Gramophone – September 2019

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14 GRAMOPHONE SEPTEMBER 2019 gramophone.co.uk


FORTHERECORD

PHOTOGRAPHY:

MUSACCHIO & IANNIELLO, COURTESY SONETTO CLASSICS

Our monthly series telling the story behind an orchestra


ORCHESTRA Insight ...


ussian ational Orchestra


Founded 1990
Home Tchaikovsky Concert Hall, Moscow
Artistic Director Mikhail Pletnev

Once upon a time, you knew when you were hearing a Russian
orchestra. These days, you can’t be so sure. That might be
a result of increasing orchestral globalisation but it’s also
connected to a relatively new orchestra that has become
one of the country’s biggest musical exports.
The Russian National Orchestra was founded by the pianist
and conductor Mikhail Pletnev in 1990 – the first symphony
orchestra in Russia to exist outside government control. It wasn’t
just the constitution that was new. Pletnev wanted a new kind of
‘Russian’ sound, something removed from the shrieking colours
and relentless heft associated with the stereotypical Russian
orchestra of the time. Pletnev would fashion his new orchestra
in his own image: with the composure and clarity for which he
was known as a pianist.
The success of Pletnev’s experiment must be judged on
audition, but there’s no doubting the distinctiveness of the
playing he engendered. It retained a certain boldness, but
with better blending woodwinds, and strings that sounded more
velvety than earthy. Critics soon noticed that the RNO was
shunning traditional Russian sentimentalism in favour of
something more multifaceted and colourful.
The RNO became the first Russian orchestra to perform in
Israel and at the Vatican, and attracted major sponsorship from
international banks and diplomatic figures. But its profile would
cause problems. When Pletnev stepped back in 1999 to become
Conductor Laureate, the RNO was undermined by the Russian
government’s founding of a state-sponsored rival (the National
Philharmonic Orchestra) comprising many of the same musicians.
Pletnevreturnedwithsteelyresolveandakeyinnovation:

a ‘collegium’ of chief conductors, including Vladimir Jurowski
and Kent Nagano, to further bolster his ensemble’s international
presence. He reunited the orchestra with DG’s mics, providing
numerous documents of that very particular sound including
discussion-worthy Beethoven symphony and concerto cycles.
The RNO’s discography stretches to over 80 titles, with its
Virgin Classics recording of Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No 6,
Pathétique, being named by Gramophone as one of ‘The 100
Greatest Recordings’. Many of the recordings make a statement:
Peter and the Wolf, narrated by Sophia Loren, Bill Clinton and
Mikhail Gorbachev, is a clear indication of Pletnev’s desire for
the RNO to be seen as an ambassador for an outward-looking
Russia. It remains as such today, visiting festivals from Latvia to
California, stopping by at the BBC Proms, and presenting its
own series in Moscow and many
far-flungcornersofRussiatoo.
AndrewMellor
Listentoourspecialplaylist on Qobuz

Celebrating the album
The second edition of National Album Day
has been announced, again to celebrate the
format’s relevance and legacy across
musical genres. Taking place in the UK on
October 12, and jointly organised by the BPI
(the UK’s record industry body) and the music
retailers association ERA, the year’s main
theme – called ‘Don’t Skip – will encourage
people to listen to an album from beginning
to end, and promote the idea that listening
to an album in its entirety can have positive
well-being and mental health beneits.

Dame Sarah Connolly
Dame Sarah has announced her withdrawal
from performances at ENO and the Proms to
undergo surgery for breast cancer. ‘Like so
many women alicted with this disease, I will

face whatever is coming as best I can,’ the
mezzo said, adding that she hopes ‘to fulil all
other concert and recording commitments
over the coming months’. All at Gramophone
wish her well in the months ahead.

Norma Fisher, Vol 
Last year saw the release by Sonetto Classics
of recordings made in the 1970s by
Norma Fisher, an acclaimed pianist who
was sadly forced to stop performing after
developing focal dystonia, but who went on
to become one of today’s most sought-after
piano teachers. Incredibly well received –
Michelle Assay named it her Critics’ Choice of
2018 – that irst album of Brahms and Scriabin
(7/18) is now being followed in September by
a recording of music by Liszt, Schumann,
Debussy and Tchaikovsky. Norma Fisher: her 1970s recordings are a revelation

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