Beethoven & Schnittke: Violin Concertos
Show recording detailsBI 2392
Beethoven & Schnittke: Violin Concertos
Label Catalogue Number:
BIS-2392
BIS-2392
Running Time: 01:06:29
Release Date: May 2021
Originally recorded in 2020
Originally recorded in 2020
Genre:
Classical
Orchestral & Concertos
Classical
Orchestral & Concertos
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About
After acclaimed recordings of the great Romantic violin concertos by Brahms, Bruch and Tchaikovsky, Vadim Gluzman takes on the work that in the beginning of the 19th century mapped out a new course for the genre: Beethoven’s Violin Concerto in D major, Op.61. With this work, Beethoven rejected the idea of a virtuoso display piece with a largely irrelevant orchestral accompaniment. Instead he presented a symphonic reinterpretation of the concerto principle, with soloist and orchestra becoming equal partners in a texture that is interwoven on many levels. Largely forgotten for several decades after the first performance in 1806, it is now considered one of the greatest violin concertos. However innovative Beethoven was in his opus 61, he nevertheless remained true to the tradition of allowing the soloist several cadenzas. Over the years, a number of composers and great violin virtuosos have proposed their own cadenzas for the concerto, with Alfred Schnittke being one of the more unexpected names. For this recording, Gluzman has chosen to perform Schnittke’s cadenzas, as a link to the second work on the disc: the composer’s Concerto No.?3 for violin and chamber orchestra. To Schnittke, the relationship between soloist and orchestra is quite different from that demonstrated in Beethoven’s score: ‘It seems to me that this relationship is never harmonically equitable and balanced… The soloist and orchestra are in fact adversaries.’ However they may be labelled, James Gaffigan and the Luzerner Sinfonieorchester nevertheless provide unstinting support to Gluzman in both scores.
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Reviews
Concerto category – Nominee
International Classical Music Awards 2022
“… The present recording is quite compelling and is recommended to every Schnittke devotee… BIS’s recorded sound is excellent. The Lucerne Symphony aquits itself well in the Schnittke …”
Huntley Dent – Fanfare – September/October 2021
**** (Excellent)
Michel Le Laour – Classica magazine (France) – November 2021
“…Schnittke’s own Violin Concerto no. 3 (1978) gets a highly engaging performance … It is a haunting, moving and entertaining piece, one of Schnittke’s most successful…”
David Mellor – The Strad – September 2021
“… Gluzman draws a wonderfully smooth and pure sound from the “Leopold Auer” Stradivarius of 1690. Excellent sound …”
Joseph Magil – American Record Guide – September/October 2021
“… Gluzman and American conductor James Gaffigan give another satisfying performance… The two concertos illuminate each other in a revealing context. It is a smart pairing, and sound quality is excellent.” *****
Phillip Scott – Limelightmagazine.com.au – 19 July 2021
Recommended
“A masterly programme with a truly inspired account of the Beethoven.”
David McDade – MusicWeb-International.com – 1 June 2021
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