By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, JAMES
R. OESTREICH
, DAVID ALLEN, SETH COLTER WALLS and JOSHUA BARONE
Clockwise from top left,
Daniil Trifonov, Barbara Hannigan, Riccardo Muti, Vikingur Olafsson, the Danish
String Quartet and Dmitri Hvorostovsky. Credit Clockwise from top left, Julieta
Cervantes, Justin T. Gellerson, Hiroyuki Ito, Vincent Tullo, Ozier Muhammad,
Richard Termine, all for The New York Times
Music writers spend their
days guiltily staring down literally dozens of unheard new recordings that pile
up as the year goes on, with more coming in each day. So it has been an arduous
and frustrating but also inspiring and illuminating exercise to narrow our
favorites down to five each, for a list of 25 gorgeous releases that covers a
huge amount of chronological and stylistic ground.
‘THE JOHN ADAMS EDITION’
Berlin Philharmonic (Berliner Philharmoniker Recordings). This isn’t one
recording so much as a hefty collection of them from the 2016-17 season, when
Mr. Adams was this orchestra’s composer in residence (and occasional
conductor). Some classic works are represented alongside more recent ones, led
by Alan Gilbert, Gustavo Dudamel, Simon Rattle and Kirill Petrenko. JOSHUA
BARONE
BACH: Cantatas Nos. 152,
199, 202 Carolyn Sampson, soprano; Freiburg Baroque Orchestra; Petra Müllejans,
director (Harmonia Mundi). Who can forget the great mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt
Lieberson in the Cantata No. 199, “Mein Herze Schwimmt im Blut”? Fortunately,
Ms. Sampson’s brighter version is different enough to be appreciated on its own
terms. JAMES R. OESTREICH
A Playlist of the Best
Classical Recordings of 2017
BACH: ‘Goldberg’ Variations
Beatrice Rana, piano (Warner Classics). In the United States, at least, Ms.
Rana has not yet acquired the reputation of some other young pianists. She
should, and she will, for what she displays here is playing of preternatural
sensitivity, sophistication and control, along with a touch of magic, as Bach’s
theme returns at the end. DAVID ALLEN
BEACH, CHAMINADE, HOWELL:
Piano Concertos Danny Driver, piano; BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra; Rebecca
Miller, conductor (Hyperion). Major orchestras ignored the 150th birthday this
year of Amy Beach (1867-1944), but Hyperion did not in this fine release,
recorded with tangible commitment by all concerned. Nor should the works by
Dorothy Howell and Cécile Chaminade be overlooked. D.A.
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story
BERLIOZ: ‘Les Troyens’
Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg; John Nelson, conductor (Erato).
Berlioz’s epic opera has rarely been given such luxury treatment as in this
magnificent live recording from France. Mr. Nelson, a “Troyens” veteran many
times over, expertly handles the unwieldy score with help from starry singers
like Joyce DiDonato, in her role debut as Didon, and Michael Spyres as Enée.
J.B.
‘BLOODROOT’ Kelly Moran,
keyboards (Telegraph Harp). When writing for “prepared” piano, some
composer-performers focus on timbral effects to the exclusion of all else.
Throughout this rewarding set of miniatures, Ms. Moran avoids this pitfall. The
avant-garde touches she employs may be inspired by John Cage, but her melodies
are memorable, and original. SETH COLTER WBRUCKNER: Symphony No. 9 Chicago
Symphony Orchestra; Riccardo Muti, conductor (CSO Resound). Happily, Mr. Muti
seems to have had a Bruckner epiphany in Chicago. The orchestra responds to him
with an unforced power that works beautifully with this composer. We have to
hope that the Bruckner symphonies he has performed since, and others, will soon
follow on record. J.R.O.
‘CHOPIN EVOCATIONS’ Daniil
Trifonov, piano; Mahler Chamber Orchestra (Deutsche Grammophon). Do we need another
recording of Chopin’s piano concertos? Well, we need this one, because Mr.
Trifonov plays them magnificently; because of illuminating chamber-orchestra
arrangements by Mikhail Pletnev, who conducts; and because of Chopin-inspired
works by Grieg, Barber and others that join. ANTHONY TOMMASINI
‘CRAZY GIRL CRAZY’ Barbara
Hannigan, soprano and conductor; Ludwig Orchestra (Alpha Classics). Ms.
Hannigan can do so many things so well, and she does most of them here. She
conducts and sings music from Berg’s “Lulu” and Gershwin’s “Girl Crazy” with
predictable aplomb, but for me it is the sensuous and utterly uninhibited
rendition of Berio’s solo “Sequenza III” that seals the deal. J.R.O.
‘DISCUSSIONS’ (Wide Hive)
Roscoe Mitchell has long been interested in teaching orchestras how to
improvise, and this album reveals the fruits of his labor. A chamber orchestra
digs into new arrangements of his past free-improvisation saxophone solos; the
sense of fresh community they create around “I’ll See You Out There” is a
testament to Mr. Mitchell’s underlying vision. S.C.W.
PHILIP GLASS: Piano Works
Vikingur Olafsson (Deutsche Grammophon). Mr. Glass’s piano études have been
criticized as unmusical, or even boring. But Mr. Olafsson’s recording of 10,
rich with interpretive depth and surprising turns, is nothing short of
eye-opening. J.B.
HARTKE: ‘The Ascent of the
Equestrian in a Balloon’ Boston Modern Orchestra Project; Gil Rose, conductor
(BMOP/sound). This exciting recording of four works by Stephen Hartke, written
over some 30 years, confirms that he is one of the most distinctive and
important living composers. If the title of “The Ascent” doesn’t grab you, the
breathless, fractured, skittish music will. A.T.
