The piano pieces of Frédéric Chopin and Claude Debussy
may be regarded as coming from either side of the great Romantic
divide, conceived in reaction against the movement's excesses yet often
embodying its ideals. Chopin never considered himself a Romantic, and Debussy
struggled to eradicate its influence. Both composers had a common
interest in avoiding the grandiose forms and sweeping gestures of Liszt and Wagner,
and instead sought beauty in intimate forms, such as miniatures and
character pieces. Yet, insofar as they were both poets of the piano,
they expressed the Romantic passion for evoking moods and love of tone
painting, and in terms of expression, Chopin and Debussy have much in common. Javier Perianes perceives the way Debussy absorbed Chopin's
refined musical language and shaped it into his own, without overtly
borrowing or quoting, and this accounts for many of their shared
sonorities, effects, and mannerisms. For this Harmonia Mundi album, Perianes alternates tracks between Chopin and Debussy, so listeners can draw their own conclusions about the many similarities as well as the obvious differences, and appreciate Perianes'
subtle treatment of such diaphanous and iridescent music. (Blair Sanderson)
martes, 31 de octubre de 2017
lunes, 30 de octubre de 2017
Olivia Belli LUDOVICO EINAUDI Stanze
It is said that in 1992 when the BBC Radio 3 broadcasted Stanze in the harp version, the phones of the radio station were buzzing with callers asking for the name of the composer. Since then the fame of Stanze and of Ludovico Einaudi has continued to grow.
This is not surprising if we consider the appeal and communicative spirit of these pieces. Even today they represent a model for the post-classic genre, still loved and imitated, which Einaudi - uncontested maestro - was able to imprint with an all Italian original and refined tenor.
After 25 years from the first recording, I present Stanze, here for the first time, in the original piano version composed by Einaudi himself. The score, published by Ricordi in 1992, is made up of 14 numbers: two less than the 16 of the harp recording. Calmo and Attesa are in fact missing. All the other ones are almost the same, just a few changes due to the dissimilar techniques of the two instruments. Only one, Moto perpetuo, in the piano version is so completely dif- ferent and much longer (12 pages versus 4 of the harp), as to be considered a new one.
Stanze was the ancient name of the strofe in the Canzone, the first Italian poetic form. Stanza means room. Dante Alighieri defined the poetic meaning of stanza as “dimora capace e ricettacolo di tutta l’arte” [a capacious storehouse or receptacle for the art in its entirety], suggesting the place, real or unreal, where the artist isolates himself to think, to collect strength and find the words (or notes) to create.
Actually we all have a stanza where we easily find our inner self. It can be a place in our home where, alas at the end of the day, we retire to listen to some music or read a book; it could be our car cabin, or a train compartment, where, while the landscape flies past, we think back on the past, dream of our future: it can even be just a space in our head, a place not in a place, where we stand alone in front of ourselves.
Even though, as the composer affirms, there is not a general idea that unifes the pieces of this album, they are all conceived in the same stanza, in that unique place which offers to the artist the peace of loneliness and meditation.
Quatuor Psophos CONSTELLATIONS
Winners of the Grand Prix at the Bordeaux
International String Quartet Competition in 2001, the Psophos Quartet
was founded by students of the Conservatoire national supérieure de
Paris. Trained and mentored in Basel by the great Walter Levin, the
quartet was strongly influenced by his passion commitment and musical
rigour.
The Quartet was the first French quartet chosen to be part of the prestigious BBC Radio 3 ‘New Generation Artists’ scheme from 2005-2007 and was also named ‘Best Ensemble of the Year’ at the 2005 Victoires de la musique.
The Quartet was the first French quartet chosen to be part of the prestigious BBC Radio 3 ‘New Generation Artists’ scheme from 2005-2007 and was also named ‘Best Ensemble of the Year’ at the 2005 Victoires de la musique.
The quartet has performed in prestigious halls and festivals all over
Europe including the Concertgebouw Amsterdam, the Wigmore Hall, London
and its trajectory has been further enriched by appearances at the Folle
Journée festivals in Nantes, Tokyo, and Lisbon, at the BBC the Proms
and many other renowned festivals. These performances have given the
quartet the opportunity to share the stage with musical personalities
including Renaud and Gauthier Capuçon, Nicholas Angelich, Bertrand
Chamayou, Cédric Tiberghien, Vladimir Mendelssohn, Emmanuelle Bertrand
and Nemanja Radulovic.
In 2009 the quartet welcomed two new members,
Eric Lacrouts (violin) and Guillaume Martigne (cello), a change that has
proved to be enriching both artistically and on a human level. The
balance provided by these new forces gives the ensemble a new serenity
that perpetuates its maturity and its high standards.
Driven by a wide-ranging artistic curiosity, the quartet works with leading artists from diverse fields. A collaboration with Jean-Marie Machado and Dave Liebman brought them to the jazz world with Painting notes in the air and they have performed at Théâtre National de Chaillot in Paris and Lyon Opera with choreographer Philippe Decouflé.
For three years the Psophos Quartet was Quartet in Residence at the Theatre Athénée Louis Jouvet in Paris, where is presented its own series of chamber music concerts inviting such artists as Bertrand Chamayou, Vladimir Mendelssohn, Jean-Marc Luisada, Nils Moenkemayer et Jörg Widmann.
Driven by a wide-ranging artistic curiosity, the quartet works with leading artists from diverse fields. A collaboration with Jean-Marie Machado and Dave Liebman brought them to the jazz world with Painting notes in the air and they have performed at Théâtre National de Chaillot in Paris and Lyon Opera with choreographer Philippe Decouflé.
For three years the Psophos Quartet was Quartet in Residence at the Theatre Athénée Louis Jouvet in Paris, where is presented its own series of chamber music concerts inviting such artists as Bertrand Chamayou, Vladimir Mendelssohn, Jean-Marc Luisada, Nils Moenkemayer et Jörg Widmann.
sábado, 28 de octubre de 2017
Sistine Chapel Choir / Massimo Palombella / Cecilia Bartoli VENI DOMINE
The music collections of the Vatican Library (Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana) are among the largest and most significant in the world, and have since the late 18th century been an essential resource for the study of music history and for musicolo- gical research. The finest polyphonic works of the Renaissance and Baroque periods, most of which are to be found in the Cappella Sistina and Cappella Giulia collections, have long been studied by scholars from around the world, but have become even more popular since they were transferred from the Sistine Chapel and St Peter’s to the Vatican Library itself (the Cappella Giulia material was moved in the 1930s and 1940s, the Sistine Chapel material a few decades earlier), when new indices and catalogues made them more easily accessible. The director of the Sistine Chapel Choir is in the fortunate position of having access to all the music resources of the Vatican Library. With that good fortune, however, comes a two-fold responsibility: firstly, that of rescuing long-forgotten works from
neglect; and secondly, that of trying out performance practices that translate the notes on the page into patterns of sound, by comparing manuscripts and early print editions, and using all the studies and other information available to us today.
