Thomas Zehetmair’s insight into Robert Schumann’s music and his capacity
to illuminate its emotional centre were very much in evidence when he
recorded Schumann string quartets with the Zehetmair Quartet for an ECM
New Series disc which collected numerous prizes, including the Edison
Award, the Gramophone Recording of the Year Award, the Diapason d’or de
l’année, and the Prix Caecilia.
As with the chamber music, so with the symphonic works. On this
recording, made at Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in February 2014,
Zehetmair does double duty as both soloist and conductor, leading the
Orchestre de chambre de Paris in compelling performances of Schumann’s
Violin Concerto and the Phantasy for Violin and Orchestra, as well as
the First Symphony. Zehetmair has spoken of the “simultaneous
spontaneity, power and delicacy” which inform Schumann’s symphonic
compositions and these are qualities which he draws forth from the Paris
orchestra in these beautifully-realized performances.
In the liner notes for the present disc, Giselher Schubert describes the
genesis of the compositions and of Schumann’s very different frame of
mind during the writing of the First Symphony in 1941 and the Violin
Concerto a dozen years later. The Violin Concerto and the Phantasy were
written for Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim in 1853, but only the
Phantasy, the solo part of which was designed by Schumann as a “written
out improvisation” to match the flair of Joachim’s performance style,
was premiered in the composer’s lifetime. Joachim and Clara Schumann
shared reservations about the playability of the Violin Concerto and,
after Schumann’s death, resolved not to publish it. The piece then had
to wait more than 80 years for its first performance, in Berlin in 1937.
Thomas Zehetmair: “The concerto has gripped me since I first encountered
it. But back in the early 1980s there was only the Schünemann edition
of the score available. As worthy as it was, it was nevertheless full of
errors. So I meticulously studied the original manuscript in 1988 in
the Berlin State Library, and recently contributed to the new Breitkopf
‘Urtext’ edition. Where the concerto was once considered a poor relative
in Schumann’s oeuvre, today no one doubts that the work belongs to the
greatest that has been written for violin and orchestra.”
Zehetmair made a well-received studio recording of the concerto for
Teldec in 1988, but notes that “experience naturally plays a major role
in performing such a profound piece, which I have now lived through in
numerous performances. This has left many traces.”
Deep engagement with the structure and proportions of the music runs
like a thread through Thomas Zehetmair’s distinguished and unusually
varied musical career as soloist, quartet leader, and conductor. (ECM Records)
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