The violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter and the composer and conductor
Krzysztof Penderecki are among the leading musical figures of our age.
For more than thirty years these two outstanding musicians have been
close friends, and during that time their friendship has proved a
fruitful one, repeatedly inspiring and challenging both parties. To mark
the composer’s eighty-fifth birthday Deutsche Grammophon is now
releasing a very special double album featuring Anne-Sophie Mutter both
as a soloist and in partnership with a number of colleagues. All the
works that are included here reflect Penderecki’s unique musical
language in fascinatingly intense and multifaceted ways. The result is a
sensitive and moving homage on the part of the violinist to a musical
friend whose Second Violin Sonata she has recorded for the first time.
Penderecki’s works have an existential depth to them that goes far
beyond the sheer sensuousness of the musical world that they inhabit.
Anne-Sophie Mutter compares their complex, multifaceted nature to the
canvases of Pablo Picasso, so varied, extreme and contrastive are they.
For the composer himself these works are the end result of a creative
process that is both tireless and extremely demanding. As he himself
puts it: “I like travelling uncharted pathways. I have to do this
whenever I compose, otherwise nothing comes out. I start somewhere in
the middle of a work, before moving to the right or left and time and
again having to get back on course, which often means retracing my
steps. I continue to compose until it becomes clear to me that I could
really do it much better. I then start at the beginning.” Penderecki has
retained this self-critical attitude right up to the present day. It is
an attitude that places enormous demands on him. The works that have
come into existence in this way afford impressive proof of his
uncompromising dedication to music and provide thrilling evidence of his
ability to explore the emotional extremes of human existence.
This double album brings together various pieces that Penderecki has
written for the violin and that are performed by Anne-Sophie Mutter in
ways that bring out their wealth of tone colours and captivating
expressivity, while also striking a personal note. In addition to La Follia,
a virtuoso set of variations for unaccompanied violin, and the
dialogue-like concert duet for violin and double bass that Anne-Sophie
Mutter has recorded with the bass player Roman Patkoló, it is two
large-scale, complex works that are at the heart of the present release.
Both reflect Penderecki’s multilayered and hugely expressive art of
composition. Laid out along symphonic lines, the Second Violin Concerto –
subtitled Metamorphosen – was premiered by Anne-Sophie Mutter
in 1995: “For me this task is physically and psychologically
challenging, but it is a challenge that I am grateful to accept,” says
the violinist about the extremely demanding and contrastive work, in
which Penderecki provides a virtuoso amalgam of the most varied styles.
Like the Second Violin Concerto, the Second Violin Sonata is dedicated
to Anne-Sophie Mutter, who has recorded it for the present album with
the pianist Lambert Orkis. The piece is in five movements and resembles a
dramatic disquisition on life that ultimately leaves the listener
emotionally moved.
Penderecki and Mutter have been friends for many years. It is a
friendship that has proved inspirational. They first got to know each
other in the early 1980s, although it was not until 1988 that they began
to work together closely. This was the year in which the then
twenty-five-year-old violinist played Prokofiev’s First Violin Concerto
under Penderecki’s direction. From the outset the conductor was
fascinated by her musical maturity. Their musical association has lasted
until the present day. For Anne-Sophie Mutter, it is “far more than
mere admiration that has bound me to Krzysztof Penderecki’s works for
several decades. I am shaken to the very roots of my being by the depth
of emotion that issues from them – almost more than I am by his genius
as a composer.” With this double album, Hommage à Penderecki, the violinist pays touching tribute to a truly exceptional composer and to their mutual friendship.
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