Given the immense quantity of material housed in the Library, any search of it has to be narrowed down. For this album, for which our primary source was the Vatican Library’s Sistine Chapel collection, we decided to focus on the liturgical period of Advent and Christmas, further refining our search by consulting the various sources that describe papal celebrations over the centuries and the use of music therein. As a final search criterion, we looked at the frequency with which different works were performed as part of these papal celebrations.
Wiener Philharmoniker / Riccardo Muti BRUCKNER Symphony No. 2 - RICHARD STRAUSS Der Bürger als Edelmann
Riccardo Muti chose to celebrate his 75th birthday with a programme at the
2016 Salzburg Festival featuring two masterworks from the Austro-German tradition
that had both been premiered by the Wiener Philharmoniker under the direction
of their respective composers: Bruckner’s Symphony No.2 and R. Strauss’
Orchestral Suite Der Bürger als Edelmann. Alongside celebrated pianist
Gerhard Oppitz is violinist Rainer Küchl, on the eve of his retirement
from the Wiener Philharmoniker following a remarkable 45 years of service.
viernes, 27 de octubre de 2017
Isabelle Faust / Alexander Melnikov BEETHOVEN Complete Sonatas for Piano & Violin
These are the most stimulating and fascinating accounts of the
Beethoven violin sonatas I have heard in many years. Isabelle Faust and
Alexander Melnikov bring out the full quirkiness of the earlier works as
well as their beauty, and their playing is remarkably accomplished
throughout. Faust reflects the Viennese taste in Beethoven’s day for
light, strongly articulated bowing, much of it ‘off-the-string’, with
sparing vibrato.
Particularly fine is their account of the profoundly original last
sonata, Op. 96. Melnikov and Faust allow its opening movement to unfold in leisurely fashion, and
in an atmosphere of hushed lyricism, though their decision to append a
‘turn’ to the ubiquitous trill that forms such an integral part of the
main subject’s melodic line may not be to everyone’s taste.
As for the Kreutzer Sonata, their performance of the opening movement
contains a welcome detail that’s seldom heard. Shortly after the start
of the presto main section the music’s momentum is momentarily halted by
two fermatas (notated pauses), the second of which is filled in here
with an improvisatory flurry of arpeggios from the piano.
When Beethoven himself rehearsed the piece with George Augustus
Polgreen Bridgetower, the violinist for whom he originally wrote it,
Bridgetower took it upon himself to imitate the piano when the same
point was reached in the repeat, to Beethoven’s apparent delight.
Bridgetower subsequently wrote down his improvisation in his copy of the
printed violin part, and Isabelle Faust incorporates it into her
performance.
I’m not so sure, however, that Beethoven would necessarily have
approved of the occasional spontaneous change Faust and Alexander Melnikov make to some of the other sonatas: a few little melodic
ornaments and alterations, the occasional exaggerated pause between
phrases, the mannerism of ‘rolled’ left-hand piano chords, the reversal
of dynamics in the repeats.
But nonetheless these stimulating performances demand to be heard. (Misha Donat / BBC Music Magazine)
Camille Berthollet / Julie Berthollet # 3
Camille & Julie are the Berthollet sisters, two extraordinarily
gifted musical siblings from the idyllic Rhône-Alpes region in France.
Camille (18) plays violin and cello and Julie (20) violin and viola.
They became celebrities in France when the then 15-year-old Camille won Prodiges, a TV show for classical virtuosos under the age of 16.
After captivating more than four million viewers on the France 2 network with her searing rendition of ‘Summer’ from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons,
Camille was immediately signed to Warner Classics, her debut album
(featuring her older sister as duo partner) achieved Gold status with
more than 80,000 copies sold in France alone and more than 1.7 million
streams. This is their third album and the expectation of their fans is
already high!
The Berthollet sisters: “On our third album we play a variety of styles
from Bach to Sinatra, from Rachmaninov to soundtracks. We picked these
pieces as they allow us to express ourselves freely. We have had a
fantastic time doing this recording and really hope our fans will enjoy
the result!” (Warner Classics)
Francesca Dego PAGANINI - WOLF-FERRARI Violin Concertos

This album marks Italian violinist Francesca Dego’s debut orchestral recording on the Deutsche Grammophon label.
It
features two Italian masterpieces: Wolf-Ferrari’s seldom-performed
Violin Concerto and Paganini’s renowned Violin Concerto Number 1, which
celebrates its 200th anniversary this year.
Francesca recorded
Wolf-Ferrari’s Violin Concerto live in March 2017, when she gave the UK
premiere of the piece at Symphony Hall with the City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra and the renowned Italian conductor Daniele Rustioni.
Francesca
regularly appears with the world’s leading orchestras, performing both
the Paganini and Wolf-Ferrari concertos extensively in the future.
jueves, 26 de octubre de 2017
Cédric Tiberghien BARTÓK
'An admirable performance of the Sonata for two pianos and percussion,
where Tiberghien is both goaded and kept in check by fellow pianist
François-Frédéric Guy, with sensitive support from the percussionists
Colin Currie and Sam Walton. Superb sound sees to it that every kicking
syncopation and drum tap is clearly focused' (Gramophone)
Cédric Tiberghien’s Bartók series has been an ear-opener—expressive
and sharp-witted performances that clinch the music’s essence in
original terms. The French pianist has saved some of Bartók’s most
straight-up tuneful material for last, and this instalment includes the Three Hungarian Folksongs from the Csík District (melodies Bartók learned in summer 1907 from a Transylvanian flute player), the Three Rondos on Slovak Folk Tunes
and the slight, blithe Sonatina. Tiberghien balances these with the
knotty Études and the thick-set Sonata—and through it all, the angular
and the earthy, he has a way of making Bartók’s rhythms sound
simultaneously stretchy, precise and personal. He’s joined by fellow
pianist François-Frédéric Guy and percussionists Colin Currie and Sam
Walton for the Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion from 1926—jostling, gracious, deft playing to round off the disc. (Kate Molleson / The Guardian)
Cédric Tiberghien BARTÓK
Cédric Tiberghien's first CD for Hyperion of Bartok's piano music was
brilliant from start to finish (reviewed in June 2016). The 47 tracks
of this new one are of the same standard, barring just one: his account
of Allegro barbaro is polite, neatly controlled and utterly lacking in
anything remotely 'barbaric'. For the rest, his approach is admirably
responsive as he explores, one by one, the enticing little abodes of
Bartók's great compositional experiment. Who would dream that a piece
entitled 'Major seconds broken and together'—and lasting less than two
minutes—could constitute a uniquely beautiful sound world?
