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Untitled Document
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Cello Recital: Hai-Ye Ni |
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Composer: |
David Popper, Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann, Ludwig van Beethoven |
Artist: |
Jeno Jando, Jozsef Kiss, Maria Kliegel, Hai Ye Ni, Csaba Onczay, Roland Pidoux, Alexandre Tharaud, Valerie Tryon, Alfred Cortot, Jacques Thibaud, Helene Jeanney, Kristin Merscher, Nina Tichman, Fredrik Fors, Roland Pontinen, Torleif Thedeen, Sveinung Bjelland, Martin Frost, Bruno Canino, Florian Henschel, Dirk Altmann, Lambert Orkis, Paul Rivinius, Pablo Casals, David Geringas, Thomas Carroll, Jean-Claude Pennetier, Kalle Randalu, Ian Fountain, Lars Vogt, Armin Watkins, Jorg Widmann, Llyr Williams, Jan Vogler, Antony Cooke, Sabine Meyer, Jean-Guihen Queyras, David Hardy, Julian Steckel, Adam Mital, Olimpia Tolan |
Label: |
Naxos |
Catalogue No.: |
8.554356 |
Format: |
CD |
Barcode: |
0636943435625 |
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Robert Schumann
(1810-1856): Fantasiestücke, Op. 73
Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827): Seven Variations on 'Bei Männern,
welche Liebe fühlen'
from Mozart's Die Zauberflöte, WoO46
Franz Schubert
(1797-1828): Sonata in A minor, D. 821, "Arpeggione"
Felix Mendelssohn
(1809-1847): Cello Sonata No. 2 in D major, Op. 58
David Popper
(1843-1913): Elfentanz, Op. 39
Felix
Mendelssohn-Bartholdy knew both material and cultural privilege, though neither
could adequately explain the phenomenal musical gifts he demonstrated during
childhood. Brought up in a stimulating intellectual ambience in Berlin, where
his family moved from Hamburg soon after his birth, both he and his sister
Fanny received every encouragement in their artistic and intellectual
endeavours. As a boy Mendelssohn was taught by Cari Zelter, who introduced him
to Goethe in Weimar, and when little more than a child composed a succession of
works of misleading maturity, twelve String Symphonies, the Octet, and
a concert overture, A Midsummer Night's Dream among them, which, in
their formal precision and melodic genius represent some of the most
astonishing creations of any adolescent composer.
Of Mendelssohn's three
works for cello and piano, two were written for his younger brother Paul, a
talented performer, who followed his father by becoming a banker. The earliest
of the three, the beguiling yet wonderfully assured Variations Concertantes,
Op. 17, dates from 1827, when Paul Mendelssohn was fourteenth. Eleven years
later, Mendelssohn returned to the medium, producing the first of his two cello
sonatas, the Sonata in B flat major, Op. 45, once again for his brother.
The second sonata, included here, was written in the final period of
Mendelssohn's intense yet prematurely curtailed creative life. Altogether more
robust and imposing than its predecessor, the Sonata in D major, Op. 58
is among Mendelssohn's finest creations. Composed in 1843, it received its
first public performance in London two years later, played by the celebrated
Italian virtuoso Alfredo Piatti and the composer. The jubilant opening
movement, marked Allegro assai vivace, is in regular sonata form, and
begins with a forthright, emphatic motif, not unlike the beginning of
Mendelssohn's Italian Symphony. The B minor Allegretto scherzando has
the light-footed fairy mercurial quality of several earlier works and features
much pizzicato writing for the cello. The G major Adagio develops
arpeggiated piano chords as a chorale, upon which the cello reflects in
sonorous and impassioned recitative, before the Finale, Molto allegro e
vivace, rounds off the work in heady triumph.
Beethoven's works for
cello and piano appear in each of his creative phases, beginning with his Opus
5 Sonatas in 1796 and culminating in the monumental two sonatas that
from Opus 102 in 1815, the first works of his so-called later period. Of his
three variation sets for cello and piano, only the last, included here, falls
within the new century. In 1801, Emanuel Schikaneder had opened his impressive
new Theater an der Wien, realising his long-held ambitions. The following year
he staged there a new production of the opera which he had written with Mozart
and with which his own name and the decoration of his new Theatre was
associated, Die Zauberflöte. In the ten years since the first
performance the work had been performed two hundred times and most recently for
the first time, in 1801, at the Court Opera. The opera's remarkable popularity
found Beethoven turning to its again for a variation work, as he had with his
set of twelve variations on Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen, in 1796. This second set
of Mozart variations falls mid-way between the sonatas of Opus 5, and Opus 69,
in 1807. The Andante theme is shared between the two instruments during
the first four variations, in which the tempo remains constant, but the note
lengths are varied. In the fifth variation the pulse provides effective
contras! with the Adagio of the sixth. The final treatment of the theme,
marked Allegro, ma non troppo, is memorable for an extended coda including
a new theme in C minor.
