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qtz2156
Wydawnictwo: Quartz
Nr katalogowy: QTZ 2156
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: lipiec 2024
EAN: 880040215622
60,00zł
w magazynie
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Epoka muzyczna: 20 wiek do 1960
Obszar (język): angielski (USA), niemiecki
Instrumenty: skrzypce, fortepian
Rodzaj: koncert

Korngold / Herrmann: The Golden Age of Hollywood - Concert Works for violin and piano

Quartz - QTZ 2156
Wykonawcy
Patrick Savage, violin
Martin Cousin, piano
Nagrody i rekomendacje
 
BBC Music Choice
 
Korngold:
Much Ado About Nothing Suite, Op. 11 (Version for Violin & Piano)

Waxman, F:
Four Scenes of Childhood

Bennett, Robert:
Hexapoda - Five studies in Jitteroptera

Heinz Roemheld:
Sonatina for Violin & Piano, Op. 6

Moross:
Recitative & Aria for Violin & Piano

Herrmann, B:
Pastoral (Twilight)

Rozsa:
Variations on a Hungarian Peasant Song, Op. 4 (1929)
The range of composing talent that gravitated to Hollywood during the 1930s and ’ 40s was truly exceptional. It included a number of musicians that were no less skilled at writing concert works as in creating effective scores for the burgeoning film industry. Yet at the time, achieving due recognition in both fields proved virtually impossible. Part of the reason for this must be linked to the snobbery of the American musical establishment which deemed that commercial success in film music meant that any other aspect of a composer’s output could never be taken seriously.

Listening to this warmly recorded and imaginatively devised recital makes you realise the utter stupidity of such entrenched views, for the intrinsic qualities of the music featured here are self-evident. A wonderfully affectionate and strongly characterised performance of Korngold’s Much Ado about Nothing Suite sets the ball rolling. It is followed by Bernard Herrmann’s luxuriously perfumed Pastoral and Franz Waxman’s delightful Four Scenes of Childhood – a cycle of four miniature pieces that encapsulates the daily activity of a young household in the most vivid manner.

Robert Russell Bennett scores a real winner with his upbeat and slightly jazzy Hexapoda. In stark contrast, Jerome Moross evokes the wide-open prairies of the American Mid-West in his Recitative and Aria. The final item, Miklós Rózsa’s Variations on a Hungarian Peasant Song, provides ample opportunity for Savage and Cousin to revel in the music’s exuberant virtuosity. All in all, a hugely enjoyable release. Erik Levi

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