Bartok
described his 4 Bagatelles—with their implicit nod back to Beethoven—a
representing 'a new piano style… a reaction to the exuberance of
Romantic piano music of the 19th century; a style stripped of all
unnecessary decorative elements, deliberately using only the most
restricted technical means.' Those words could apply to almost
everything on this disc.
As David Cooper observes in his
illuminating liner note, the first of these Bagatelles—to be played in
four sharps in the right hand, and four flats in the left—was one of the
earliest essays in bi-tonality by a European composer, and in
Tiberghien's hands it becomes both simple-seeming and profoundly
challenging. He gives the Folk Dances and the Eight Improvisations
a relaxed and full-blooded sound evoking courtships and comic
mock-fights through their furious or flirtatiously irregular, tempos.
He's sparing with the pedal, but on occasions uses it to make simple
figurations sound bewitching, most notably in Bagatelle No 12, which
prefigures the 'night music' style of later works. Intimate and poetic,
this is pianism which delicately suggests rather than making statements.
A lovely hour and a quarter. (Michael Church / BBC Music Magazine)
Cédric Tiberghien BARTÓK
Bartók's piano music has the appearance of simplicity, and many of
its notes are mere grace-notes, so the games which Bartók plays with
rhythm and counterpoint, and with moments of impressionism, make very
special demands on the pianist. Possessing an instinctive feel for that
impressionism, and for the ebb and flow of those rhythms with their
little hesitations and sudden rushes forward, Cédric Tiberghien is
ideally fitted for this task. Moreover the selection of works on this CD
makes a very satisfying survey of the Bartókian piano œuvre.
Every
piece here is in one way or another an experiment, including the
unassuming little Suite, whose Allegretto and Scherzo reflect the
composer's researches into Romanian and North African styles
respectively, while its concluding Sostenuto floats and dreams in a very
Debussian manner. Out of Doors brings one of Bartók's most
magical piece of night-music with softly-whirring hover-flies, croaking
frogs and chirruping birds: here Tiberghien is in his element, as he is
with the bagpipe-evocations via vibrating trills and slammed chordal
dissonances. He wittily brings out the drunkenness in the second
Burlesque—you can visualise the stumbling belching figure—and for
'Quarrel' he turns on some effortless virtuosity.
But the chief glory of this recording lies in what Tiberghien does with the Peasant Songs and the sixth book of Mikrokosmos. Each of the songs is sharply characterised and the pulse throughout follows the heartbeat. Meanwhile Mikrokosmos
is delivered with charm, each note perfectly weighted, and with the
concluding display of Bulgarian rhythms making a brilliant envoi to the
record as a whole. (Michael Church / BBC Music Magazine)
miércoles, 25 de octubre de 2017
Antoine Tamestit / Cédric Tiberghien BEL CANTO
Going well beyond mere historical interest, this album unveils the
charms of a repertoire that delighted Parisian concert halls and salons
throughout the 19th century. It demonstrates how the viola finally
emerged from the violin’s shadow thanks to virtuoso playing, now
resuscitated by the talent of Antoine Tamestit and Cédric Tiberghien in
pieces which offer much more than the exquisite languors of bel canto.
Italian for 'beautiful singing' or 'beautiful song', the term remains
vague and ambiguous but is commonly used to evoke a lost singing
tradition; in this case the famed singing tone of Antoine Tamestit's
viola, a 1672 Stradivarius, loaned by the Habisreutinger Foundation.
Born in Paris, Antoine Tamestit studied with Jesse Levine at Yale
University and with Tabea Zimmermann. He has won several coveted prizes
including the William Primrose Competition, first prize at the Young
Concert Artists (YCAT) international auditions, a place on BBC Radio 3’s
New Generation Artists Scheme and a Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award.
Antoine Tamestit’s distinguished discography includes Berlioz’s
'Harold en Italie', which was recorded with the London Symphony
Orchestra and Valery Gergiev and released in 2015 by LSO Live. For Naïve
he has recorded three of the Bach Suites, Hindemith solo and
concertante works recorded with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
and Paavo Järvi, and an earlier recording of 'Harold' with Marc
Minkowski and Les Musicians du Louvre.
This particular diva is the viola; its servant is Antoine Tamestit, here making his first solo recording for harmonia mundi. (Presto Classical)
martes, 24 de octubre de 2017
Michael Tilson Thomas / San Francisco Symphony ADAMS Harmonielehre - Short Ride in a Fast Machine

Accademia del Piacere / Fahmi Alqhai / Arcángel LAS IDAS Y LAS VUELTAS

All over the Andalusian and American towns people could hear songs
and dances that had been originated here and had gone there to come back
again, sometimes to eventually travel overseas anew. From the Guinean
Gulf to the Caribbean, then to Triana and the Bay of Cádiz, these tunes
continually melt, overlapped, in a delocalized, bubbling melting pot,
where jácaras, folías and chaconas existed as a common heritage both to
popular and educated music. It is normal then, for instance, to listen
to Guarachas de Zéspedes which remind us of Cádiz tanguillos, or to
discover medieval romances which had been preserved in the oral
tradition, fandangos of yore and today, siguiriyas set to the chords of a
passacaglia. In short, pieces of music that were written down centuries
ago which can be brought to life today thanks to the spontaneous
intuition of good musicians and, of course, good flamenco.
The inspired souls of Fahmi Alqhai and Arcángel have set their minds
to walk up the still-unexplored paths that result of the fertile
combination of flamenco and Baroque music. Arcángel and Alqhai keep a
dialogue which enables them to delve into a common past and present with
the help of music, a universal vehicle to brotherhood between nations
and cultures. With strong, difficult to classify personalities, these
artists combine a strict, academic music education along with a
restless, experimental spirit. Therefore, they will let themselves be
freely driven by their sheer music instinct. Who knows? Maybe, in a
natural, unexpected, intuitive way, they will bring back the original
sources of the remote flamenco, that Paradise Lost which no musicologist
ever found before. (Juan Ramón Lara / Seville, January 2012)
Schumann Quartett LANDSCAPES

When the Schumann Quartet took stock of the selection of works for this
recording, they realised that they had, completely intuitively, put
together a concept album, without ever having planned to do so. The
pieces had to be ones that are close to their hearts, ones that they
often play. (...) Ultimately, they are works from four different parts
of the classical-music world: an Estonian piece, a Japanese piece, a
Hungarian piece and an Austrian-German piece. And contrasts, differences
and contradictions also dominate within the works themselves. This is
what Christopher Warmuth relates in the booklet text, after a
conversation with the quartet.
This recording thus represents the kind of pure antithesis that gives
life to every great whole. Alongside Joseph Haydn's “Sunrise Quartet”,
op. 76, No. 4, a homage to “the father of the string quartet”, Béla
Bartók's String Quartet No. 2, a ne plus ultra of the quartet
repertoire, provides a striking contrast with its “imaginary folklore”
flavour. It is set off in its turn by Arvo Pärt's evocative, meditative
“Fratres”, which exists in versions for very different instrumental
combinations, including, as here, for string quartet. The composer – who
like violist Liisa Randalu comes from Estonia – has clearly formulated
what he sees as the task of music: “For me, the greatest value of music
goes beyond its tone colours (...) Music must exist through itself (...)
