Sofia Gubaidulina’s 80th birthday in October 2011 generated much
press coverage around the world, appropriately stressing the uniqueness
and the variety of her compositional approaches. Both are in evidence on
these recordings from Lockenhaus. Gidon Kremer is the soloist and
Kremerata Baltica the ensemble on the premiere recording of “The Lyre of
Orpheus”, dedicated to the memory of Gubaidulina’s daughter. Kremer has
long been a committed advocate of Gubaidulina’s work, and the composer
has praised the way the violinist seems to unleash music from the soul.
In this work of austere beauty and raw lyricism, violin, string
orchestra and percussion intermingle in new ways. At a subterranean
level, the piece is also an exploration into acoustic phenomena and the
physics of sound, with pulsating difference tones part of its underlying
structures. “The Lyre of Orpheus” was recorded in 2006, a month after
Kremer gave the first performance.
“Canticle of the Sun”, recorded in 2010, revisits the celebrated
piece that Gubaiduilina wrote in tribute to Mstislav Rostropovich on the
occasion of his 70th birthday in 1997. Rostropovich’s famously sunny
disposition was an inspiration, by association prompting Gubaidulina to
set St Francis of Assisi’s “Canticle of the Sun” for choir. In this
recording, Nicolas Altstaedt, one of the most accomplished cellists of
his generation, takes on the highly expressive lead role. A further,
timely, Lockenhaus connection here: as of this year, Altsteadt takes
over from Kremer as the new director of the Lockenhaus Chamber Music
Festival.
Dear Music-is-the-Key, is it possible to re-up this Gubaidulina release? I would be very happy...
ResponderEliminarI'm sorry, my request is in the wrong post. I already own this release and am looking for this release: https://musicisthekey2.blogspot.com/2015/01/elsbeth-moser-boris-pergamenschikow.html
ResponderEliminar