Reportajes
Monopolio masculino en los Premios ICMA 2022
Maruxa Baliñas
El 18 de enero se dió a conocer el fallo de los International Classical Music Awards (ICMA) en su edición de 2022. La entrega de los premios tendrá lugar en la Philharmonie de Luxemburgo el próximo 21 de abril en el marco de una ceremonia que incluirá un concierto de gala de la Orquesta Filarmónica de Luxemburgo dirigida por el premiado Adam Fischer y con la participación de algunos de los artistas premiados. El concierto será retrasmitido por en director por la Radio Pública de Luxemburgo 100.7 y posteriormente por otras radios pertenecientes a la European Broadcasting Union.
Aunque había 377 nominaciones a los ICMA 2022 el resultado final fue casi exclusivamente masculino. Entre los artistas premiados todos fueron hombres y en las grabaciones discográficas la intervención femenina se limitó al disco de la violinista Alina Ibragimova interpretando los 24 Caprichos para violín solo de Niccolò Paganini, las voces femeninas en las óperas y poco más: ninguna directora de orquesta, ninguna directora de escena, y ninguna compositora.
El jurado estuvo compuesto por Remy Franck (Pizzicato de Luxemburgo) como presidente, y los representantes de Andante (Turquía), Crescendo (Bélgica), Das Orchester (Alemania), Deutsche Welle (Alemania), IMZ (Austria), MDR-Klassik (Alemania), Musical Life (Rusia), Musica (Italia), Musik & Theater (Suiza), Opera (Gran Bretaña), Orpheus Radio (Rusia), Papageno (Hungría), Polskie Radio Chopin (Polonia), Radio 100,7 (Luxemburgo), Radio Romania Muzical (Rumanía), Resmusica.com (Francia), Scherzo (España), Rondo Classic (Finlandia), y Unison (Croacia).
El premio 'a los logros de toda una vida' fue para el director de orquesta Adam Fischer. El premio al 'artista del año' correspondió al clarinetista y director Martin Fröst. Los violinistas Gennaro Cardaropoli y Julian Kainrath fueron respectivamente 'artista joven del año' y 'descubrimiento del año'. El premio a 'compositor del año' fue para Sebastian Androne mientras el compositor español Francisco Coll recibía el 'premio orquestal'. Château de Versailles Spectacles fue el 'sello del año', junto a 17 grabaciones en total de vídeo y audio de diferentes géneros y estilos, entre ellas dos del violinista Frank Peter Zimmermann. El director Pierre Cao y el pianista Michael Korstick recibieron sendos premios especiales.
Lista completa de premiados (en inglés)
Lifetime Achievement Award: Adam Fischer, conductor
For decades Adam Fischer has enriched the discographic catalogues with mostly complete recordings of symphonists like Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven or Mahler as well as selected operas. His interpretations, always full of character, display tonal refinement and a broad spectrum of colour as well as striking tempos, drama and clarity. In particular, his many interpretations of 18th century repertoire enable the listeners to experience new views. Adam Fischer always stands for artistic alternatives in the best sense.
Artist of the Year: Martin Fröst, clarinet
Martin Fröst is an artist who breaks boundaries and who is certainly not limited to the core repertoire of his instrument, but is constantly looking for something new. He plays Vivaldi as well as new works with equally imaginative virtuosity and finds a fresh, inspired grip on the classics. In his hands, the clarinet becomes an extension of the human voice and a magic wand of new sound worlds. The transition to conducting orchestras was a natural step for Fröst, and in that role he also shows the same sovereign and wide-ranging musicianship and transfers his own energy to the entire orchestra.
Young Artist of the Year: Gennaro Cardaropoli, violin
At only 24 years of age, Gennaro Cardaropoli is one of the purest talents on the international violin scene: the only Italian to win the Grumiaux Prize, in recent years he has performed in Vienna, Berlin and New York and has made his recording debut with Warner Classics. And in his playing one can clearly hear the heritage of Salvatore Accardo’s school, together with an expressive elegance and a subtlety in phrasing that are reserved only for great artists.
Discovery Award: Julian Kainrath, violin
The violinist Julian Kainrath, born in Merano in 2005, is a scholarship holder of the Liechtenstein Music Academy. He has already attracted attention on several occasions. At the Verbier Festival 2019 he met Marc Bouchkov, who has been his mentor ever since. Meeting the pianist Till Fellner a year later opened up further opportunities for him to showcase his talent and develop himself. Last summer, at the Accademia Chigiana in Siena, the next artistically important encounter came with Ilya Gringolts. ICMA follows Julian Kainrath’s continuous and consistent development with great interest and is documenting this with the Discovery Award 2022.
