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Gary Cooper, Rachel Podger: Mozart – Complete Sonatas for Keyboard and Violin vol.2 (24/192 FLAC)

Gary Cooper, Rachel Podger: Mozart - Complete Sonatas for Keyboard and Violin vol.2 (24/192 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Performer: Rachel Podger, Gary Cooper
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Channel
Catalogue: CCSSA22805
Release: 2005
Size: 2.1 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

Violin Sonata No. 20 in C Major, K. 303 / 293c
01. I. Adagio – Molto allegro
02. II. Tempo di Menuetto

Violin Sonata No. 2 in D major, K7
03. I. Allegro molto
04. II. Adagio
05. III. Menuets I & II

Violin Sonata No. 18 in G Major, K. 301 / 293a
06. I. Allegro con spirito
07. II. Allegro

Violin Sonata No. 15 in F major, K30
08. I. Adagio
09. II. Rondeau. Tempo di Menuetto

Violin Sonata No. 33 in E flat major K481
10. I. Molto allegro
11. II. Adagio
12. III. Allegretto

BBC Music MagazineNovember 2005
The outstanding work on this second instalment is the big E flat Sonata K481. Cooper and Podger provide a broad performance of its wonderful slow movement that really plumbs its depths, applying ornamentation in a way that Mozart might well have done himself. Cooper and Podger are superb in the G major K301, with an account of the minor-mode siciliano-like episode in its finale that’s both expressive and irresistibly lilting.

Gary Cooper and Rachel Podger’s projected set of the Mozart duo sonatas (of which this is the second volume) will be more complete than most, including the works he wrote for keyboard with accompanying violin between the ages of seven and 10. Of course these can’t be compared to the later sonatas but they’re certainly not without interest; and on the present disc the progress between No 2 and No 15 is striking – the latter’s Adagio shows an enormous increase in expressive range (further extended by Gary Cooper’s extravagant decoration of the repeats) with the violin complementing the melody most effectively. The decision to use the same fortepiano for all the sonatas may not be the most accurate historical way of presenting them but, as Cooper points out, it does help the listener to hear them as belonging to a single line of development.
Both artists show an impressive command of the rhetorical 18th-century approach to phrasing and expression, giving a very lively air to the music-making – there are no flat, routine moments. The theatrical manner of No 18’s first movement inspires a wonderfully bright, colourful performance, and the contrasts inherent in the two-speed opening movement of No 20 are brilliantly realised.

Some may find the continually active style of playing a step too far, and there were places, in the first movement of No 33, for example, where a calmer, less eventful approach might have been welcome. But the great Adagio of this sonata has a beautiful sense of line and, throughout, the marriage of expertise and stylistic awareness results in truly treasurable performances.

Both artists show an impressive command of the rhetorical 18th-century approach to phrasing and expression, giving a very likely air to the music-making – there are no flat, routine moments.

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