
The Scherzo is biting and dazzlingly virtuosic,
like a carousel gone wild. The ensuing Passacaglia is, quite simply,
the pinnacle of this concerto; a masterpiece – mature, elegiac and
highly lyrical. The passacaglia theme is repeated nine times with
contrapuntal elaborations. This is followed by a large-scale cadenza
that forms a bridge to the finale. The concerto closes with a Burlesque,
in which the theme from the Passacaglia has one final, piercing
reappearance.
Shortly after the première of Gubaidulina’s
Offertorium (1981), the Swiss patron of the arts Paul Sacher asked her
to compose a further violin concerto for the German soloist Anne-Sophie
Mutter, but nothing came of this due to lack of time. It was only in
2007, eight years after Sacher’s death, that Gubaidulina completed In
tempus praesens, which was given its première by Mutter at the Lucerne
Festival. It is a work of extreme contrasts in which very deep, infernal
passages are juxtaposed with extremely high, celestial episodes. Much
more so than Offertorium, In tempus praesens is a spectacular work for
the violinist, who plays virtually from start to finish and barely has a
chance to pause for breath. The virtuosity demanded by the work is
never an end in itself.
Pizzicato on Lamsa’s first release on
Challenge Classics (CC 72677): "The surround recording from Challenge
Classics stands out due to especially brilliant and powerful
interpretations and a finely coordinated dialogue between the
instruments. This is perfect harmony." (Presto Classical)
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