
The intensity of Ustvolskaya’s music is well-matched with the driven
performance style of Patricia Kopatchinskaja who was recently voted “Instrumentalist of the Year” by the Royal Philharmonic Society, its
jury of musicians hailing her as “an irresistible force of nature:
passionate, challenging and totally original in her approach.” Her aim
as an interpretative player, is “to communicate the meaning and inner
workings of the music. Curiosity drives me to explore many different
musical frontiers." Her repertoire has addressed music from Bach to Cage
and beyond. Kopatchinskaja feels that Ustvolskaya’s 1964 Duet is
amongst the 20th century’s most powerful compositions: “Here is no place
for ‘beauty’. In order to rise to the expressive power of this music
the interpretation has to go to the extremes.” The 1952 Sonata,
meanwhile, “gains quality and depth with each repeated playing (and
listening). In the beginning the violin repeats a hammering phrase, -
the stonemason working on a tombstone. This pulse prolongs itself
through the whole piece, sometimes interrupted by irregular breaths and
sighs – a lonesome soul walking through an endless Russian landscape.
The music of Ustvolskaya is like a ritual, taking the listener into a
unique and archaic world, where there is no place for comparisons or
theoretical analysis.”
The present recording of Ustvolskaya’s music was made at Lugano’s
Auditorio Radiotelevisione svizzera in March 2013, and produced by
Manfred Eicher.
Very serious music. Sometimes melancholic, but most of the time simply dark. I can't say I feel particularly enthusiastic about it, but it's far more accessible than I had expected.
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