Mystery must be there, whatever the instrument.” The Schumann Quartet
prepared this work together with him and recorded it in a church in
Viimsi, near Tallinn. And finally, with the title composition,
“Landscape I” by Tōru Takemitsu, the Schumanns (who incidentally speak
fluent Japanese) forge a connection to their mother's native land – an
exotic sound-landscape of noble delicacy that sets wonderful contrasts.
sábado, 21 de octubre de 2017
Jeanette Köhn / Capella de la Torre NEW EYES ON MARTIN LUTHER

Everyone is just doing what they’re best at,
and with the open tonality of the renaissance music, they have found
the perfect meeting place and playground for it. Swedish soprano
Jeanette Köhn together with a small ensemble (Johan Norberg guitar,
Magnus Lindgren, flute and clarinet, Eva Kruse, bass) fronted by Nils
Landgren, recorded their album “New Eyes On Baroque” with Swedish Radio
Choir under the baton of Gustaf Sjökvist (2013) released on ACT: “… how
well the timbres of soprano saxophone, trombone and guitar suit the
original melodies. The effect in Handel's ’Gia nel seno’ and Purcell's
’When I Am Laid in Earth’ is gorgeous” (The Observer, GB). ”A strong
direct quality about the music which is distinctly Nordic in character…a
superb piece of music making on the part of all involved” (Euan Dixon,
Jazzviews).
Jeanette Köhn is one of Sweden's most versatile sopranos.
She has been an established concert- and oratorio- singer for a long
time with engagements all over the world. Jeanette Köhn was soloist at
the Royal Wedding of H.R.H. Crown Princess Victoria with Mr Daniel
Westling on the 19th of June in Stockholm. She is also a member of Nils
Landgren's highly coveted and successful touring ensemble "Christmas
With My Friends”.
Nils Landgren has one of the leading profiles on the European jazz scene,
easy recognizable with his red trombone and tasteful tenor voice. With
“Funk Unit”, the Swede gives full rein to his grooving side, whereas the
highly sentimental Nils Landgren can be seen during Advent with his
ensemble “Christmas With My Friends”. When looking for a new challenge
he decided to see if it was possible to combine baroque music with
Swedish traditional music and jazz.
After the success of the first album “New eyes on Baroque” it
was an easy choice to dig even deeper into the history of classical
music. In 2016 there was an opportunity to perform a concert with the
Capella de la Torre and Knabenchor Hannover conducted by Jörg Breiding
at the 500th anniversary of the reformation, an event at NDR's Funkhaus
in Hannover.
Capella de la Torre have specialized in historical performance practice
with a repertoire of mediaeval and renaissance music. Their instruments are similarly old, from shawms, slide trumpets and sackbut to lute, cow
horn and percussion. In 2016 their critically acclaimed album “Water
Music – Tales of Nymphs and Sirens” won an ECHO Klassik award in the
best recording ensemble/orchestra category.
Jörg Breiding took over as conductor of
the Knabenchor Hannover in 2002. Together they have made several
recordings and in 2003 released a new CD with Georg Friedrich Handel’s
“Messiah” with “Barockorchester L’Arco”. In 2006 the Knabenchor Hannover
was awarded “ECHO Klassik” in the category “Choral Work Recording of
the Year”
”New Eyes on Martin Luther” is an experiment
based on Nils Landgren's relentless conviction that “music is music” and
“nothing is impossible”. With those words serving as a motto, the three
ensembles just dived into the music without pre-conceptions. The
traditional German folksong “Die Gedanken sind frei” is here performed
with a percussive flute solo, and Landgren’s smooth voice on top of a
funky rhythm. Sometimes he joins Capella de la Torre with a trombone
solo and when all musicians play together it sounds as if the music was
originally written with this in mind. It moves seamlessly between genres
and what you can hear is the sound of really skilled musicians together
- and just having fun.
Johanna Rose / Javier Nuñez C.P.E. BACH 3 Sonatas for Viola da Gamba
Composed during his time at the court of Frederick the Great in Berlin,
Bach’s sonatas provided the court gambist with ample opportunities to
display both virtuosity and sensitivity. The viola da gamba was going
out of fashion when the forward-looking C.P.E. Bach composed these
works, however, they represent some of the finest and most expressive
music in the instrument’s repertoire.
German Viola da Gambist Johanna Rose is a member of Accademia del
Piacere and has worked with many ensembles including La grande Chapelle,
La Orchesta Barroca de Sevilla. She has performed throughout Europe,
South America and Japan. Johanna studied at the Schola Cantorum in Basel
with Paolo Pandolfo and later in Vittorio Chielmi in Lugano and Venturo
Rico in Seville where she now lives. The recording of the three CPE Bach Viola da Gamba sonatas with Javier Nuñez is her debut solo album. (Rubicon Classics)
viernes, 20 de octubre de 2017
Chloe Mun ROBERT SCHUMANN Piano Sonata No. 1 - Fantasie

Chloe Mun began studying piano at the age of five. Raised under
disadvantaged conditions, since both parents are disabled and receive
only a state subsidy, she began studying the instrument at her own
initiative. Because she did not have a piano at home in the early years,
she practiced either at school or in a neighborhood church for several
hours a day. Despite her family's economic hardships she soon decided
that she wanted to take her piano career seriously, refusing to be
discouraged by anything that stood in the way of bringing her dream to
fruition. In fact, she discontinued traditional schooling in order to
spend more time at the piano and subsequently graduated on her own –
well ahead of her peers. In 2012 she won Germany's Ettlingen
International Youth Music Award Competition, selected for her “amazing
musical imagination, so rich and full for a seventeen year old.” In 2009
she won First Prize in her category at the Art Dream Competition
organized by the Korean Business Council, which allows people in the
lower echelons of society access to higher artistic education. It was on
that occasion that she met her teacher, Daejin Kim, who has since been
her teacher and mentor. She is currently studying at the Korean National
University.
Angela Gheorghiu ETERNAMENTE
For Eternamente, her first studio recording in six years, soprano
Angela Gheorghiu focuses on Italian composers of the generation that
followed Verdi and predominantly on repertoire she has not sung before –
including some fascinating rarities. Joining her for duets from
Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana and Giordano’s Andrea Chénier is another
star of today’s opera stage, tenor Joseph Calleja.
