Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Annette Walther. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Annette Walther. Mostrar todas las entradas
martes, 24 de noviembre de 2020
martes, 17 de noviembre de 2020
martes, 27 de marzo de 2018
Nils Mönkemeyer / William Youn / Signum Quartett BRAHMS
Moog’s view of these pieces is the loving result of countless
performances and long reflection on the music: his pacing and phrasing
feel absolutely natural, and rubato sounds inevitably right. Moog
relishes the music’s broad intervals with heartfelt portamentos.
Although he keeps mostly to the higher, ‘clarinet’ version of both
sonatas, he does make an exception for the beginning of the F minor
piece – the warmth of the C and G strings is too good to lose! Moog’s
tone may not be as immediately seductive as, say, William Primrose’s
or Yuri Bashmet’s but its sinewy quality fits the music’s
autumnal mood like the proverbial glove. Hashiba is a thoughtful partner
throughout.
In a booklet interview, Mönkemeyer claims to play the E flat major Sonata ‘from the clarinet part’ but of course he does no such
thing: some telltale double-stops and the odd changed pitch point to the
usual viola part, albeit restored (mostly) to the original, higher
octave. Conversely, Mönkemeyer keeps to the traditional, ‘low’ version
of the F minor Sonata, which suits the piece’s tragic hue but results in
anticlimactic octave drops. Mönkemeyer’s tempos are consistently on the
broad side and, combined with his suavely sweet trademark tone (and a
more resonant acoustic than in Moog’s more closely balanced recording),
they make for a very different, to my ears more mannered experience.
Youn is a stimulatingly proactive collaborator. Mönkemeyer’s coupling of
the Hungarian Dances is lightweight in comparison with Moog’s, who
includes Fuchs’s very Brahmsian Sonata and Kiel’s rarely recorded
Romances, redolent of late Schumann. (Carlos Maráa Solare)
Signum Quartett SCHUBERT Aus Der Ferne
Hailed as one of the most adventurous and outstanding string quartets of
today, both in the performance of modern pieces and the iron repertory,
Signum Quartett now releases its first PENTATONE recording with an
all-Schubert program.
Aus der Ferne illuminates the Romanticism and lyricism of this great
master. By combining string quartets with lieder arranged for string
quartet, the members of the Signum Quartett aim to show how Schubert’s
instrumental and vocal music cross-pollinate each other. The fact that
Schubert quotes openly from his own songs in his chamber music
underlines the strong connection between the two, and this album takes
this connection a step further. The concept for the album grew out of
the Schubertiad, where chamber music and vocal works would be heard side
by side in an intimate setting. A further idea was to complement one of
the late quartets with an earlier one - perhaps lesser-known but not a
lesser piece. The B-flat major quartet and the Rosamunde Quartet, both
featured on this album, share a delicacy and fragility of spirit; convey
a longing from afar. These instrumental works gain significance by
being accompanied by the lieder arrangements, created by quartet member
Xandi van Dijk. These arrangements present quintessential Schubert
lieder such as Du bist die Ruh, Wandrers Nachtlied and Lachen und Weinen
in a new, fascinating light.
sábado, 24 de febrero de 2018
Antoine Tamestit / Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks / Daniel Harding WIDMANN Viola Concerto
Antoine Tamestit's recording of Jörg Widmann Viola
Concerto is released on Harmonia Mundi on 23 February 2018. Tamestit
gave the world premiere of the concerto in 2015 with the Orchestre de
Paris and Paavo Järvi. “One of the most gifted French musicians of the
era,” wrote Le Figaro, “the work is made to measure for
Tamestit, his style of playing, his tone, his personality.” The work was
co-commissioned by the Swedish Radio Symphony and Symphonieorchester
des Bayerischen Rundfunks with conductor Daniel Harding, who play on the
recording.
As well as Widmann’s Viola Concerto, the disc features chamber works
performed by Tamestit and Bruno Philippe, Marc Bouchkov and the Signum
Quartet.
The theatrical concerto sees the soloist exploring a range of
positions on the stage. Initially seated behind the harp players the
soloist moves towards the centre of the orchestra and eventually ‘front
and centre’ assuming the traditional position for the soloist.
Tamestit has already performed the concerto widely, and it has proved
popular with audiences at subsequent performances with the Danish
National Symphony Orchestra, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra,
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, Stavanger Symphony Orchestra, Finnish
Radio Symphony Orchestra and Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra.
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