Martinu Cello Sonatas Nos 1-3
Noises off prove a minor niggle to some fine playing
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Claves
Magazine Review Date: 13/2008
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 56
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: 502803
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Sonata for Cello and Piano No. 1 |
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer Massimiliano Mainolfi, Piano Mattia Zappa, Cello |
Sonata for Cello and Piano No. 2 |
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer Massimiliano Mainolfi, Piano Mattia Zappa, Cello |
Sonata for Cello and Piano No. 3 |
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer Massimiliano Mainolfi, Piano Mattia Zappa, Cello |
Composer or Director: Samuel Barber, Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Edvard Grieg
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Quartz
Magazine Review Date: 13/2008
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: QTZ2057
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Sonata for Cello and Piano |
Samuel Barber, Composer
Jacob Katsnelson, Piano Kristine Blaumane, Cello Samuel Barber, Composer |
Variations on a Slovak folksong |
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer
Bohuslav (Jan) Martinu, Composer Jacob Katsnelson, Piano Kristine Blaumane, Cello |
Author: Guy Rickards
The Third (1952) opens with one of Martinu’s most inspired ideas, a serene sequence of chords on the piano which contains a world of experience. Mainolfi takes it too swiftly, losing something of its tranquillity (Daniel Adni – accompanying Rafael Sommer in wonderful accounts of the complete cello-and-piano music, issued by the Rafael Sommer Trust and Dvorák Society – is ideal), though the movement settles quickly into a fine account. The one fly in the ointment in Claves’ close-miked recording is some all-too-audible breathing in moments of intensity – presumably Zappa’s.
For some, noises from the players rather than their instruments are perfectly acceptable so they will no doubt not mind the audible breathing characteristic of Kristine Blaumane. As with Zappa, she is a technically fine player (and an occasional first cellist with Kremerata Baltica). Her passionate playing is heard to best effect in Barber’s apprentice Sonata (1932), written at just 22, rather Brahmsian in its late-romantic harmonies and gestures. The compound central span, a tiny Scherzo rammed between two equally brief halves of a slow section, is unconvincing but provides a welcome respite between the two darker outer movements. Grieg’s A minor Sonata of 1881-83 is structurally sounder and has proved to be a popular work, so it is surprising its composer was so dismissive of it. Yet he accompanied several cellists over the years (including Casals in 1906 – oh, for a recording of that!) and I think would have warmed to Blaumane’s ardour. Ably accompanied throughout by Katsnelson, she finishes with a fine account of Martinu’s valedictory chamber piece, the Variations on a Slovak Theme (1959).
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