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Prom 69: Barenboim/Staatskapelle, Royal Albert Hall, review: 'Gold-plated'

PCM 8: Sampson/Davies/Middleton, lunchtime Prom at Cadogan Hall, review, four stars 

Michael Church
Thursday 08 September 2016 12:09 BST
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Daniel Barenboim performs Mozart’s Piano Concerto with the Staatskapelle Berlin – minimal gestures were enough to exert perfect control as the Allegro gracefully unfolded
Daniel Barenboim performs Mozart’s Piano Concerto with the Staatskapelle Berlin – minimal gestures were enough to exert perfect control as the Allegro gracefully unfolded (BBC)

Soprano Carolyn Sampson, countertenor Iestyn Davies, and pianist Joseph Middleton gave a lunchtime Prom at the Cadogan Hall which was chamber music of the highest quality. The first half consisted of Benjamin Britten’s lovely "realisations" of songs by Purcell – settings based on vestigial markings in the original scores, which vividly opened up a 17th century sound-world with the aid of a pianistic palette of 20th century colours. If the second half – songs by Mendelssohn and Roger Quilter – dwelt on a much less exalted aesthetic plane, the performers’ consummate musicianship was still a pleasure in itself.

Prom 69 was gold-plated: Daniel Barenboim directing the Staatskapelle Berlin from the piano, in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No 24 in C minor, then taking them through Symphony No 4 (the "Romantic") by Bruckner, a composer he now devotedly champions. The Staatskapelle being Barenboim’s own fiefdom, minimal gestures were enough for him to exert perfect control as the concerto’s Allegro gracefully unfolded; answering the exceptional cleanness of the woodwind, his touch created a still sweetness in the opening sections. If the first cadenza – presumably his own composition – didn’t fire satisfactorily, the second (by Mozart) rang out brilliantly; the whole work was exquisitely contained within the accepted rules – no shouting - of 18th century decorum. Bruckner’s luxurious textures were lovingly rendered.

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