Maria Bachmann Kiss On Wood
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Aaron Copland, Paul Dresher, Alfred Schnittke, William (Elden) Bolcom, James MacMillan
Label: Catalyst
Magazine Review Date: 5/1995
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 67
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 09026 62668-2

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Kiss on Wood |
James MacMillan, Composer
James MacMillan, Composer Jon Klibonoff, Piano Maria Bachmann, Violin |
Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2 |
William (Elden) Bolcom, Composer
Jon Klibonoff, Piano Maria Bachmann, Violin William (Elden) Bolcom, Composer |
Nocturne |
Aaron Copland, Composer
Aaron Copland, Composer Jon Klibonoff, Piano Maria Bachmann, Violin |
Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1 |
Alfred Schnittke, Composer
Alfred Schnittke, Composer Jon Klibonoff, Piano Maria Bachmann, Violin |
Double Ikat, Movement: Part Two |
Paul Dresher, Composer
James Saporito, Percussion Jon Klibonoff, Piano Maria Bachmann, Violin Paul Dresher, Composer |
Author:
Maria Bachmann's second Catalyst recital is even more ambitious than her first (''Fratres'', 12/93) and yet it exhibits the same warm, expressive tone, easy virtuosity and winning musicianship. True, parts of James MacMillan's Kiss on Wood of 1994—a strong, somewhat Spartan dialogue that becomes progressively more serene—find Bachmann having occasional trouble sustaining the line (or so it sounds), but the music's tense character is very well captured and the players' timing seems immaculate. Total contrast is afforded by William Bolcom's Second Sonata (1938), a winsome scrapbook of a piece, alternating dreams and brutality (the movement titles tell the tale) and with a finale ''In Memory of Joe Venuti'' that wouldn't be out of place on BBC Radio 3's ''Jazz Record Requests''. Here Bachmann weaves a cool, Grappelli-style line, whereas her sensitive handling of Copland's smokey Nocturne (1928)—so memorably recorded years ago by Louis Kaufman—makes a strong case for an atmospheric morceau other violinists might do well to investigate.
Schnittke of course keeps both players on their toes: his largely playful First Sonata (1963) flirts with atonalism (''a tonal world with atonal highways'', to quote the composer himself) and turns grandly solemn for a Largo that recalls the parallel movement in Shostakovich's Second Piano Trio. Then there is Paul Dresher, whose transcontinental eclecticism makes for an interesting marriage between Western and south-east Asian musical styles.Double Ikat—Part Two for violin, piano and percussion (1988-90) is fitfully animated and dies to a wailing, curvaceous solo line backed by simple piano chords, a gong and sighing cymbal. It is a restful finale to a pleasing sequence of musical explorations, stylishly played, very well annotated (by Tim Page) and expertly recorded. R1 '9505079'
Schnittke of course keeps both players on their toes: his largely playful First Sonata (1963) flirts with atonalism (''a tonal world with atonal highways'', to quote the composer himself) and turns grandly solemn for a Largo that recalls the parallel movement in Shostakovich's Second Piano Trio. Then there is Paul Dresher, whose transcontinental eclecticism makes for an interesting marriage between Western and south-east Asian musical styles.
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