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Gyorgy Pauk (violin), Kazuki Sawa (violin) Pauk and Sawa make for an admirable partnership and Naxos's recordings are entirely satisfactory... I've often said that when it comes to recommending a CD on musical grounds, price is irrelevant. That claim still stands, although I'm happy to confirm the exceedingly low price of their excellent programme.
- Gramophone - May 1996 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Bartók - Music for Solo Violin & Violin and Piano
Elise Bĺtnes (violin) & Hĺvard Gimse (piano) Béla Bartók’s music for the violin occupies an important position in his creative output. The instrument attracted him at intervals throughout his career, from the Andante of 1902 to the magnificently disciplined Sonata for Violin Solo, written in 1944. Norwegian Elise Bĺtnes, newly appointed concertmaster of the Oslo Philharmonics, makes her international debut release as a soloist with a selection of these phenomenal works, revealing a mature interpreter and an outstanding violinist. The earliest surviving work by Bartók for violin and piano is the Andante in A major composed in 1902 while he was a student at the Budapest Academy of Music. It seems to have been written for a fellow-student destined for fame as a violinist, namely Adila d’Aranyi, niece of Joseph Joachim. The work was written as a kind of friendly message on a series of six postcards. The Sonata in E minor was written only one year later, but it reveals a more ambitious composer audibly inspired by both the virtuosity of Liszt, Hungarian folk music, the chromatic harmony of Richard Strauss and the violin sonatas of Brahms. Bartók and Kodály, as professional ethnomusicologists, uncovered the old, authentic Hungarian folk music by going into the countryside with a phonograph and recording the actual melodies people sang and danced to. They published their first joint collection of folksongs in 1906, and Bartók published his piano pieces entitled “For Children” in 1909. In 1931 Bartók transcribed several numbers under the title Hungarian Folk Songs for violin and piano. Bartók’s Sonata for unaccompanied violin was one of his last compositions. It was written early in 1944 for Yehudi Menuhin, who had begun to emerge as a notable interpreter of Bartók’s violin music. The composer worked on the piece in close collaboration with Menuhin, who gave the world premiere in New York on 26 November 1944 and subsequently edited the score for publication. | 
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| |  | Bartók - Music for Violin, piano and clarinet
Annar Follesř (violin), Björn Nyman (clarinet) & Christian Ihle Hadland (piano) The young 2L label shows the tremendous scope of its activities in the six
discs released this month. All recorded in state-of-the-art compatible SACD
format, the repertoire ranges from Gregorian Chant for Lent and Holy Week, to
the music of Ola Gjeilo, very much a 21st-century post-modernist composerperformer,
and Arne Nordheim, probably Norway’s best-known contemporary
composer.
The Nordheim disc demonstrates the other strand in 2L’s release programme:
young Norwegian artists – in this case the Cikada Duo. There is also a live
recording of an excellent concert given by pianist Steffen Horn (Dussek, Grieg,
Rachmaninov and Prokofiev), and two discs devoted to young violinists in 20th
century repertoire: Annar Follesř playing Bartók, and an enticing coupling of
sonatas by Richard Strauss and George Enescu, played by Kolbjřrn Holthe
accompanied by Tor Espen Aspaas.
Attractive and unusual “book” style presentation completes the picture, giving
instant ‘eye appeal’. Certainly, all worth checking out. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 6 working days. |
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| |  | CiacconaWorks for solo violin
“Technically the performance is immaculate, and many passages of double stopping are perfectly tuned. Karl Amadeus Hartmann’s Suite No.1 receives a superb account, one where Hagner’s rhythmic freedom in shaping each movement to such good purpose elevates the score to a masterpiece of the genre. Even the fiendishly difficult crossing of strings in the final Ciaconna is taken with effortless security…” David Denton, The Strad | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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David Grimal (violin) & Georges Pludermacher (piano) “The young French violinist David Grimal draws a consistently pure and silky tone from his Roederer Stradivari (1710) with a controlled and somewhat discreet vibrato. Nevertheless, Grimal’s accuracy, lyricism and technical command … show him to be an artist of immense talent and promise.” The Strad | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Viktoria Mullova plays 20th Century Sonatas
Viktoria Mullova (violin), Piotr Anderszewski & Bruno Canino (piano) | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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Laurent Korcia (violin), Michel Portal (clarinet) & Jean-Efflam Bavouzet (piano) City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Sakari Oramo “His recordings of Ysaye and Bartok make it clear: Laurent Korcia is an outstanding violinist. One of those whose passion and instinct just grab you from the very first bars. Just like those turn-of-the-century virtuosos, Elman, Heifetz, Ysaye or Kubelik, whose style, sound and vibrato were a real trademark, you can’t mistake Korcia for another. For this reason, he stands out among his contemporaries.” Diapason | | Naive - V4991 (CD - 2 discs) Normally: $30.49 Special: $24.39 |
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"Her tone is powerful, warm and round, her technique perfect, her musical competency makes her conclusive interpretation of such a complicated piece as Bartňk's sonata for solo violin possible... Baiba Skride has what it takes for a great career" (Rondo) | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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Christian Tetzlaff (violin), Leif Ove Andsnes (piano) | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | Mirijam Contzen - Solo
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