The promise of Bak's 2022 recording debut is fully realised on this new release, which opens with a work for solo viola: Chant by the late British composer Jonathan Harvey. It’s an evocative piece with demanding double-stopping and a persistent drone effect offset by some tricky upper passage work. Bak offers a thoroughly convincing account of a work that calls for razor-sharp precision and considerable nerve ...Vaughan Williams’ lyrical Romanza provides immediate relief as well as introducing sympathetic pianist Richard Uttley into the mix. Both players are thoroughly inside the idiom here with Bak delivering an ardent, songful account of the melodic line over Uttley’s gently rocking accompaniment.There’s further contrast with The Stream Flows by Chinese-American composer Bright Sheng ... Bak, whose line is intended to evoke a female singer comparing her absent lover to bright moonlight, captures the work’s wistful lyricism, bending and shaping the phrases to create an evocative picture of loneliness and love.
The Bax sonata – at nearly 30 minutes, a meaty, challenging work – forms the beating heart of the program ...Channelling his inner Irishman, Bak digs into the first movement’s folk-like themes, alternating between a misty, keening quality that summons the heart into the mouth and lively sections that exude an infectious, dancing energy. Uttley’s spirited pianism spurs his partner on to feats of melodic dexterity. The central movement is all demonic fire and brilliance, the jigging second subject bringing Bak’s virtuosic side to the fore. The darkling finale finds both musicians turning inwards to squeeze the last ounce of poetry from the music’s Celtic moodiness ...The lyrical loveliness of Augusta Read Thomas’s Song Without Words forms a bridge to the grand finale, a pitch-perfect account of Benjamin Britten’s Lachrymae. The latter, a set of reflections on a theme by Dowland that only reveal their origin in the final iteration, can prove intractable, but not here. Bak’s dramatist’s ear conjures a wide range of filigree colours as well as considerable technical wizardry to hold the attention throughout. The finale opens with a rush of adrenalin before both players plunge into the lingering stillness of Dowland’s melancholy melody ...Warmly recorded in natural sound, Cantabile is another winner from an artist well worth getting to know'
EDITOR'S CHOICE