01 ObsessionBaroque violinist Marie Nadeau-Tremblay admits to having an obsessive personality and to having crafted her new album Obsession with that in mind. She is supported by Mélisande Corriveau on viola da gamba, Eric Milnes on harpsichord and organ, and Kerry Bursey on lute (ATMA Classique ACD2 2825 atmaclassique.com/en/product/obsession).

Nadeau-Tremblay notes that obsessive characteristics are present in each of the works here – as themes and variations, repeated ground bass lines or returning rondo themes – with the album consisting entirely of minor key pieces adding to the feeling of being stuck in an obsessive loop. 

An engrossing recital of predominantly late 17th-century works includes two by Biber – his Sonata No.2 in D Minor, C139 and Rosary Sonata No.1 in D Minor, “Annunciation” – two by Buxtehude – his Trio Sonata in A Minor, BuxWV272 and Trio Sonata in G Minor, BuxWV261 – Michel Farinel’s Faronells Division Upon a Ground (La Folia) and François Francœur’s Sonata for Violin and Continuo in G Minor, Op.2 No.6.  

Bursey is the tenor soloist in the lovely, anonymous Une jeune fillette, and Nadeau-Tremblay is terrific in Louis-Robert Guillemain’s extremely difficult Amusement for violin solo, Op.18 No.1 “La Furstemberg” from 1755.

Nadeau-Tremblay plays with outstanding clarity and beauty, her flawless technical facility married to an innate and sensitive musicianship in a superb release.

02 Patrick Yim OneOne – New Music for Unaccompanied Violin, a collection of world premiere recordings, is violinist Patrick Yim’s third album of solo violin music and features six works commissioned between 2020 and 2023 (New Focus Recordings FCR411 newfocusrecordings.com/catalogue/patrick-yim-one-new-music-for-unaccompanied-violin).

Ilari Kaila’s high-energy moto perpetuo Solitude opens the disc. Juri Soo’s title track One is a cycle of 12 widely-varied vignettes representing the months of the year. All four opening works on the CD were written during the pandemic lockdown, Takuma Itoh’s A Melody from an Unknown Place and Páll Ragnar Pálsson’s Hermitage are both meditations on the loneliness and spirituality of the isolation. Matthew Schreibeis’ Fragile Remembrance and John Liberatore’s Strange, High Sky are both from 2023, the former essentially an ABA arc and the latter inspired by Lu Sun’s Wild Grass stories.

“Yim plays with virtuosity and powerful expression,” says the release blurb in a perfect assessment.

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03 Viola FantasiesOn the digital release Viola Fantasies violist Mischa Galaganov presents the 12 Fantasies for Bass Viol (1735) by Georg Philip Telemann, the first recording on viola of the only known solo works from a major Baroque composer to almost ideally complement the modern viola’s range and tonal characteristics (Navona NV6692 navonarecords.com/catalog/nv6692).

Galaganov uses gut strings and modern tunings in his own arrangements of the works, with such issues as dynamics, tempi and ornamentation being determined by his research, experience and instincts. If you are familiar with Telemann’s12 Fantasies for Solo Violin then you will know what to expect here: a set of short, inventive works, mostly of three brief and contrasting movements, that require a great deal more technical skill than you might imagine given the deceptively easy flow of the music. Galaganov is superb throughout a fascinating recital, with the two Vivaces and the Presto in the four-movement Fantasie No.2 particular standouts.

The release publicity referred to these works as “soon-to-be viola standards,” and it’s easy to see – and hear – why.

04 Busoni DegoViolinist Francesca Dego completes her celebration of Ferruccio Busoni’s centenary year with Busoni Violin Sonatas & Four Bagatelles, accompanied by her regular recital pianist Francesca Leonardi (Chandos CHAN 20304 chandos.net/products/reviews/CHAN_20304).

The two sonatas, No.1 Op.29 K234 and No.2 Op.36a K244 are both in E minor and reflect the composer’s grounding in the German Romantic tradition. The first, from 1890 is close to the Brahms D minor sonata in feel, while the second, from 1900 is a more complex work centred on a chorale from the Anna Magdalena Notebook and feeling like a single-movement arc, its ten mostly short sections played without a break.

The Four Bagatelles Op.28 K229 from 1888 that end the disc are brief – only just over six minutes in total – early works written for the 7-year-old child prodigy Egon Petri, who would later become a Busoni student. 

As always, Dego plays with warmth and style, sensitively supported by Leonardi. 