Eternamente is described as a collection of verismo – the term used
generically for Italian opera of the immediate post-Verdi era. No matter
when they were composed, and no matter what their subject matter, all
these operas demand great passion and commitment from their performers –
and they get it from Angela Gheorghiu. “It is like my soul, it is
something different, it is not the voice,” she explained in an interview
with Opera magazine. “The voice is also there, it has to be there, and
it has had to be prepared – but at that moment of the performance, there
is more. The response is never a conscious exaggeration – it is a
natural expression. I am never pretending. It is just how I am at that
moment.” The character and impact of her voice was summarised thus in
Gramophone: “With her smooth and dark-toned soprano, a voice at once
powerfully firm and vulnerable, Gheorghiu stands out from an entire
generation of talented singers. Her sound is convincingly Italianate in
the great tradition; her voice, once heard, is never forgotten.”
Olga Scheps TCHAIKOVSKY
Olga Scheps frequently
performs recitals in venues such as the Berlin Philharmonie, the Great Hall of
the Laeiszhalle Hamburg, Munich’s Prinzregententheater, Alte Oper Frankfurt,
Liederhalle Stuttgart, Musikverein Wien, and Cologne’s Philharmonie. Highlights
of this seasons include tours with Staatskapelle Weimar and the Russian State
Symphony Orchestra.
An exclusive artist of SONY
Classical/RCA, Olga Scheps’ debut CD “Chopin” was released in January 2010; she
received the ECHO Klassik award as “Newcomer of the Year” in October 2010.
After the success of her Satie album, Olga Scheps
is back with a new recording of beautiful music from Tchaikovsky. The Russian-born pianist grew up in Cologne, but still retains a connection
to Tchaikovsky’s music. The album mixes his famous first Piano Concerto
with solo works such as the popular piano arrangement of the Nutcracker
Suite from Mikhail Pletnev, as well as music from “The Seasons”,
“Chanson Triste” and more!
Arabella Steinbacher / Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin / Vladimir Jurowski BRITTEN & HINDEMITH Violin Concertos
Breathtaking virtuosity flows seamlessly with expansive lyrical passages
and fiendish passagework in this commanding performance by Arabella
Steinbacher of the restless and technically demanding violin concertos of Britten and Hindemith, with the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin
conducted by Vladimir Jurowski.
Britten’s haunting and mesmerising violin concerto is considered one of
the century’s finest. The three contrasting movements are replete with
grand theatrical gestures, unabashed lyricism, and show-stopping
pyrotechnics, and the work closes with an austere passacaglia of
other-wordly beauty and power. Following the work’s enthusiastic
reception at its premiere in 1940 at Carnegie Hall, Britten declared “So
far, it is without question my best piece”.
“Britten and Hindemith completed their concertos at about the same
time,” writes Steinbacher, “both are absolutely bursting with emotional
turmoil, persisting precariousness, and latent despair.” Steinbacher
feels a particular affinity with the Hindemith concerto. “Every artist
introduces his own life experiences and personal feelings into his
interpretations ... with the Hindemith concerto, I have an extremely
close, even private connection, as my father knew Hindemith rather
well.”
Steinbacher’s previous recordings have received widespread praise. For
her playing in the Mendelssohn and Tchaikovsky violin concertos,
Gramophone commented “one could hardly wish for a more expressive
account of both concertos”; for the Korngold and Bruch Violin Concertos,
Gramophone noted Steinbacher’s “easy virtuosity with concern to find
the right tone and nuance for every phrase”. And BBC Music Magazine
said of her last album, Fantasies, Rhapsodies, Daydreams, that it was
“recorded in glowing sound that feels astonishingly lifelike ... this
recital is something of a triumph”. (PENTATONE)
Lise de la Salle BACH UNLIMITED
In just a few years, through her international concert appearances and her award-winning Naïve recordings, 29 year-old Lise de la Salle has established a reputation as one of today’s most exciting young artists and as a musician of uncommon sensibility and maturity. Her playing inspired a Washington Post critic to write, “For much of the concert, the audience had to remember to breathe… the exhilaration didn’t let up for a second until her hands came off the keyboard.”
A native of France, Ms. de la Salle first came to international attention in 2005, at the age of 16, with a Bach/Liszt recording that Gramophone Magazine selected as „Recording of the Month.“ Ms. de la Salle, who records for the Naïve label, was then similarly recognized in 2008 for her recording of the first concertos of Liszt, Prokofiev and Shostakovich – a remarkable feat for someone only 20 years old. Recent recordings offered works of Schumann and the Complete Works of Rachmaninoff for Piano and Orchestra with Fabio Luisi and the Philharmonia Zurich.
The 2017-2018 season will see the release of a Bach-focused disc on Naïve including the Italian Concerto, the Liszt Fantasy & Fugue on the Theme B.A.C.H. and the Bach/Busoni Chaconne.
“Bach…where everything begins.”
Since the 18th century, a number of composers have paid hommage to
Jean-Sebastian Bach, often considered the musical touch-stone: the
perfect balance between science, form, expression and emotion.
Preludes and Fugues; transcriptions; or the musical motif made from
the letters of his name: these hommages have come in many forms. In the
captivating and fascinating programme by Lise de la Salle, we find works
by Bach himself, Poulenc, Busoni, Roussel and Liszt. And then, like a
fresh breath of air from the heart of our current century, interspersed
between the works of the masters we find four new pieces commissioned
from the pianist Thomas Enhco. The result is an essential, modern
recording, an unprecedented journey into the essence of music, in which
Lise de la Salle exhibits all her pianistic talent, as well as a
profound intellectual knowledge.
It’s a long-considered recording, subtle yet powerful, that marks the
15th anniversary of the rich collaboration between Naïve and Lise de la
Salle.
jueves, 19 de octubre de 2017
Amadeus Quartett FRANZ SCHUBERT String Quartets D. 87 & 112

Cuarteto Ruso-Americano JESÚS ECHEVARRÍA Suite Huasteca - Suite Tarasca

The concerto grossi and trio sonatas of the Neapolitan and Venetian schools descended upon the shores of the New World via the Kingdom of Naples, which was under Spanish rule during the 17th Century. The influence of these genres is felt in both of the Echevarría suites recorded here; passages evoking an Andalucian origin are also denoted in the mixture of Flamenco resources with polyphony, in which the composer's skill is more than evident, and which he proves himself a worthy successor of Corelli and Vivaldi.
As with Mexican colonial architecture - in which the Baroque's more formal elements coexist with more popular influences (witness the Franciscan missions in the Sierra Gorda) - Jesús Echevarría's music represents a melange of popular and "cultured" music, inspired by masters of the concertante style. Thus is the concept of nationalism reinforced, whereby the recognition and rescue of Novohispanic music becomes an essential part of today's Mexican music.
The cultural heritage of New Spain - as evidenced by a plethora of architectural monuments (both civic and religious) from California to Yucatán and all points between - is no less valuable than Mexico's indigenous past, nor less valuable than its more recent history.