Composer Award: Sebastian Androne
Romanian composer Sebastian Androne is a true talent, mixing creativity and versatility both in contemporary music and also in soundtracks for cinema and theatre. Born in 1989, he studied in Romania, France, Great Britain and Switzerland. He is a prizewinner of the some of the important international competitions dedicated to composers, including the International Film Music Competition in Zürich (2018). Music means to communicate with the audience – this is Androne’s artistic credo, expressed in his almost 100 works.
Label of the Year: Château de Versailles Spectacles
With the release of nearly 50 CDs and a dozen DVDs, the Château de Versailles Spectacles label has taken just four years to establish itself as one of the most relevant in the international market, especially in the field of Baroque and Early Music. And it has done so through the attractiveness of the works (many of them world premiere recordings, and practically all of them recorded in the Palace of Versailles), the quality of the ensembles and artists, the excellent quality of the sound recordings and a presentation so luxurious that it can only be described as Versaillesque.
Orchestra Award: Francisco Coll, composer
In just a few years, the young Valencian composer Francisco Coll, winner of the ICMA Composer Award 2019, has become one of the great realities of contemporary European musical creation. His works, characterized by overflowing imagination and structural richness, as well as by an unquestionable and very attractive technical virtuosity, are commissioned by some of the most important international soloists, ensembles and orchestras. Moreover, his ability to communicate with a wide audience seems to guarantee a bright future for this only disciple of Thomas Adès. For all this he receives this year the Orchestra Award granted by the Luxembourg Philharmonic.
Special Achievement Award: Pierre Cao, conductor
After winning the Malko Conducting Competition in 1968, Pierre Cao became Assistant Conductor of the former RTL Symphony Orchestra and Music Director of the chamber orchestra Les Musiciens. He was one of the founders of the INECC (European Institute of Choral Singing). In 1999 he created the choir Arsys Bourgogne and became the Artistic Director of Les Rencontres Musicales de Vézelay. A passionate and uncompromising teacher, he was also particularly attracted to the Baroque movement, and his work in this field makes him a point of reference.
Special Achievement Award: Michael Korstick, piano
Despite having been called Mr Beethoven, Michael Korstick shows in a very broad repertoire and on almost 60 recordings an astonishingly determined and sovereign style of playing, which however remains free of airs and graces, always striving for clarity of the composer’s message. Though he meticulously prepares every interpretation, his performances achieve a spontaneity that makes the music sound newly minted.
Audio and Video categories. Early Music
Basevi Codex – Music at the Court of Margaret of Austria. Dorothee Mields, soprano. Boreas Quartett Bremen. Audite 97.783
The brilliant Dorothee Mields and the excellent Boreas Quartett Bremen take us on a fascinating musical journey through time and inspire us with their high art of interpretation, with a perfect mixture of intimacy, simplicity and feeling for the improvisational gesture of the works.
Audio and Video categories. Baroque Instrumental
The Mad Lover. Eccles – Purcell – Dunford – Matteis. Théotime Langlois de Swarte, violin. Thomas Dunford, lute. Harmonia Mundi. HMM902305
With this CD, the violin of Théotime Langlois de Swarte and the lute of Thomas Dunford come together in a very intimate vision of English melancholic music at the turn of the 18th century, exploring the theme of madness in love. Welcomed for the first time by Harmonia Mundi, this unique duo represents two of the most talented musicians of the young generation. The slow movements are immensely touching, in a language close to improvisation. In the variations, both musicians lead us into a whirlwind of perfectly mastered virtuosity. Very great art!
Audio and Video categories. Baroque Vocal
Anima Aeterna. Fux – Handel – Nucci – Zelenka. Jakub Józef Orliński, countertenor. Il Pomo d’Oro, Francesco Corti. Erato. 9029674390
The perfect recipe for a successful production: outstanding voices – Jakub Józef Orliński and Fatma Said – an orchestra and a conductor perfectly attuned to the specificity of baroque music, and repertoire featuring several world premieres and other less known pieces. Orliński, one of the greatest countertenors of our time, shows not only excellent vocal abilities, but also a rare musical intelligence. A must-have for all those who love baroque music.
Audio and Video categories. Vocal Music
Schumann: Complete Songs. Christian Gerhaher, baritone. Gerold Huber, piano. Sony Classical 19439780112
Schumann’s Lieder are not only pearls of lyricism, but the most colourful and dramatic pieces of theatre – each one in a small, closed form. Presenting them all in their richness and variety is an incredible challenge. Christian Gerhaher and Gerold Huber – with important help from the singers Camilla Tilling, Julia Kleiter, Sibylla Rubens, Wiebke Lehmkuhl and Martin Mitterrutzner – do it with deep and insightful comprehension and vocal artistry of the highest possible quality. They do not only sing, but narrate stories and relish the detail of the poetry. The effect is indeed pure musical poetry.