05 The Morning MistInspired by her research project “Latvian Classical Violin Music in Transition, c.1980-2000” the Australia-based Latvian violinist Sophia Kirsanova presents world premiere recordings of stylistically diverse works for violin by Latvian composers on The Morning Mist, a musical reflection on a significant period that saw the collapse of the Soviet Union and Latvia regaining its independence (SKANI LMIC167 sophiakirsanova.com).

Three works represent music of today’s Latvia: Ēriks Ešenvalds’ title track, with pianist Agnese Eglina; Linda Leimane’s Architectonics of a Crystal Soul, with the Syzygy Ensemble; and Platon Buravicky’s Angel’s Gaze, with pianist Georgina Lewis. Amir Farid is the pianist for Pēteris Vasks’ Little Summer Music, a set of five brief but delightful pieces, but the highlight here is Aivars Kalējs’ monumental Toccata for Solo Violin Op.40, a striking work, heavily influenced by Bach, that draws particularly outstanding playing from Kirsanova, who handles a variety of styles and techniques with ease and musical intelligence throughout the CD.

06 Ehnes Brahms and SchumannJames Ehnes switches to viola on Ehnes & Armstrong Play Brahms & Schumann, accompanied by his regular recital partner Andrew Armstrong – and it’s not just any viola, but the 1696 “Archinto” Stradivarius viola on loan from the Royal Academy of Music (Onyx ONYX4256 onyxclassics.com/release/ehnes-armstrong-play-brahms-schumann-brahms-sonatas-op-120-weigenlied-schumann-marchenbilder).

The Schumann work that opens the disc is the Märchenbilder (Fairy-Tale Pictures) Op.113, a group of four pieces written in a mere few days in March 1851. They create a sense of fantasy rather than depicting specific scenes, and are full of strong rhythmic and melodic contrast.

Brahms had advised his publisher that he was considering retirement when he encountered the exceptional playing of clarinetist Richard Mühlfeld, the four works he wrote for him – the Clarinet Trio Op.114, the Clarinet Quintet Op.115 and the two Clarinet Sonatas Op.120 – being the last chamber compositions of Brahms’ career. It’s the latter works that are featured here: the Sonata in F Minor Op.120 No.1 and the Sonata in E Major Op.120 No.2, both in the arrangements made by the composer. His Wiegenlied Op.49 No.4 – the well-known Brahms Lullaby – completes the recital. 

The playing is all that you would expect: warm, expressive perfection from Ehnes and sensitive, resonant support from Armstrong.

07 EncirclingEncircling, the new CD from violist Daphne Gerling and pianist Tomoko Kashiwagi, features music by the English violist and composer Rebecca Clarke and three of her female contemporaries. It was inspired by Gerling’s doctoral research that celebrated the centennial of the 1919 Berkshire Composition Competition in America (Acis APL53974 acisproductions.com/encircling-daphne-gerling).

Clarke’s Passacaglia on an Old English Tune opens the disc. The Viola Sonata Op.7 by the virtually unknown English composer Kalitha Dorothy Fox (1894-1934) was rediscovered as one result of the project to find as many of the 72 entries in the 1919 competition as possible; it’s a world premiere recording.

The Viola Sonata Op.25 by the French composer Marcelle Soulage (1894-1970) may possibly have been entered in the competition, although the entry deadline preceded the sonata’s November 1919 completion. The Fantaisie Op.18 by Hélène Fleury-Roy (1876-1957) completes the CD.

There’s nothing spectacular here, but it’s still a beautifully played and recorded recital of finely crafted and fascinating works.

Listen to 'Encircling' Now in the Listening Room

08 Brahms Cello WeilersteinCellist Alisa Weilerstein and her longtime recital partner Inon Barnaton are in fine form on Brahms Cello Sonatas, pairing the two works with their own arrangement of one of the violin sonatas (Pentatone PYC5187215 pentatonemusic.com/product/brahms-cello-sonatas).

The Cello Sonata No.1 in E Minor, Op.38 from 1865 clearly illustrates Brahms’ intention to treat the piano as an equal partner in the duo – it should “under no circumstances assume a purely accompanying role.” The Cello Sonata No.2 in F Major, Op.99 from 1886 is a mature work, although not with the autumnal nature of so many of his late chamber works.