With the particular treatment that Echevarría has given to Mexican folkloric music, the "Mester de Juglaría" and the "Mester de Clerecía" go hand in hand , revealing yet another intriguing aspect of Mexican identity. (Aurelio León Ptacnik)
miércoles, 18 de octubre de 2017
Rachel Kolly d’Alba / Christian Chamorel LYRICAL JOURNEY
The two musicians have known each other since an early age and ever since have performed together intensely on every
continent across the planet. For their second album together, the violinist Rachel Kolly d’Alba and the pianist Christian Chamorel have chosen two of the most demanding sonatas from the post-romantic repertoire.
Linking the Belgian Guillaume Lekeu and the German Richard Strauss on the same disc is as captivating as the dialogue between their two inspired interpreters.
Richard Strauss wrote his Sonata op. 18 in 1886 and Guillaume Lekeu followed him 6 years later. Besides this chronological proximity, the two composers were both 22 when they composed these works: so it’s natural to ask if these sonatas have other points in common.
Rachel Kolly d'Alba FRENCH IMPRESSIONS

domingo, 15 de octubre de 2017
Jyväskylä Sinfonia / Ville Matvejeff OLLI VIRTAPERKO Romer's Gap
This exciting new release of contemporary music includes three new concertos by Finnish composer Olli Virtaperko
(b. 1973). The concertos are combining multiple styles from Baroque to
prog jazz as well as different performance practices. Romer’s Gap is a
concerto for electrically amplified cello featuring as soloist Perttu
Kivilaakso, best known as lead cellist in the multi-million selling rock
band Apocalyptica. Ambrosian Delights is a concerto for the knifonium, a
vacuum-tube-based analogue synthesiser created by Jonte Knif.
Multikolor, written for Joonatan Rautiola, is a single-movement work for
baritone sax and small chamber orchestra. All three works are recorded
by the Jyväskylä Sinfonia under conductor Ville Matvejeff.
“The three concertos on this album were written within a relatively
short space of time, between 2013 and 2016. They reflect basic themes in
my music in different ways, including my relationship to tradition and
the problems of combining multiple styles and performance practices”,
composer Olli Virtaperko describes in his liner notes, and continues:
“What links these three concertos is that the solo parts were customised
according to the technical and expressive potential of the soloists who
premiered and recorded them. I collaborated closely with the soloist in
each case. - - The past four-year period has offered me a fascinating
journey into new musical colours and the borderland between acoustic and
amplified music – with all the possibilities and challenges that this
entails.”
Olli Virtaperko has enjoyed a multi-faceted career. He studied
composition, the Baroque cello and early music performance practice at
the University of Edinburgh and at the Sibelius Academy, and on the
other hand he was also a vocalist in one of Finland’s most popular rock
groups, Ultra Bra. Virtaperko’s musical background feeds directly into
his work as a composer, which includes heavy-duty solo concertos and
orchestral works but also a number of works for Baroque and Renaissance
period instruments and for his own early music group, Ensemble
Ambrosius. (Ondine Records)
Anne Sofie von Otter / Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra / Hannu Lintu SIBELIUS Tapiola - En Saga - 8 Songs
This new release by the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Hannu Lintu is an all-Sibelius programme featuring internationally
acclaimed mezzo-soprano Anne Sofie von Otter. The album includes two
major tone poems by Jean Sibelius (1865–1957), Tapiola and En Saga,
combined with a set of songs orchestrated by Aulis Sallinen (b. 1935) in
2015. • Sibelius’ tone poem Tapiola, written shortly after the 7th
Symphony, may be regarded as the culmination of a period that began with
the Fifth Symphony, a period where Sibelius created music that grew
organically out of tiny germs into huge processes. It was completed in
1926 and remained Sibelius’s last great orchestral work. In Tapiola,
Sibelius appears to equate the primacy of nature with the value of art
for its own sake, the unattainable truths of which remain uneroded by
time or by the shifting ideals of mankind. Sibelius stated to his
private secretary: “My inspiration for Tapiola came wholly from nature,
or even more accurately from something inexpressible in words.”
The genesis of En Saga, originally premiered in 1892, is also
shrouded in mystery, and even later in life Sibelius was reluctant to go
into any detail regarding its content. It is among Sibelius’ earliest
orchestral works, and its original title in Swedish, En saga, refers to
ancient Nordic tales of heroes and gods. Although En saga is among the
most popular works by Sibelius today, the premiere of the work was not a
success and Sibelius revised the score in 1902.
On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of Sibelius’s birth in 2015
composer Aulis Sallinen (b. 1935) orchestrated a cycle of songs for
mezzosoprano Anne Sophie von Otter. This cycle of eight songs contains
several less known songs in a cavalcade juxtaposing human emotions and
innermost thoughts with the natural environment and experiences in
nature. (Ondine)
sábado, 14 de octubre de 2017
Danish String Quartet LAST LEAF
They are widely recognised as the most exciting young string quartet
of the present moment, bringing new insights to contemporary composition
and core classical repertoire. In parallel, they have also made
surprising and impressive forays into the world of Nordic folk music.
Their 2014 album Wood Works (Dacapo Records) was a left-field
hit, and audiences around the world have been delighted by concert
performances of the music. Now the Danish String Quartet bring their
folk project to ECM with a stirring new recording. Last Leaf took its initial inspiration from an unusual Christmas hymn, “Now found is
the fairest of roses”, published in 1732 by Danish theologian and poet
H.A. Brorson. The hymn is set to a mysterious, dark melody: Brorson had
chosen an old Lutheran funeral choral to accompany his Christmas hymn,
elegantly showing how life and death are always connected. “From here we
embark on a travel through the rich fauna of Nordic folk melodies until
returning to Brorson in the end,” say the DSQ. “It is a journey that
could have been made in many different ways, but we believe that we
returned with some nice souvenirs. In these old melodies, we find
immense beauty and depth, and we can't help but sing them through the
medium of our string quartet. Brorson found the fairest of roses, we
found a bunch of amazing tunes – and we hope you will enjoy what we did
to them.” (ECM Records)
Franziska Pietsch / Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin / Cristian Macelaru PROKOFIEV Violin Concertos
The violinist Franziska Pietsch, the “Anne-Sophie Mutter of East Germany”
(W Dulisch)
Stupendous stage presence, supreme musicianship and outstanding instrumental prowess; transformation of political repression to a personal musical success: the violinist Franziska Pietsch cuts her own path, away from the standard soloistic career.
From promising star of the GDR with a burgeoning solo career to boycott, via a new beginning, chamber music and leading orchestras back to being a soloist, now enriched by a transformed understanding of her own role: with this recording of the Prokofiev Violin Concertos, Franziska Pietsch has come full circle. Thanks to her intensive engagement with chamber music and her experience as a concert master, Franziska Pietsch’s performances as a soloist are not only worldclass, but also characterised by an exceptional sense of chamberlike intimacy.
