The booklet of Isabelle Faust’s new recording includes an essay
written by her regarding the performing editions used and the
significance of the violinist Joseph Joachim in the string works of
Johannes Brahms, as seen from a performer’s point of view. Since Brahms
did not belong to a generation of composers who mastered several
different instruments – as had Bach or Mozart – and composed from the
perspective of a pianist, his exchange of ideas with Joachim, which in
the case of the Violin Concerto lasted almost a year, was of decisive
importance for the final form of the piece, one of the most difficult in
the repertoire. Isabelle uses the rarely played cadenza by Ferruccio
Busoni, which dates from 1913. Brahms got to know Busoni as a child
prodigy and recommended the young pianist in a number of artistic
circles: ‘What Schumann did for me, I will do for Busoni.’ The spirit of
Joseph Joachim also hovers over the second work on this recording, for
the composer regarded the violinist as his most important adviser in the
realm of chamber music too. In the case of his Sextet, however, the
most perceptible influence is that of the doomed love affair between the
composer and the soprano Agathe von Siebold. That Brahms was unable to
overcome their separation with a light heart is clear from the monument
in sound to his lost romance in the lyrical second theme of the first
movement. ‘A-GA- D/H-E’1 proclaims the sequence of notes making up the
motif (bars 162 ff). Isabelle generously credits Christopher Hogwood,
Robert Pascall, Stefan Weymar and Douglas Woodfull-Harris for their
active support in all questions relating to the manuscript and the first
edition of Op.36 and for generously making available a prepublication
copy of the new Bärenreiter edition. Gramophone Magazine gave Isabelle
Faust its Young Artist of the Year Award for her first recording of
sonatas by Béla Bartók, in 1997 [now reissued on hm gold with volume 2].
The year 2010 marked a new stage in her recording career:
Diapason voted her CD of Bach Partitas and Sonatas a Diapason d’Or of
the Year, while her complete set of the Beethoven Sonatas with Alexander
Melnikov, received the Gramophone Award for Best Chamber Recording.
Composed of around 40 musicians from 20 different nations, and
independent of external sponsorship, the Mahler Chamber Orchestra was
founded in 1997 by the players themselves and Claudio Abbado. In 1998,
at the age of 22, Daniel Harding became Principal Guest Conductor; in
2003 he was named Music Director and he has served as Principal
Conductor since 2008, conducting around a quarter of the orchestra’s
projects each season. He is also Music Director of the Swedish Radio
Symphony Orchestra, Principal Guest Conductor of the LSO and Music
Partner of the New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra. (Presto Classical)
“a poetic player with an irresistibly warm sound, a tightly controlled vibrato and an athletic technique." BBC Music Magazine
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