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Capuçon, Harding: Haydn – The Cello Concertos (FLAC)

Capuçon, Harding: Haydn - The Cello Concertos (FLAC)
Capuçon, Harding: Haydn – The Cello Concertos (FLAC)

Composer: Franz Joseph Haydn
Performer: Gautier Capuçon
Orchestra: Mahler Chamber Orchestra
Conductor: Daniel Harding
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Erato
Catalogue: 5455602
Release: 2003
Size: 327 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Cello Concerto No. 1 in C major, Hob. VIIb:1
01. I. Moderato – Cadenza
02. II. Adagio – Cadenza
03. III. Allegro molto

Cello Concerto No. 2 in D major, Hob. VIIb:2 (Op. 101)
04. I. Allegro moderato – Cadenza
05. II. Adagio
06. III. Rondo (Allegro) – Cadenza

Cello Concerto No.4 in D Major, Hob. VIIb / 2
07. I. Allegro
08. II. Adagio
09. III. Allegro

Still in his early twenties, Gautier Capuçon plays the cello with the control and wisdom of a much older musician. The lightness of his touch and the consistent clarity of his bow strokes are quite admirable in themselves, but when combined with an uncanny sweetness of tone in the higher registers they’re breathtaking.


These qualities suit the two Haydn concertos very well indeed and bestow upon the modest little anonymous D major Concerto unexpected dignity and charm.


Daniel Harding, conducting the Mahler Chamber Orchestra, opts for galant rather than driven tempi. The scale of his orchestral forces enables him to establish a relationship with the soloist more akin to chamber music than is usually heard in these works. There’s lightness of articulation throughout, conveying both intimacy and vitality.


Their reading of the C major Concerto, while not strongly imprinted, is truly Classical in its delicacy and refinement. It’s shapely and spirited but never forced. It’s the second item, the D major Haydn, which proves the highlight. In the opening movement Capuçon conjures the darting image of a water sprite, who can nevertheless steal time in all the right moments. The doublestops are dizzying and the chords in the poetic cadenza are exquisitely rolled. The Adagio takes on the aura of a meditation; Capuçon seems detached while gently supported by the orchestra, in a reverie of his own. When it comes, the elaboration that serves in the place of a cadenza is perfectly attuned to the moment.


The final Allegro is never allowed to go ‘peasant’, remaining instead in the aristocrat’s drawing room where it sparkles and glows.

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