Pfitzner Piano Trio; Violin Sonata
The Trio will take you on a wild tour of the emotional underworld, the Sonata will amaze you with its inventiveness, and both are beautifully played using an ideal piano
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Hans (Erich) Pfitzner
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Dabringhaus und Grimm
Magazine Review Date: 10/2000
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 70
Catalogue Number: MDG312 0934-2
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Sonata for Violin and Piano |
Hans (Erich) Pfitzner, Composer
Benjamin Schmid, Violin Claudius Tanski, Piano Hans (Erich) Pfitzner, Composer |
Piano Trio |
Hans (Erich) Pfitzner, Composer
Benjamin Schmid, Violin Claudius Tanski, Piano Clemens Hagen, Cello Hans (Erich) Pfitzner, Composer |
Author: Michael Oliver
Astonishingly enough, neither of these works is otherwise available. I say ‘astonishingly’ because the Sonata is a fine piece from Pfitzner’s maturity, while the much earlier Piano Trio is one of the most extraordinary works for the medium that I’ve ever heard. To be sure, enterprising chamber players hunting for neglected repertory may well have come across early critical reactions to both these pieces, and references to (for example, in the case of the Trio) Pfitzner’s ‘sick imagination’ and the work’s ‘monstrous length’ might put anyone off. When he wrote it Pfitzner was in despair at his financial and other problems; he told a friend that after finishing it all he wanted was to die. It does at times suggest a man at the end of his tether, but also a composer chronicling such a state when at the height of his powers.
It is long, extremely tense, at times weirdly obsessive, even hysterical, but all this takes place within a cunningly plotted ground plan. After the strange and powerful contrasts of the first movement, with its wild coda, the noble but perilously assaulted main theme of the slow movement, the dance-like but fraught and nervous Scherzo, Pfitzner begins his finale with a choleric gesture which soon fades to pathos and pallor. After 10 minutes of desperate attempts to climb out of this pit, a positive coda seems possible, but when the music turns instead to utterly euphonious calm the listener is likely to be moved by what seems in context heroic as well as wonderfully beautiful.
The Sonata, from 1918 (more than 20 years later), sounds like a demonstration – with various modernisms in the ascendancy all round – that Pfitzner’s late romantic style and prodigious craft still had abundant life in them. Its inexhaustible inventiveness and the beauty of its themes are accompanied by a huge enjoyment of virtuosity (hair-raising demands are made of both players) and, in the finale especially, by an infectious, impulsive warmth: Pfitzner, you realise, is having a high old time.
Both works are vastly welcome, in short, but that they should be so superbly played goes beyond all reasonable expectations. As the final pinnacle on a quite exceptional coupling, Claudius Tanski plays a Bluthner piano of 1925 whose beautiful warmth and the very slight ‘ping’ at the top of its register are simply ideal for this wonderful, inexplicably neglected music.'
It is long, extremely tense, at times weirdly obsessive, even hysterical, but all this takes place within a cunningly plotted ground plan. After the strange and powerful contrasts of the first movement, with its wild coda, the noble but perilously assaulted main theme of the slow movement, the dance-like but fraught and nervous Scherzo, Pfitzner begins his finale with a choleric gesture which soon fades to pathos and pallor. After 10 minutes of desperate attempts to climb out of this pit, a positive coda seems possible, but when the music turns instead to utterly euphonious calm the listener is likely to be moved by what seems in context heroic as well as wonderfully beautiful.
The Sonata, from 1918 (more than 20 years later), sounds like a demonstration – with various modernisms in the ascendancy all round – that Pfitzner’s late romantic style and prodigious craft still had abundant life in them. Its inexhaustible inventiveness and the beauty of its themes are accompanied by a huge enjoyment of virtuosity (hair-raising demands are made of both players) and, in the finale especially, by an infectious, impulsive warmth: Pfitzner, you realise, is having a high old time.
Both works are vastly welcome, in short, but that they should be so superbly played goes beyond all reasonable expectations. As the final pinnacle on a quite exceptional coupling, Claudius Tanski plays a Bluthner piano of 1925 whose beautiful warmth and the very slight ‘ping’ at the top of its register are simply ideal for this wonderful, inexplicably neglected music.'
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