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Lydia Mordkovitch plays Bacewicz & Enescu with Ian Fountain (24/96 FLAC)

Lydia Mordkovitch plays Bacewicz & Enescu with Ian Fountain (24/96 FLAC)
Lydia Mordkovitch plays Bacewicz & Enescu with Ian Fountain (24/96 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Grazyna Bacewicz, George Enescu
Performer: Lydia Mordkovitch, Ian Fountain
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Chandos
Catalogue: CHAN10476
Release: 2008
Size: 311 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

Enescu: Violin Sonata No. 2 in F minor, Op. 6
01. I. Assez mouvementé
02. II. Tranquillement
03. III. Vif

Bacewicz: Violin Sonata No. 1, “Sonata da camera”
04. I. Largo
05. II. Allegro
06. III. Tempo di minuetto
07. IV. Andante sostenuto
08. V. Gigue. Molto allegro

Bacewicz: Violin Sonata No. 3
09. I. Allegro moderato – Allegro appassionato
10. II. Adagio
11. III. Scherzo. Vivo
12. IV. Finale. Andante – Moderato

Bacewicz: Partita
13. I. Prelude. Grave – Grandioso
14. II. Toccata. Vivace
15. III. Intermezzo. Andantino melancolico
16. IV. Rondo. Presto

Bacewicz was the most prominent Polish female composer of the twentieth century and a renowned violinist who, by contemporary accounts, was surpassed only by Ginette Neveu and David Oistrakh. She left a legacy of over 200 compositions, many of which have never been heard in the West. The Partita was written after a long hospitalisation – the result of a serious automobile accident. Although Bacewicz’s body was immobilised, her musical mind must have been very active. She provided two versions of the work, one for orchestra and the second for violin and piano which we hear on this recording. Bacewicz’s Third Violin Sonata is one of her lesser-known pieces. Bacewicz is frequently labelled a neoclassicist, but she is much more robust and muscular in her approach than many of her contemporaries.

George Enescu was a prodigy as both performer and composer and was not yet eighteen when he completed the Second Violin Sonata. His world here is not Romanian, but rather influenced by Brahms, Franck and Fauré; however, the work still exudes a healthy respect for the tradition which he inherited.

Both Bacewicz and Enescu studied in Paris, and were professional violinists and pianists who imbued their music with a profound knowledge of their instruments, clearly demonstrated in this new recording.

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