Composer: Béla Bartók
Performer: James Ehnes, Andrew Armstrong
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Chandos
Release: 2012
Size: 299 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
Rhapsody for Violin & Piano No. 1, BB 94a, Sz. 86
01. I. Lassu: Moderato
02. II. Friss: Allegretto moderato
03. II. [Agitato]
Violin Sonata No. 2, BB 85, Sz. 76
04. I. Molto moderato
05. II. Allegretto
Rhapsody for Violin & Piano No. 2, BB 96a, Sz. 89
06. I. Lassu: Moderato
07. II. Friss: Allegro moderato
Violin Sonata No. 1, BB 84, Sz. 75
08. I. Allegro appassionato
09. II. Adagio
10. III. Allegro
11. Andante in A major, DD 70, BB 26
Rhapsody for Violin & Piano No. 1, BB 94a, Sz. 86
12. II. Accelerando – A tempo – (alternative ending)
13. II. [Agitato] (alternative ending)
Recorded: 30 May–1 June 2011
Recording Venue: Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk
This is the second volume in a series devoted to the works for strings by Béla Bartók, with James Ehnes the featured soloist. Earlier this year, Ehnes recorded the Violin and Viola Concertos (CHAN10690), which was made Disc of the Month in Gramophone magazine. On this new recording, he turns to the Violin Sonatas and Rhapsodies, complemented by the earliest surviving work by Bartók for violin and piano, an Andante. He is accompanied by the pianist Andrew Armstrong.
Dedicated to the Hungarian violinist Adila d’Arányi, the sonatas for violin and piano were composed in 1921 – 22, around the same time as the highly successful ballet score The Miraculous Mandarin. Of the two works, the Sonata in C sharp minor is the more traditional in terms of its structure, and characterised by a mood that is sometimes exhilarated, sometimes turbulent – but always virtuosic. The finale builds from a series of increasingly wild dances, folk-like in style but entirely expressionistic.
In the Sonata in C major, Bartók removes himself from classical form and traditional tonal practice, calling on the violinist to distance himself from the romantic manner of playing. At several points, for example, the violin is played without vibrato, producing an ethereally cool and distant sound. The improvisatory character is strong throughout, as the work repeatedly alternates between the quiet and thoughtful, and the stormy and strident. The ending, in contrast to the earlier sonata, is understated, emotional, and expressive.
Bartók’s two rhapsodies for piano and violin, dedicated respectively to Joseph Szigeti and Zoltán Székely, are steeped in the tradition of Hungarian folk music. Exuberant and infectious, the works are heavily inspired by the csárdás, the national dance of Hungary, and display the traditional pairing of lassú (slow) and friss (lively) movements.