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Persinaru, Cox, Francke: Sergei Bortkiewicz – Chamber Music (FLAC)

Persinaru, Cox, Francke: Sergei Bortkiewicz - Chamber Music (FLAC)
Persinaru, Cox, Francke: Sergei Bortkiewicz – Chamber Music (FLAC)

Composer: Sergei Bortkiewicz
Performer: Nils Francke, Cristian Persinaru, Paul Cox
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Brilliant
Catalogue: 96586
Release: 2022
Size: 258 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Elegie in D-Flat Major, Op. 46
01. I. Andante – un poco più mosso – agitato – Tempo I

Im ¾ Takt in G Major, Op. 48
02. V. Vivace – Un poco meno mosso – Tempo I

Berceuse in A Major, Op. 15
03. IV. Andantino poco moto con morbidezza – Lento

Im ¾ Takt in E Minor, Op. 48
04. II. Un poco sostenuto – Un poco più mosso – Tempo I

Suite, Op. 63
05. I. Albumblatt in G Major – Andante
06. II. Walzer in E Minor – Tempo giusto – più lento
07. III. Méditation in E Major – Andante – più mosso – Tempo I
08. IV. Espana in C-Sharp Minor – Allegretto – Vivace

3 Morceaux, Op. 25
09. I. Romance in F Major – Andante con moto – più mosso – Tempo I
10. II. Gavotte in D Major – Allegretto giocoso – a tempo
11. III. Valse in G Major – Tempo di valse

Violin Sonata in G Minor, Op. 26
12. I. Sostenuto – Allegro dramatico – Un poco meno mosso – Adagio
13. II. Andante – Un poco più animato – Agitato – Cadenza – Tempo I – Andante lacrimoso
14. III. Allegro vivace e con brio – Vivace – Tempo I – Vivace – Moderato – Allegro vivace

Bortkiewicz was born in Kharkiv, Ukraine, to a privileged Orthodox family. Influenced by Tchaikovsky and Anton Rubinstein, he studied theory with Liadov at the St Petersburg Conservatoire (1896–99) before going to Leipzig (1900–02), then beginning married life in Berlin. World War I, however, saw him effectively deported back to Ukraine, where any attempt to rebuild his career post-Revolution was thwarted by the Bolsheviks.


In November 1920, he and his wife made for Allied-occupied Constantinople, where he befriended Géza Hegyi, Hungarian court pianist to the Sultan, Mehmed VI, and gained entry to the most influential diplomatic and social circles of the day. Unsatisfied there after some 20 months, he journeyed to Vienna, where he settled for the remainder of his life and weathered (another) war, occupation, Nazi persecution, Soviet obstruction and financial ruin. Being on the wrong side of the cloth in the wrong place at the wrong time was Bortkiewicz’s over-riding misfortune.


Dating from the start of his Vienna years, the Violin Sonata op.26 (1922) was published in 1924. A big-boned work of angst and drama, it looks back to imperial times and the poetry of generations long past. The pathos of the opening, the lacrimosa of the C minor slow movement’s last page, the bells, the 5/4 Russian dance of the finale, are arresting landmarks. The Suite op.63 (published in 1946 as ‘Four Pieces’) conjures Viennese waltz, Iberian evocación and tobacco-tinged nostalgia. The remaining three pieces for violin and piano are own-arrangements of piano solos: Berceuse (1916, from the A major Étude op.15 no.4) and nos. 2 and 5 of the Im 3/4-Takt collection (1935).


The Sibelian D flat Elegie op.46 for cello and piano, printed in 1936, is also an arrangement of an earlier piano solo (1931). More or less contemporary with (lost) manuscripts of a Cello Sonata and Piano Trio, Bortkiewicz’s Three Pieces op.25 – comprising a pair of pastiche dances and an opening F major Romance vaguely echoing Albéniz – date from 1924.

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