony that places it far beyond the droopy musings of the English ācow patā school. Guy Johnstonās playing here is as fine as in any version yet recorded; and with tempos marginally fleeter than the competition on Chandos, this version may well become the reference recording for the work. Credit for that certainly goes equally to JoAnn Falletta, who also offers the scintillating neo-classical Serenade in its original version containing eight movements instead of the usual six.
The program concludes with two charming miniatures, Whythorneās Shadow, and Lonely Waters, the latter with its folk-song motto sung quite prettily at the end by Rebekah Coffey (thereās also a purely orchestral version). Excellent, well-balanced engineering completes this wholly recommendable release.
-- David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
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Composed for his wife, Peers Coetmore, the concerto is suffused with the spirit of Irish folk song, but also contains an edge to the harmony that places it far beyond the droopy musings of the English ācow patā school. Guy Johnstonās playing here is as fine as in any version yet recorded; and with tempos marginally fleeter than the competition on Chandos, this version may well become the reference recording for the work. Credit for that certainly goes equally to JoAnn Falletta, who also offers the scintillating neo-classical Serenade in its original version containing eight movements instead of the usual six.
The program concludes with two charming miniatures, Whythorneās Shadow, and Lonely Waters, the latter with its folk-song motto sung quite prettily at the end by Rebekah Coffey (thereās also a purely orchestral version). Excellent, well-balanced engineering completes this wholly recommendable release.
-- David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com