Verdict: "English cellist fuses fire and soul in Russian masterpieces"
Shostakovich's First Concerto is rightly popular, possibly because it so immediately evokes the paranoia of living in Stalinist timesSteven Isserlis is a man with a sprightly and sometimes spiky sense of humour. On his website, among charming literary rambles and a recent, beautifully turned tribute to his teacher Jane Cowan, he discusses enthusiasms that include Fred Bassett cartoon books and lists his hates, from Delius to caviar and tinned tuna.
Isserlis is coy with his recordings. Rather than a checklist of his many releases, we get pithy observations on a select few. At his most wry, he assesses a 1999 set of reissued performances as "a slightly mixed bag -- but it's cheap".
Even without acknowledging seconded appearances on marketing ploys like Music for Dinner Parties and Zen Classics, Isserlis has created a substantial discography.