Canadian violinist
James Ehnes, ably backed by the
BBC Philharmonic under the energetic
Gianandrea Noseda, sets himself a challenge here with an original and difficult program, and then meets all the challenges involved in this fine
Bartók disc. The program, containing
Bartók's three concertos for a stringed instrument and orchestra, has dual difficulties: not just the requirement that the player surmount technical hurdles on both the violin and viola, but, more significantly, put across the differing emotional worlds of early, middle, and late
Bartók. The Violin Concerto No. 1, probably unperformed during
Bartók's lifetime, was composed in 1907 for the violinist Stefi Geyer, a student of Jenö Hubay. It is pure late-Romantic
Bartók, with dense, Straussian melodies in its first movement balanced by a more rhythmic finale. The Violin Concerto No. 2, from the late '30s, is one of
Bartók's finest works, with variation structures that elegantly expand the melodic economy resulting from the composer's engagement with folk music. It's a rigorous, complex work that reveals something new on each hearing. The Viola Concerto, left unfinished but fully sketched at
Bartók's death in 1945 and completed by Tibor Serly four years later, is a product of the composer's more populist American style, with broad, pleasing melodies and a full-out Hungarian finale. To deliver each of these styles convincingly is a tall order, but
Ehnes does not fail. The second violin concerto, especially, has the effect of a diamond whose aspects are viewed from different perspectives; it's worth the purchase price in itself. An excellent choice not only for
Bartók's concertos, but as an introduction to this giant of 20th century music who felt the dictates of wider cultural developments but worked things out fully in his own way.