Audio and Video categories. Choral Music
Gioachino Rossini: Petite Messe Solennelle. Sandrine Piau, soprano, Josè Maria Lo Monaco, mezzo-soprano. Edgardo Rocha, tenor, Christian Senn, baritone. Francesco Corti, Cristiano Gaudio, piano – Daniel Perer, harmonium. Coro Ghislieri. Giulio Prandi. Arcana A494
The Petite Messe Solennelle is an enigmatic and mysterious masterpiece. Perhaps it is only with this recording (which for the first time makes use of the new critical edition), wonderfully conducted by Giulio Prandi with the Ghislieri Choir and four top class singers, that we can truly understand the mysteries of the old Rossini, who winks at the opera theatre but from a now distanced perspective.
Audio and Video categories. Opera
Vincenzo Bellini: Il Pirata. Javier Camarena, Marina Rebeka, Franco Vassallo, Antonio Di Matteo, Gustavo De Gennaro, Sonia Fortunato. Orchestra e Coro del Teatro Massimo Bellini di Catania. Fabrizio Maria Carminati. Prima Classic PRIMA010
This recording of Bellini’s Il Pirata, comes from where the opera is set: Sicily. With his light, supple and still very youthful voice, Javier Camarena is an ideal interpreter of the title role. Marina Rebeka interprets Imogene expressively and with dramatic impetus. With his rich baritone, Franco Vassallo is a very impressive Ernesto. All the other roles are well cast, and there are also good performances from the orchestra and chorus of the Teatro Massimo Bellini that all add up to make this recording a real treat.
Audio and Video categories. Solo Instrument
Niccolò Paganini: 24 Caprices. Alina Ibragimova, violin. Hyperion. CDA68366
Alina Ibragimova is one of the brightest violinists of our time. Her latest album with Paganini’s 24 Caprices sets a new high standard, with the violinist displaying nonchalant virtuosity, amazing imagination if not borderline audacity. Her very personal interpretation offers continuously enriching surprises with each Caprice.
Ex aequo
Leoš Janáček: On an Overgrown Path – Piano Sonata 1.X.1905 – In the Mists. Lars Vogt, piano. Ondine. ODE1382-2
In this Janáček programme, Lars Vogt expresses the intimacy of the music very sensitively. This subtle atmosphere is created because Vogt, like the great Ivan Moravec before him, is a singer at the piano, combining tension with naturalness, and turns accents into nuanced, music-inherent developments, unobtrusive throughout in the character of an improvisational reflection.
Audio and Video categories. Chamber Music
Ludwig van Beethoven: Violin Sonatas Nos. 8-10. Frank Peter Zimmermann, violin. Martin Helmchen, piano. BIS 2537
Violinist Frank Peter Zimmermann took a long time before recording Beethoven’s sonatas, having found only with Martin Helmchen the partner to tackle this challenge with him. Now the cycle has found its completion with the final three sonatas. Always focused on the music and not on self-expression, they bring an organic soulfulness to their music-making. Each colleague feels when to stand back and give his partner more prominence. At the same time, everything seems extremely energetic, spontaneous and fresh.
Audio and Video categories. Concertos
Beethoven – Berg – Bartók, Violin Concertos. Frank Peter Zimmermann, violin. Berliner Philharmoniker. Alan Gilbert, Daniel Harding, Kirill Petrenko. Berliner Philharmoniker Recordings. BPHR210151
Nearly four decades of fruitful artistic cooperation connects Frank Peter Zimmermann and the Berliner Philharmoniker. The superb two-CD box showcases the violinist with Chief Conductor Kirill Petrenko as well as conductors Daniel Harding and Alan Gilbert exploring the famous concertos by Beethoven, Berg and Bartók. Zimmermann’s warm and richly shaded tone oscillates between highest subtlety, introversion and powerful expression. His multifaceted craftsmanship forms a perfect complement to the organic and colour-saturated sound of the renowned orchestra.
Audio and Video categories. Symphonic Music
Anton Bruckner: Symphony No. 4 (3 versions). Bamberger Symphoniker. Jakub Hrůša. Accentus Music. ACC 30533
Bruckner’s Symphony No. 4 has never been presented as lavishly on CD than in this four-CD set. Bamberger Symphoniker under the baton of Jakub Hrůša have recorded all three existing versions plus alternative movements and fragments of this monumental symphony. The listeners are very well served by these recordings and the most rewarding of them all is undoubtedly the 1874 version which has never been heard in a more fresh and colourful, imaginative, and richly blossoming performance than in this one under Jakub Hrůša. The recorded sound is also exceptional.
