Wydawnictwo: Avi Music
Seria: Bach - Ysaye
Nr katalogowy: AVI 8553320
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: grudzień 2014
EAN: 4260085533206
Seria: Bach - Ysaye
Nr katalogowy: AVI 8553320
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: grudzień 2014
EAN: 4260085533206
Bach / Ysaye: Bach & Ysaye, Vol. 1
Avi Music - AVI 8553320
Wykonawcy
Antje Weithaas, violin
Antje Weithaas, violin
Bach, J S:
Sonata for solo violin No. 1 in G minor, BWV1001
Partita for solo violin No. 2 in D minor, BWV1004:
Chaconne
Ysaye:
Sonata for solo violin in G minor, Op. 27 No. 1
Sonata for solo violin in A minor, Op. 27 No. 2
Sonata for solo violin No. 1 in G minor, BWV1001
Partita for solo violin No. 2 in D minor, BWV1004:
Chaconne
Ysaye:
Sonata for solo violin in G minor, Op. 27 No. 1
Sonata for solo violin in A minor, Op. 27 No. 2
Antje Weithaas launches her trilogy of solo violin CDs with the first work in each cycle.
It was Antje Weithaas’s own idea to jointly record Johann Sebastian Bach’s six sonatas and partitas for solo violin in conjunction with Eugene Ysaye’s six solo violin sonatas. “The works by Bach are rather well-known”, she remarks. “But Ysaye is invariably shoved into the virtuoso corner, but as a composer he is to be taken quite seriously!”.
Eugene Ysaye‘s son remembers that his father started composing the solo violin sonatas when he heard Joseph Szigeti, a violinist younger than himself, play Bach in Brussels in 1923. Antje Weithaas sees many parallels with Bach’s Sonata No. 1 for Solo Violin, BWV 1001: “The works have similar structures.”
“Both composers wrote technically challenging pieces featuring double stops and ornamental figurations. Although there is no proof for such connections, I’m quite certain that Ysaye had them in mind.” The fugues, in each case, represent quite a challenge. Each composer demands double and multiple stops from an instrument normally designed to play one part at a time. “The notes are written directly on top of one another, as the composer must have imagined them in his head, but not in the way they are to be executed. Since the performance tradition has not survived, we can only make guesses.”
It was Antje Weithaas’s own idea to jointly record Johann Sebastian Bach’s six sonatas and partitas for solo violin in conjunction with Eugene Ysaye’s six solo violin sonatas. “The works by Bach are rather well-known”, she remarks. “But Ysaye is invariably shoved into the virtuoso corner, but as a composer he is to be taken quite seriously!”.
Eugene Ysaye‘s son remembers that his father started composing the solo violin sonatas when he heard Joseph Szigeti, a violinist younger than himself, play Bach in Brussels in 1923. Antje Weithaas sees many parallels with Bach’s Sonata No. 1 for Solo Violin, BWV 1001: “The works have similar structures.”
“Both composers wrote technically challenging pieces featuring double stops and ornamental figurations. Although there is no proof for such connections, I’m quite certain that Ysaye had them in mind.” The fugues, in each case, represent quite a challenge. Each composer demands double and multiple stops from an instrument normally designed to play one part at a time. “The notes are written directly on top of one another, as the composer must have imagined them in his head, but not in the way they are to be executed. Since the performance tradition has not survived, we can only make guesses.”