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Alina Ibragimova, Ilan Volkov: Roslavets – Violin Concertos (FLAC)

Alina Ibragimova, Ilan Volkov: Roslavets - Violin Concertos (FLAC)
Alina Ibragimova, Ilan Volkov: Roslavets – Violin Concertos (FLAC)

Composer: Nikolay Roslavets
Performer: Alina Ibragimova
Orchestra: BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Ilan Volkov
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Hyperion
Catalogue: CDA67637
Release: 2008
Size: 229 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

Violin Concerto No. 1
01. I. Allegretto grazioso – Cadenza
02. II. Adagio sostenuto
03. III. Allegro moderato, risoluto

Violin Concerto No. 2
04. I. Allegro moderato
05. II. Adagio
06. III. Finale: Allegro giocoso

As late as 1982 Soviet musicologists claiming any significance for Nikolay Roslavets were vigorously suppressed. Only in 1990 was his unmarked grave identified. How many scores were lost when his flat was ransacked just after his death in 1944? The ruthless vengeance of a reactionary proletariat—branding Roslavets, himself born of peasant stock and a fervent 1917 revolutionary, a mere pedlar of bourgeois ‘art for art’s sake’—has fortunately now given way to a gradual recognition of the very real significance of this ‘Russian Schoenberg’. Hyperion has played an important part in the composer’s contemporary rehabilitation, with a benchmark recording of some orchestral works performed by Ilan Volkov and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. The same performers are joined here by the brilliant young violinist Alina Ibragimova.

Roslavets’s Violin Concerto No 1 was thought to exist only in piano reduction form until 1989 when the full score was unearthed in the archives of the State Music Publishers in Moscow. It is an ambitious work, laid out on a large scale. Roslavets’s mastery of a leaner symphonic idiom, virtuosic and elegant, is immediately apparent. It ranks as one of the most important Russian works of its era.

Violin Concerto No 2 was completed in 1936, and was written shortly after the composer’s remarkable Chamber Symphony of 1934–5 (recorded on Hyperion CDA67484). Thus it belongs to the period following Roslavets’s return to Moscow from Uzbekistan, when he seems to have been trying to re-establish his reputation as a composer of substantial works, but after the notorious Pravda denunciations of Shostakovich and musical modernism in January 1936 he probably felt it stood little chance of performance. Since then it has remained in total obscurity until very recently, and these notes were heard for the first time in Glasgow’s City Hall in January 2008—the performance on the present disc is in fact the world premiere.

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