BLOCH Music for Cello and Piano

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Ernest Bloch

Genre:

Chamber

Label: Nimbus

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 70

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: NI5943

NI5943. BLOCH Music for Cello and Piano

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Sonata for Cello and Piano Ernest Bloch, Composer
Ernest Bloch, Composer
John York, Piano
Raphael Wallfisch, Cello
Suite Ernest Bloch, Composer
Ernest Bloch, Composer
John York, Piano
Raphael Wallfisch, Cello
Nigun Ernest Bloch, Composer
Ernest Bloch, Composer
John York, Piano
Raphael Wallfisch, Cello
From Jewish Life Ernest Bloch, Composer
Ernest Bloch, Composer
John York, Piano
Raphael Wallfisch, Cello
Méditation hébraïque Ernest Bloch, Composer
Ernest Bloch, Composer
John York, Piano
Raphael Wallfisch, Cello
Can it really be that the Ernest Bloch who wrote the Cello Sonata (1897) is the same composer who penned the Viola Suite 22 years later that Gábor Rejtő and Adolph Baller transcribed for cello and piano and that Raphael Wallfisch and John York feature on the current collection? The Sonata at times sounds like a cross between Saint-Saëns and Dvořák, its appealing melodic content lacking the individual slant that marked so many of Bloch’s later works as distinctive. My fondest past memory of the Suite, a wonderful work, is the RCA Victor/HMV shellac set that viola player William Primrose and Fritz Kitzinger made of the original in 1938, a performance of a searing intensity that Wallfisch and York don’t quite level up to, though there’s plenty to enjoy: the energetic start of the second movement, for example, and the deeply mysterious Lento third movement.

‘Nigun’ from Baal Shem (1923) is by far the best-known piece included here, its arranger Joseph Schuster a wonderful cellist in his own right. Wallfisch captures the work’s signature ‘speaking’ eloquence with some effective chordal work and well calculated expressive leaps. From Jewish Life (1925) again takes me back, specifically the opening ‘Prayer’ which years ago was recorded by Gregor Piatigorsky to wonderful effect, the ‘Jewish Song’ possibly the most ethnically infused of all the Jewish works included on the disc, its cantorial cadences unmistakably stemming from synagogue chant. The closing Méditation hébraïque (1924, written for Casals) is similarly intense.

Wallfisch and York do well by this music, Wallfisch never pushing for maximum intensity but favouring a lightly inflected manner that suggests an appropriate sense of improvisation. Altogether a most successful programme.

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