Alison Balsom,
trumpet; various conductors and ensembles. Warner Classics 50999 0 19162 2 5.
Now that Warner Classics have acquired the EMI catalogue,
it appears one of the first things they’ve done is reissue some of EMI
recording star Alison Balsom’s biggest hits in the elegantly packaged new
release The Sound of Alison Balsom.
It’s a retrospective of Ms. Balsom’s Baroque trumpet work from 2002 to 2012,
accompanied by various individuals and ensembles, period and modern. Fans of
Ms. Balsom will no doubt already have most of these recordings, but folks new
to her playing may want to use the disc to catch up on what they’ve been
missing.
For those few of you who may not know her, British trumpet
soloist Alison Balsom has been playing trumpet professionally since 2001. She
is now a multiple award winner with eight albums to her credit; she was the
former principal trumpet of the London Chamber Orchestra; and she’s a Visiting
Professor of Trumpet at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. What’s more
important, she is a darn fine trumpet player. On the present record’s liner
notes she credits legendary jazz great Dizzy Gillespie as her inspiration, so
if you hear any signs of casual, easy, improvisational, modern-jazz inflections
in her playing, well, you know where it probably came from.
The program here consists of short Baroque pieces from
English composer Henry Purcell (1658-95), German organist and composer Johann
Sebastian Bach (1685-1750), Italian violinist and composer Giuseppe Torelli
(1650-1708), German composer George Frideric Handel (1685–1759), Italian
composer Tomaso Albinoni (1671-1750), and Italian composer Benedetto Marcello
(1686–1739). Her accompanists include Quentin Thomas, organ; Colm Carey, organ;
Alastair Ross, harpsichord; Lestyn Davies, countertenor; Edward Gardner and the
Goteborg Symfoniker; Thomas Klug and Die Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen;
Jonathan Morton and the Scottish Ensemble; and, most recently, Trevor Pinnock
and The English Concert. Throughout the selections, Ms. Balsom demonstrates the
smooth, fluent, mellifluous style that has made her famous.
Things begin with five tunes from Purcell's King Arthur, which come across with considerable
pomp, vigor, and enthusiasm, Ms. Balsom's trumpet effortlessly pouring forth
her usual golden notes in abundance. If that sounds like hyperbole, just give
it a listen.
Next come several numbers from Bach: a Sarabande, an Aria, a Badinerie, and Andantes from various suites, plus the Concerto in D (after Vivaldi). The Sarabande and Badinerie are particularly interesting as they are unaccompanied
solos yet sound like small ensembles unto themselves.
After the Bach comes Torelli's Trumpet Concerto in D, its three movements lively and enlivening
yet most refined. Following that is a selection apiece from Handel's Giulio Cesare, Albinoni's Sonata da chiesa, transcribed by Ms.
Balsom, and Marcello's Oboe Concerto in C
minor. The program concludes with three more numbers from Handel: the
overture from Atalanta, the Birthday Ode for Queen Anne, and the Amadigi di Gaula, arranged by Ms.
Balsom. This is exquisite, well-chosen music, exquisitely well played.
The album provides a healthy seventy-seven minutes of
playing time, nearly the limit for a compact disc, so you get more than your
money's worth right there.
The folks at Warner Classics have done up the packaging
most lavishly, enclosing the disc in its own sleeve within a hardcover book
with a thirty-two page bound insert. The only minor snag was trying to get the
disc out of its sleeve without leaving fingerprints on the playing surface. In
any case, I wonder if the company is planning to do up all of its new releases
so elaborately.
The sound, originally recorded by EMI in a number of
different locations from 2002-2012, is uniformly good, if not always as
absolutely transparent as some audiophiles might prefer. Still, it is nicely
dynamic in all the selections, with in each case a pleasant, natural hall
resonance to provide a realistic ambience. While the sound is a little
one-dimensional much of the time, it also sounds well extended, which helps to
make up for any slight deficiencies.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your comment. It will be published after review.