In between the two sonatas is the duo’s arrangement of the Violin Sonata No.1 in G Major, Op.78. There was a contemporary arrangement of this work, transposed into D major, by Paul Klengel, but Barnaton always felt that the loss of the original key’s timbre and colour, together with the changes to the piano part and the high register cello writing rendered it unconvincing. 

Played here in the original key with the cello mostly an octave lower, Barnaton feels that “those dark colours” are restored, albeit more so now that the cello part is in the middle of the piano range for much of the time. Still, there’s no doubting the quality of the playing on a simply lovely CD.

09 Oslo String QuartetThe Oslo String Quartet launches their very own label with Learn To Wait, a digital-only release that features music by Benjamin Britten, György Ligeti and Nils Henrik Asheim, whose third quartet gives the project its title (OSQ01 stringquartet.com).

Britten’s String Quartet No.1 from 1941 was written while he was in the United States, having left England at the start of the war. Although a relatively early work, its brilliance of invention, scoring and technique is a clear indicator of how the composer’s career would develop.

The central work in the recital is Asheim’s String Quartet No.3, Learn To Wait, composed during the pandemic lockdown. It’s a ten-minute single movement featuring note clusters, harmonics and extended bowing techniques that apparently seemed a logical choice for the disc as the Oslo players happened to be working on it at the same time as the other two quartets; however, it has trouble holding its own in such company.

Ligeti’s String Quartet No.1, Métamorphoses nocturnes from 1953-54 clearly has more to say right from the start, the range of its fascinating soundscape showing a personal voice emerging from the influence of both Bartók and Schoenberg’s 12-tone system.

Listen to 'Learn To Wait' Now in the Listening Room

10 Irish SeasonsWorks by Vivaldi and the Irish composer Ailbhe McDonagh (b.1982) are featured on The Irish Seasons, the debut solo album from the Irish violinist Lynda O’Connor. David Brophy conducts the Anamus string ensemble (Avie AV2688 avie-records.com/releases/the-irish-seasons-ailbhe-mcdonagh-•-antonio-vivaldi).

O’Connor feels that there are similarities between Irish and Baroque music, both structurally and in ornamentation, and the pairing of Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons with the world premiere recording of McDonagh’s The Irish Four Seasons was a natural choice. The former is an intimate, warm and upbeat performance, but it’s really the McDonagh work that drives the CD – and it’s a real gem.

Each of the four seasons is represented by a single movement. The lovely Spring – Earrach (pronounced AH rakh) has a slow Irish air on each side of a lively reel, the ABA form mirroring the fast-slow-fast pattern of each of the Vivaldi concertos. Summer – Samhradh (SAU rah), also in ABA form, is in the same G minor key as Vivaldi’s Summer, and quotes from the latter’s third movement. Autumn – Fómhar (FOHR) with its jig and turbulent cross-string patterns, has a clear Vivaldi feel, and Winter – Geimhreadh (GEE rah) includes themes from the three previous movements.

11 Music of the Angels“Has there ever been a composer of more consistent eloquence?”, says cellist Steven Isserlis about the subject of his new CD Music of the Angels – Cello Concertos, Sonatas & Quintets by Luigi Boccherini on which he also directs the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment (Hyperion CDA68444 hyperion-records.co.uk/dc.asp?dc=D_CDA68444).

Boccherini (1743-1805) spent most of his adult life in Spain in what Isserlis, in his customary exemplary booklet essay calls “his own idyllic realm of the senses.” The CD’s title comes from a musical dictionary published a few years after Boccherini’s death that described his adagios as giving one “an idea of the music of the angels.”

Faithful editions of Boccherini’s music, however, are a relatively recent development. The two concertos here – the Concerto No.2 in A Major G475, the authenticity of which was originally questioned, and the Concerto No.6 in D Major G479, are from Boccherini’s early years as a touring virtuoso. 

Maggie Cole is the harpsichordist in the Sonata in C Minor G2b, and Luise Buchberger the second cellist in the gorgeous Sonata in F Major G9. The String Quintet in D Minor G280 is at the centre of the recital, and the famous Minuetto & Trio from the String Quintet in E Major G275 ends an outstanding CD of beautiful – and, yes, eloquent – playing. 

12 Dvorak Benedict KloecknerThere’s more fine cello playing on Dvořák Cello Concerto & Pieces, with cellist Benedict Kloeckner accompanied by the Romanian Chamber Orchestra under Cristian Măcelaru and by pianist Danae Dörken in a recital of Dvořák’s cello works “all of which,” it is claimed, “are collected here for the first time on a CD.” There’s no sign of the Slavonic Dance Op.48 No.3, though (SWR Berlin Classics 0303412BC berlin-classics-music.com/en/album/885470035130-dvorak-cello-concerto-pieces).