David Popper, the
'Liszt of the Cello', enjoyed a sensational career as a virtuoso, and his
numerous studies and pedagogical works may be said to have systematically
modernised cello technique. Popper served as solo cellist of the Vienna Court
Orchestra between 1868 and 1873, and was married to the pianist Sophie Menter,
perhaps Liszt's greatest protégée. Of Popper's many compositions, which
includes several concertos, a set of caprices, numerous characteristic
miniatures, and a superb Requiem for cello ensemble, the dazzling Elfentanz,
Op. 39, is perhaps the best known; its timeless appeal as a bravura morceau
de concert remains undiminished.
Robert Schumann
composed what is generally considered to be the first great Romantic concerto
for cello, the Concerto in A minor, Op. 129, in a mere two weeks in the
autumn of 1850, shortly after assuming the position of director of music in
Düsseldorf, at the suggestion of Ferdinand Hiller, who had preceded him there.
He was by no means a stranger to the instrument, having attempted it himself
when muscular weakness forced him to abandon all hope of becoming a piano
virtuoso. During 1849, Schumann had written three works which have become
standard elements in the cello recital repertory, though curiously only in the
case of the five Stücke im Volkston (‘Pieces in Folk-Song Style’), was
the cello the composer's prescribed first choice. His Adagio and Allegro,
Op. 70, was originally conceived as a virtuoso show-piece for the newly
perfected valve-horn, while the Drei Fantasiestücke, Op. 73, included on
this recording were originally intended for clarinet and piano. Today both
works are heard almost exclusively in their cello and piano versions.
The manuscript of
Schumann's Fantasiestücke is dated 11th and 12th February 1849, while
the Adagio and Allegro was ready by 14th February, and the former work
was played privately a week later by the Dresden clarinettist Johann Kotte,
with Clara Schumann. From the direction attacca found at the end of the first
two of these ternary-form pieces, we may conclude that Schumann devised the
work as a continuous three-section suite. Nonetheless, the character of each is
emphatically defined. The first piece, Zart und mit Ausdruck (‘Tender
and with expression’), in A minor, is nostalgic and contemplative; the second,
Lebhaft, leicht (‘Lively, light’) is relaxed and sun-lit, while the final
section, Rasch und mit Feuer (‘Bold and with fire’) is powerfully
assured and vigorous. The second and third are both in A major, and feature
extended codas.
Franz Schubert, the
great song-writer of the Western art music, was idolised by Schumann, yet
despite the glorious cello writing found in many of his chamber works, notably
in the great String Quintet in C major, D. 956, his name is linked with
just one substantial composition for this instrument, and then only by default.
Schubert's only addition to cello literature is a masterwork, indelibly touched
by his sublime genius. The Sonata in A minor, D. 821, was written in
1823 for the recently invented arpeggione, a bowed hybrid of guitar and cello
with six strings and a finger-board with 24 frets, devised by the Viennese
instrument-maker Johann Georg Staufer. History records the existence of a
single arpeggionist of note, one Vincenz Schuster, a virtuoso performer, who
wrote the only known tutor for his instrument, which was engraved and published
by the firm of Diabelli. That Schuster's treatise was issued by an influential
publisher keenly aware of market forces and eager to satisfy public demand
suggests that, for a time, at least, the arpeggione was very much in vogue, at
least in Vienna. Today, however, this instrument is remembered only in the
context of the magnificent sonata which Schubert wrote at Schuster's behest. Although
universally known as the Arpeggione Sonata, the work is most often heard
played by the cello, although an alternative transcription for viola and piano
is essential element in the repertoire of that instrument.
The sonata is in three
movements, the Adagio and final Rondo, an Allegretto, being
linked. The opening Allegro moderato, in tripartite sonata-form, begins
according to custom, with the piano presenting the first subject idea, before
it is taken up and extended by the cello. A more mobile second group follows,
with lively ex changes between the instruments. Both main ideas are further
explored throughout various keys during the development. A brief cadenza
announces the recapitulation, and the movement ends in grave A minor solemnity.
The Adagio, suggesting a Song without Words, reveals Schubert's
vocal mastery transformed to magical effect. Indeed, it would be difficult to
contemplate a melody more ideally suited to the cello. This leads directly into
the Rondo finale. The recurring main idea, another characteristically
singable Schubertian theme in the tonic major, is counterbalanced throughout
the movement by an acerbic D minor episode recalling the rhythm of the opening
movement's main Allegro. In the middle of the movement, a new
counter-melody emerges before the previous D minor idea returns, this time in A
minor, anticipating an enharmonic return of the Rondo theme in the major. A
graceful coda completes one of Schubert's happiest inspirations.
Michael Jameson
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