Violinist Thomas Zehetmair and violist Ruth
Killius have shared many years as musical collaborators in the
Zehetmair quartet. The couple’s spectacular duo performance at last
autumn’s ECM festival in Mannheim raised the expectactions for their new
programme, a carefully composed anthology of contemporary pieces for
violin and viola. Next to Bohuslav Martinů’s virtuosic and accessible
“Madrigals”, written in 1946 in American exile, the central piece here
is “Drei Skizzen” by Heinz Holliger, a triptychon with the instruments
tuned in the scordatura of Mozart’s fomous “Sinfonia concertante” for
violin, viola and orchestra. It was commissioned by the duo as an encore
piece for their frequent renderings of Mozart’s masterworks on the
concert platform. Its first movement “Pirouetts harmoniques” is entirely
based on shimmering harmonics, whereas the second one is an exuberant
perpetuum mobile. The cycle concludes with a six-part chorale that
requires both string players to hum an extra voice. This idea, which is
realised by the duo to a most stunning effect effect, was itself
inspired by Giancinto Scelsi’s solo piece “Manto” for a “singing viola
player”. The programme is complemented by compositions by Nikos
Skalkottas, Béla Bartók and short pieces by Rainer Killius and Johannes
Nied. (ECM Records)
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