20th-Century Violin and Piano Works
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Olivier Messiaen, Béla Bartók, Leoš Janáček
Label: DG
Magazine Review Date: 1/1991
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 57
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 427 351-2GH
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1 |
Béla Bartók, Composer
Béla Bartók, Composer Gidon Kremer, Violin Martha Argerich, Piano |
Sonata for Violin and Piano |
Leoš Janáček, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Leoš Janáček, Composer Martha Argerich, Piano |
Thème et variations |
Olivier Messiaen, Composer
Gidon Kremer, Violin Martha Argerich, Piano Olivier Messiaen, Composer |
Author:
Like so many of his contemporaries Bartok underwent a period of artistic self-examination immediately after the First World War. The Violin Sonata No. 1 is the first result of that reappraisal and it has all the hallmarks of a style in transition—in other words, it is a jolly tough nut to crack, and it remains so even in a performance as consistently colourful and high-powered as Kremer and Argerich's.
The first movement, probably the most elusive of the three, emerges as a hyper-romantic drama, not inappropriately given the extensive influence of Szymanowski on Bartik at the time. The playing has tremendous eloquence and range of expression and there is not a dead note anywhere in the movement. The adagio is no less enthralling and the rhythmic elasticity of the finale is just what the music needs. Kremer's earlier Hungaroton/Conifer recording, dating from 1975, was a superlative account, and it remains a good recommendation if you are looking for both sonatas Bartik sonatas; but the finely-recorded new DG is even more dazzling.
In Janacek's Sonata it may be that such consistent strength of projection is too much of a good thing. Of course it has to be fiery and passionate, but there needs also to be a sense of when that passion is being lived out in the present and when just sadly recollected. Here Sitkovetsky and Gililov on Virgin Classics are the most perceptive duo, though as ES warned, the couplings are less special—the more adventurous collector may prefer the smoother Suk/Panenka version on Supraphon/Koch International, coupled with late romantic sonatas by Foerster and Novak.
The Theme and Variations are hardly vintage Messiaen, but they can be more effectively shaped than they are here. The theme itself is too highly inflected and its eventual apotheosis is too straight, while the first variation is too loud and the piano is too prominent in Var. No. 3. There is no current rival version, however, and the whole programme is well chosen to illustrate the duo medium between the wars. I'm sure many will think the Bartik alone worth the price.'
The first movement, probably the most elusive of the three, emerges as a hyper-romantic drama, not inappropriately given the extensive influence of Szymanowski on Bartik at the time. The playing has tremendous eloquence and range of expression and there is not a dead note anywhere in the movement. The adagio is no less enthralling and the rhythmic elasticity of the finale is just what the music needs. Kremer's earlier Hungaroton/Conifer recording, dating from 1975, was a superlative account, and it remains a good recommendation if you are looking for both sonatas Bartik sonatas; but the finely-recorded new DG is even more dazzling.
In Janacek's Sonata it may be that such consistent strength of projection is too much of a good thing. Of course it has to be fiery and passionate, but there needs also to be a sense of when that passion is being lived out in the present and when just sadly recollected. Here Sitkovetsky and Gililov on Virgin Classics are the most perceptive duo, though as ES warned, the couplings are less special—the more adventurous collector may prefer the smoother Suk/Panenka version on Supraphon/Koch International, coupled with late romantic sonatas by Foerster and Novak.
The Theme and Variations are hardly vintage Messiaen, but they can be more effectively shaped than they are here. The theme itself is too highly inflected and its eventual apotheosis is too straight, while the first variation is too loud and the piano is too prominent in Var. No. 3. There is no current rival version, however, and the whole programme is well chosen to illustrate the duo medium between the wars. I'm sure many will think the Bartik alone worth the price.'
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