Born in East Berlin, she received her first violin lessons from her father at the age of five. She made her debut at the Komische Oper Berlin aged eleven, after which she regularly performed as a soloist alongside renowned orchestras of the Eastern Bloc. She entered the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler as a junior student, where she studied with Werner Scholz. As an emerging talent, she enjoyed special state support until her father escaped to the West in 1984. Two years of reprisals by the regime followed, heavily influencing Franziska Pietsch’s understanding of music: deprived of any possibility of playing concerts or taking lessons, her chosen path towards hope – against desperation, refusal, fear and despotism – led inwards. Music became the only language in which she was able to express herself freely and which gave her the necessary strength to withstand external circumstances, continuing to hope for freedom. These were the origins of the intensity and artistic depth which characterise Franziska Pietsch’s playing to the present day. (Excerpt from the liner Notes)
Lars Vogt / Christian Tetzlaff / Tanja Tetzlaff / Royal Northern Sinfonia BEETHOVEN Triple Concerto - Piano Concerto No. 3
Lars Vogt continues his cycle of Beethovens Piano Concertos with the
Royal Northern Sinfonia. On this second volume, the recording also
includes Beethovens Triple Concerto where Lars Vogt is joined together
with his longtime artistic partners Christian Tetzlaff and Tanja
Tetzlaff. Vogts recordings of chamber music with the trio have gathered
astonishing reviews and recording awards, including a Grammy nomination
for the recording of Brahms Piano Trios (ODE 1271-2D). Beethovens Triple
Concerto for Piano, Violin, and Cello in C major, Op. 56 is a work
radiant with joy, described by many as a concerto for piano trio and
orchestra. The work, completed in 1803, has standed unrivaled in its
genre. Beethovens Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Op. 37 is a slightly
earlier work and it was premiered together with his Symphony No. 2 in a
concert in 1804. It has been noted that the theme in the first movement
of the concerto is possibly a quotation from Mozarts Piano Concerto No.
24 written in the same key, and the both works do ressemble each other
in formal, rhythmic, and thematic aspects. C minor key is also a key in
which Beethoven wrote many of his most important works, including the
5th Symphony, the Pathétique Sonata and Piano Sonata, Op. 111. Lars Vogt
was appointed the first ever 'Pianist in Residence' by the Berlin
Philharmonic in 2003/04 and enjoys a high profile as a soloist and
chamber musician. His debut solo recording on Ondine with Bachs Goldberg
Variations (ODE 1273-2) was released in August 2015 and has been a
major critical success. The albums tracks have also been streamed online
over 6 million times. Lars Vogt started his tenure as Music Director of
the Royal Northern Sinfonia in September 2015. In June 2017 Lars Vogt
was nominated for Gramophone's Artist of the Year 2017 Award.
miércoles, 11 de octubre de 2017
John Potter JOSQUIN / VICTORIA Secret History
Josquin Desprez (c. 1450/1455-1521) and Tomás Luis de Victoria
(c.1548-1611) lived and worked, for the most part, in different
countries and perhaps shared little in terms of abstract compositional
style. Yet throughout Europe, generations of musicians came to recognize
them as kindred spirits, and tablature versions of their masses and
motets circulated amongst lutenists. For John Potter, this is “the
secret life of the music – in historical terms its real life.” In this
characteristically creative project, Potter explores “what happens to
music after it is composed.”
As John Potter explains in the liner notes: “We don’t usually think of
Josquin being a major influence on Victoria, and for most modern
listeners and performers, one is ‘early renaissance’ and the other is
‘late’. But the musicians of four hundred years ago made no such
distinction: for them a new choral work by a great master was another
source of inspirational material to add to the stream of music from many
previous generations which they constantly re-invented. The music of
their past was also the music of their present. The original
manuscripts, commissioned for purely vocal performance in church, were
quickly transformed by lute players into instrumental and vocal pieces
that then took on a life of their own, constantly re-worked over many
generations. (…) Time and geography meant very little to singers or
players who could make the music their own in the moment.”
The project developed out of an idea by Potter and Ariel Abramovich to
perform pared-down duet versions of Josquin’s motets, “in keeping with
our belief that the pristine ‘early music’ a cappella performance of Franco-Flemish polyphony has misrepresented the way the music was mostly
performed. This then evolved into a plan to use two vihuelas and two
voices, so we asked Anna Maria Friman and Lee Santana.” Viola da gamba
player Hille Perl attended the Josquin sessions in St Gerold,
contributing to two pieces. For a session devoted to the music of
Victoria, Jacob Heringman, another outstanding lutenist, was drafted in.
Heringman also contributes five improvised preludes to the programme. (ECM Records)
martes, 10 de octubre de 2017
Tatjana Ruhland / Radio-Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart des SWR / Alexander Liebreich CARL REINECKE Flute Concertos - Flute Sonatas
Tatjana Ruhland has been described as »the Paganini of the flute.« At the very latest since her debut at New York’s Carnegie Hall she has numbered among the most prominent artists performing on the flute. On the present program she dedicates herself to Carl Reinecke’s chamber and concertante flute compositions, all of which he composed during the second half of his life. Along with the Undine Sonata op. 167 for flute and piano, today his most frequently performed work, the recording features the two concertante works written by him when he was over eighty years old. Here the initial dominance of stylistic elements associated with Mendelssohn has yielded to a tonal language that is both electrifying and highly individual. Reinecke’s music is diatonic in design but so strongly pervaded by semitones and suspensions that it also continues to flow. The »build-up phase« of the concertante last movements is only one of the procedures hardly invented by Reinecke but very much loved by him.
lunes, 9 de octubre de 2017
Anne Akiko Meyers FANTASIA

Rautavaara was a legendary Finnish composer who wrote eight
symphonies, 14 concertos, and numerous other works for chamber ensembles
and choir. He was a protégé of Sibelius, active until age 87, and was
best known for writing Symphony No 7, Angel of Light and the beautifully haunting work, Cantus Arcticus: concerto for birds and orchestra, a piece that took my breath away the first time I heard it.
In my early twenties, I regularly went to record and sheet-music
stores, looking through items one at a time in the hope of discovering
music that would make the hairs on my neck stand up. It was then I first
discovered Rautavaara’s music, and for years, dreamed of commissioning
him to compose more music for violin. In 2014, I inquired if Rautavaara,
with the wonderful support of Boosey & Hawkes, would be interested
in writing a fantasy for violin and orchestra. I was beyond elated when
he responded that indeed he would and worked quickly. I received a
handwritten draft of the score in the fall of last year, and
breathlessly ran to my music studio to play through it.
I think there are similar qualities to the Angel of Light and Cantus Arcticus
and Rautavaara’s signature soulful sound permeates throughout the
piece, with fluid harmonies and deep moods -much like flowing large
movements of water and majestic scenes from nature.