‘HOMMAGE À BOULEZ’
West-Eastern Divan Orchestra; Daniel Barenboim and Pierre Boulez, conductors
(Deutsche Grammophon). Boulez, who died in 2016, gets quite the tribute here
with more than two hours of music, including “Le Marteau Sans Maître.” That
score might frighten some young musicians; here, the contralto Hilary Summers
and members of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra are fearless. J.B.
‘LAST LEAF’ Danish String
Quartet (ECM New Series). It is wonderful to hear these superb players let
their collective hair down in this collection of (mostly) Scandinavian folk
tunes and original material composed in like fashion. This should warm the
heart of every fan of fiddling, whether bluegrass, Celtic or Bachian. J.R.O. ‘LUTHER
COLLAGE’ Calmus Ensemble (Carus-Verlag). Collage indeed. This excellent German
vocal quintet presents seven of Martin Luther’s chorales in many versions,
typically changing composers from one verse to the next. Those composers
include some from Luther’s time and some from our time, and instrumental
chorale preludes appear in Swingle Singers-like vocalise, without the insistent
perkiness. J.R.O.
MAHLER: Symphony No. 3
Gerhild Romberger, alto; Cantemus Children’s Choir; Bavarian Radio Chorus;
Budapest Festival Orchestra; Ivan Fisher, conductor (Channel Classics). Every
moment of this recording is fresh and insightful, traits we have now come to
expect from Mr. Fisher. But it is the finale, Mahler’s ode to love, that pulls
at the memory — a miracle of phrasing; a quiet wonder of string tone and
balance; a paean to a devotion tender, fragile and deep. D.A.
MESSIAEN: ‘Quartet for the
End of Time’ Martin Frost, clarinet; Lucas Debargue, piano; Janine Jansen,
violin; Torleif Thedeen, cello (Sony Classical). Mr. Frost was the driving
force behind this recording of Messiaen’s mystical, wild-eyed quartet. He is
joined by three formidable artists who all demonstrate infectious affinity for
this profound music. A.T.
‘RIGHT UP ON’ Oliver Lake,
alto saxophone; FLUX Quartet (Passin’ Thru). Mr. Lake has never paid genre
distinctions much heed. This collaboration with the FLUX Quartet is a crucial
document of his thinking. “5 Sisters” traffics in modernist blues; pointillism
and sweet harmonies alternate in “2016.” When Mr. Lake joins the quartet, his
saxophone playing sparks new heights of intensity. S.C.W.
SCHUBERT: ‘Die Schöne
Müllerin’ Christian Gerhaher, baritone; Gerold Huber, piano (Sony Classical)
It’s Mr. Gerhaher at the peak of his abilities, with his marvelous accomplice
Mr. Huber, singing Schubert. Need one say more? Probably not, except that their
decision to weave in the Wilhelm Müller poems that Schubert did not set is a
masterstroke, especially when read with such musical sense by Mr. Gerhaher.
D.A.
SIBELIUS: Piano Works Leif
Ove Andsnes, piano (Sony Classical). Who knew? Sibelius, composer of seven
visionary symphonies, wrote a sizable body of piano pieces that remain mostly
neglected. The adventurous Mr. Andsnes discovers them on this exquisitely played
album of beguiling, lyrical and quirky works. Even those with tame titles like
“Impromptu” startle you. A.T.
TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 6
MusicAeterna; Teodor Currentzis, conductor (Sony Classical). Some listeners
might find the approach here overblown. I do not. There is more cultivated
Tchaikovsky out there, to be sure, and more precise, too, but none more
faithful to his devastating purpose. The climaxes of the first movement feature
some of the scariest conducting I have ever heard, the dark night of a soul
pushed over the brink. D.A.
‘THOUSANDS OF MILES’ Kate
Lindsey, mezzo-soprano; Baptiste Trotignon, piano (Alpha Classics). Ms. Lindsey
shows just how nimble her voice can be with this diverse collection of
20th-century songs by Alma Mahler, Weill, Korngold and Zemlinsky, who all fled
the Nazis. Especially worth hearing is Zemlinsky’s music, which is tragically
underrepresented in concert halls today. J.B.
‘TORRENT’ Alex Mincek,
composer (Sound American). “Pendulum VII” is a thrill ride. At a
second-by-second level, it might seem as if the sonic riot is too much to
process. But zoom out, and this hailstorm’s qualities of shape and proportion
begin to emerge. The slower compositions on this bracing album of Mr. Mincek’s
music are just as fine. S.C.W.
‘UNBOUND’ Jasper String
Quartet (Sono Luminus/New Amsterdam). This quartet’s taste in repertoire runs
toward post-Minimalist composers who work with melody — and an edge. The
pop-style rhythmic fury of Judd Greenstein’s “Four on the Floor” is exhilarating.
Annie Gosfield’s “The Blue Horse Walks on the Horizon” shows some of the same
dramatic flair as her recent opera for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. S.C.W.
VERDI: ‘Rigoletto’ Kaunas
City Symphony Orchestra; Constantine Orbelian, conductor (Delos). Last year,
while battling brain cancer, the baritone Dmitri Hvorostovsky spent nine days
recording “Rigoletto,” which was released this November, shortly before his
death at 55. He gives a russet-toned, compelling performance, joined by an
impressive cast for a gripping and, in every sense, poignant performance. A.T.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/13/arts/music/best-classical-music-recordings-2017.html
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