Audio and Video categories. Contemporary Music
Francisco Coll, Violin Concerto – Hidd’n Blue – Mural – 4 Iberian Miniatures – Aqua Cinerea. Patricia Kopatchinskaja. Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg. Gustavo Gimeno. Pentatone PTC 5186951
Francisco Coll, winner of the ICMA 2019 Composer Award, writes music distinguished by depth and individuality, combining modern musical language with the colourfulness and energy inherent in the musical culture of Spain. These outstanding creative qualities attracted Patricia Kopatchinskaja, famous for her love of discoveries. She shows off her stupendous skills in the premiere recording of Coll’s Violin Concerto and Four Iberian Miniatures. The composer reveals himself as a symphonist and master of orchestral writing in the other pieces on this disc. The jury also highlights the sound of the Orchestra Philharmonique du Luxembourg under its chief conductor, Gustavo Gimeno, compatriot of Coll, and the excellent technical level of the recording.
Audio and Video categories. Assorted Programs
Nikolai Kapustin, Piano Concerto No. 4 – Concerto for violin, piano & strings – Chamber Symphony Op. 105. Frank Dupree, piano, Rosanne Philippens, violin. Württembergisches Kammerorchester Heilbronn. Case Scaglione, Frank Dupree. Capriccio C5437
Nikolai Kapustin was posthumously christened a ‘Russian in Gershwin’s clothing’. Whoever listens to the recording by Frank Dupree and the Württembergisches Kammerorchester is immediately convinced: this is no exaggeration. Kapustin’s music sounds filigree, virtuosic and full of relish, in an exciting and immediately gripping, transparent performance. The young violinist Rosanne Philippens also comes into play virtuously and confidently in the Double Concerto.
Audio and Video categories. Historical Recordings
The Complete Wilhelm Furtwängler on Records. Various composers. Berliner Philharmoniker, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Lucerne Festival Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, Wiener Philharmoniker. Wilhelm Furtwängler. Warner Classics 019025232405
Warner Classics has reissued a complete set of Wilhelm Furtwängler’s studio recordings, reuniting for the first time Deutsche Grammophon, Polydor, HMV, Decca and Telefunken in one release. This boxed set, which is indispensable to our knowledge of the conductor’s art, benefits from the expert work of Stéphane Topakian (editorial manager) and Christophe Hénault (sound restoration).
Audio and Video categories. Premiere Recordings
Antonio Salieri: Armida. Lenneke Ruiten, Florie Valiquette, Teresa Iervolino, Ashley Riches. Chœur de chambre de Namur, Les Talens Lyriques. Christophe Rousset. Aparté AP244
Aparté presents the world premiere recording of three-act opera Armida by Antonio Salieri. An intense love drama involving just four characters, it is perfectly performed by the soloists together with the orchestra Les Talens Lyriques and the Choeur de Chambre de Namur. The opera was premiered in 1771 in Vienna, and 250 years later we are grateful to Christophe Rousset for providing the opportunity to listen to this fantastic recording of a true masterpiece by the young Salieri.
Audio and Video categories. Video Performance
Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Die tote Stadt. Jonas Kaufmann, Marlies Petersen, Andrzej Filonczyk, Jennifer Johnston, Mirjam Mesak, Corinna Scheuerle, Manuel Günther, Dean Power. Chor der Bayerischen Staatsoper, Bayerisches Staatsorchester. Kirill Petrenko. Regie: Simon Stone. Bayerische Staatsoper Recordings BSOREC1001
In this sensational production from Munich, the Bayerische Staatsoper was right to cast Jonas Kaufmann in the tenor role. His brilliant performance is the major highlight of this album. Kirill Petrenko’s commitment to the Bayerische Staatsorchester is evident, and the vital breath of his conducting is always in harmony with the sensual score. The chorus and children’s choir are equally central to this recording which brilliantly marks the birth of a new label.
Audio and Video categories. Video Documentaries
A World Without Beethoven?. Sarah Willis, Martin Roddewig. C-Major 757008
A world without Beethoven? It’s simply unimaginable. In Martin Roddewig’s documentary, the famous horn player Sarah Willis of the Berliner Philharmoniker travels through the realms of rock and classical music, jazz and film scores. In interviews with musicians and managers, the documentary shows how profoundly Beethoven’s innovations have shaped the music of centuries to come. This film is witty and highly entertaining.
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