The New York Times has praised violinist Miranda Cuckson’s “undeniable
musicality,” while Gramophone has declared her “an artist to be reckoned
with.” Born in Australia and educated in America, she makes her ECM New
Series debut – alongside pianist Blair McMillen – with three
20th-century milestones: the Hungarian Béla Bartók’s Violin Sonata No. 2
(1922), the Russian Alfred Schnittke’s Violin Sonata No. 2 “Quasi una
Sonata” (1968) and the Pole Witold Lutoslawski’s Partita for Violin and
Piano (1984). “Bringing these great Slavic composers together enables us
to hear each dealing with the dichotomies of form and spontaneity,
playfulness and seriousness, folk expression and abstraction,” Cuckson
explains. “The colors and traits of Slavic ethnic music are vibrantly in
the foreground in Bartók’s music, more subsumed into abstraction and
flavor in the Schnittke and Lutoslawski. Humor is a tool of provocation
and survival in Schnittke and to some extent Lutoslawski, a cheeky
attitude anchored by deep purpose. In Bartók, the boisterousness and
teasing charm of folk dances gives way to moods of profound melancholy.” (ECM Records)
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ENrique, thnk you so much for sharing all this wonderful music. Could you please do me (and many other Jaroussky dfans)a favor, and re-upload track 1? There is a short stop on 1:06. Thanks in advance!
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