In December, I flew to Helsinki to meet Rautavaara and perform the
work for him. We met at the apartment he shared with his wife, and the
apartment was flooded with a special light that only seems to exist at
the edge of the earth, overlooking the sea. He stood with a walker and
was incredibly gentle and kind. Smiling and laughing, we spoke about
how Sibelius liked the fact that Rautavaara owned an automobile, as well
as his time in New York, studying at the Juilliard School where I also
went to school.
After I played Fantasia, he looked at me and repeatedly
said, 'I wrote such beautiful music!' We all laughed and agreed. He
apologized for what he felt were his lazy bow markings and was so happy
that I took the liberty to change the bowings to punctuate the phrasing
the way I thought would bring his poetry out best. I was amazed that he
made no changes to any notes or dynamics. Everything was in place just
the way he wrote it.
Fantasia is transcendent and has the feeling of an elegy
with a very personal reflective mood. Rautavaara’s music will live on
forever and I thank him from the bottom of my heart for writing a
masterpiece that makes me cry every time I listen to it. (Anne Akiko Meyers / Gramophone)
domingo, 8 de octubre de 2017
LEE HYLA Riff and Transfiguration

Yulianna Avdeeva JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
This magnificent programme of three of Bach’s keyboard masterpieces begins with the English Suite no.2 in A minor BWV 807. But why ‘English’? Bach’s first biographer, Johann Nikolaus Forkel, whose source of information was the composer’s two eldest sons, speaks of ‘Six great Suites, consisting of preludes, allemandes, courantes, sarabandes, gigues, etc. They are known by the name of English Suites because the composer wrote them for an Englishman of rank’. Bach’s exchanges with British musicians, ‘of rank’ or otherwise, would seem to have been tenuous in the extreme. Having reflected at length on the question, scholars have come to think that this Englishman of rank might have been the . . . French musician François Dieupart, known as Charles. He lived in London for the greater part of his life, and died there around 1740. The reasoning behind this is that Bach quotes a motif borrowed from Dieupart in the Prélude to the very first suite. He had even copied out in his own hand, among other French and Italian scores, the six Suites de Clavessin of Dieupart, which date from the early years of the century and follow the same scheme as the six English Suites. So could Dieupart have been the ‘Englishman of rank’ to whom Bach was therefore paying tribute, or actually dedicating his work? Or, which seems more plausible, was it the example of Dieupart’s suites that prompted him to write a set of six suites in his turn?... (Excerpt from the liner Notes)
sábado, 7 de octubre de 2017
Pauline Sachse / Andreas Hecker VIOLA GALANTE
„….Original compositions for viola as a solo instrument were
quite rare before 1775. There are several reasons for this, and they go
back a long way. In ensembles, the viola, as the middle part, usually
played a subordinate role. In court and municipal orchestras, the posts
of violists were generally poorly filled in terms of both quality and of
quantity – also because violists were poorly paid. The first author to
highlight the viola’s pivotal role in harmony and voice-leading was
Johann Mattheson (1681-1764), who pointed out in 1713 that everything
would sound dissonant without the viola. Then, in 1738, Johann Philipp
Eisel (1698-1763) described the viola as the “innards of music”. Further
statements can be found – for instance, Johann Samuel Petri
(1738-1808), in his Manual of Practical Music-Making (1782), exclaimed:
“Another mistake! The viola is so mistreated! A beautiful instrument
that achieves such great effect is generally put through torture by
ignorant apprentices or stupid old men.”
However, the fact that solo viola parts were generally entrusted
to skillful violinists eventually led to the emergence of works written
specifically for viola.
With this recording exclusively featuring world premières (with
the exception of Flackton) of original compositions for viola, we are
thus able to provide a multi-faceted glimpse of late 18th-century
repertoire for viola and keyboard – works that are mostly forgotten
today. …..“ (Excerpt from the liner Notes)
Hanna-Elisabeth Müller / Juliane Ruf TRAUMGEKRÖNT
Hanna-Elisabeth Müller studied with Rudolf Piernay with whom she
still closely collaborates. The multi award winning soprano later
fine-tuned her skills in masterclasses with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau,
Julia Varady, Elly Ameling and Thomas Hampson.
In March 2017 she made her debut at the MET in New York as Marzelline
in Jürgen Flimm’s Fidelio. In May, she will make both a role and house
debut at the Scala in Milan as Donna Anna in Robert Carson’s production
of Don Giovanni. She will return to the MET, as Pamina, in December
2017, followed by her debut at the Opera Zurich as Ilia in Mozart’s
Idomeneo.
In 2014, Hanna-Elisabeth Müller achieved her international
breakthrough at the Salzburg Opera Festival with her sensational debut
as Zdenka alongside Renée Fleming and Thomas Hampson under the baton of
Christian Thielemann and, shortly afterwards, was distinguished by
German magazine Opernwelt as Young Artist of the Year. She later resumed
the role at Semperoper Dresden and at the Munich Opera Festival. In
Amsterdam, she made her house and role debut as Sophie in a new
production of Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier in 2015.
From 2012 to 2016, she was a member of the Bavarian State Opera,
where she appeared as Pamina, Zerlina, Susanna, Servilia, Gretel,
Zdenka, the Infanta Donna Clara in Zemlinsky’s The Dwarf, Sophie in
Massenet’s Werther and Marzelline, amongst others. She made her
farewells to the ensemble as much-acclaimed Sophie in Strauss’
Rosenkavalier during the Munich Opera Festival, but will remain
associated to the house as a guest. In the 2017-2018 season, she will
accompany the Bavarian State Orchestra on tours to Japan (Pamina) and
the Carnegie Hall New York (Sophie, Rosenkavalier). She will return to
Munich as Zdenka in summer 2018.
The versatile singer is a regular guest on the concert stage.
Hanna-Elisabeth Müller celebrated the arrival
of 2017 in spectacular style, stepping in at the opening concerts of
Elbphilharmonie Hamburg with Beethoven’s 9th symphony. In 2016-2017, she
also appeared at the Philharmonie de Paris, Philharmonie Essen,
Philharmonie Cologne (with WDR Symphony Orchestra), and the Tonhalle in
Düsseldorf.
In the 2017-2018, she will perform Brahms’ Ein deutsches Requiem with
the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra under Yannick Nézét-Seguin and Berg’s
Sieben frühe Lieder with the Bilbao Orkestra under Erik Nielsen.
With her permanent piano partner Juliane Ruf, she regularly appears
at major recital venues such as Heidelberger Frühling, Philharmonie
Cologne, deSingel Antwerp and at the Festival RheinVokal.
In summer 2017, she will release her first CD recital Traumgekrönt with songs by Strauss, Berg and Schönberg.
In summer 2017, she will release her first CD recital Traumgekrönt with songs by Strauss, Berg and Schönberg.
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