Kloeckner’s warm tone and outstanding technique make for a fine reading of the Cello Concerto in B Minor Op.104, recorded in a live single-take performance in the Stadttheater Koblenz and featuring a particularly lovely middle movement. The cello and piano versions of Waldsruhe Op.68 No.5 (Silent Woods) and the Rondo in G Minor Op.94 were both used in Dvořák’s farewell tour of Bohemia before leaving for America.

The Slavonic Dance Op.46 No.8 and the rarely-performed Polonaise in A Major Op.Post.B94 are both Dvořák originals, and Kloeckner’s own arrangements of Songs my mother taught me Op.55 No.4 and Leave me alone Op.82 No.1, the song that makes a crucial emotional contribution to the concerto, are the remaining tracks on an excellent disc.

13 Love LettersA warm and finely-judged performance of Robert Schumann’s Cello Concerto in A Minor, Op.129 anchors the 2CD set Love Letters – Tribute to Clara & Robert Schumann, with cellist Christian-Pierre La Marca supported by the Philharmonia Orchestra under Raphaël Merlin and pianist Jean-Frédéric Neuberger (Naïve V7364 christianpierrelamarca.com/en/music). 

Described as “an anthem to eternal love” the release was inspired by the intimate love letters exchanged between Robert and Clara Schumann, while seeking to root those letters in a modern context by inviting four contemporary composers to add their own vision of love in a world of digital connection.

CD1 opens with the concerto and also includes Robert’s Fantasiestücke Op.73 and his Adagio and Allegro Op.70. It ends with La Marca’s arrangements of the two movements from the collaborative F-A-E Sonata written by Schumann, Brahms and Albert Dietrich for the violinist Joseph Joachim: the Intermezzo by Schumann and the Scherzo by Brahms, the latter a close associate of both Schumanns.

CD2 is a somewhat less successful mixed bag, with three works by Clara and four by Robert interwoven with world-premiere recordings of Fabien Waksman’s Replika, Michelle Ross’ Désenvoyé, Neuberger’s Vibrating and Patricia Kopatchinskaja’s Klingelnseel & Choral and SMS. 

01 Flute AlorsScherzi Forastieri
Flute Alors!
ATMA ACD2  2818 (atmaclassique.com/en/product/scherzi-forastieri)

Speaking as a former recorder player, I can say, with good authority, that it can be a frustrating instrument: limits to timbre and dynamics can quickly outweigh the joys of how easy it is to make your first decent sounds. The Montreal-based recorder quartet Flûte Alors! is a shining example of the other side of this coin, revealing for years now how astonishing this instrument can be when it’s well played. 

Although known for its eclectic repertoire, the latest offering from the quartet focuses solely on Italian music of the early Baroque. The title is taken from a collection of canzoni written in 1611 by Giovanni Cangiasi and translates roughly as “pleasantries of a foreigner.” Of the 18 tracks on this CD, ten are by Cangiasi and they really are very cheerful and inventive. Like most music from this period, the curiosity for modern ears lies in all the ways in which the conventions of the high baroque have not yet been formed: vestiges of renaissance harmonies and dance forms present themselves again and again. 

I particularly liked the “clucking hens” of Cangiasi’s La Furugada and the athletic and sinuous theme of Nicolò Corradini’s La Bizzarra; both of these feature that light-speed tonguing only possible on the recorder. Execution throughout is spectacular: virtuosic and tasteful ornaments, spot-on tuning, infallible passage work. Yes, the colours are limited but the group has selected interesting and varied music and as far as taking the listener back in time, it is thoroughly and delightfully convincing.

02 More BachMore Bach, Please!
Concerto Italiano; Rinaldo Alessandrini
Naïve OP8454 (arkivmusic.com/products/more-bach-please)

Over the years, composers and performers as diverse as Anton Webern, Procol Harem and the Modern Jazz Quartet have all drawn inspiration from the music of J.S Bach. The Rome-based Baroque ensemble Concerto Italiano directed by Rinaldo Alessandri is the latest ensemble to refashion the music of the Leipzig cantor in this intriguing Naïve label recording titled More Bach, Please!. The aim of the endeavour was to create three new works based upon pre-existing material by Bach with Alessandrini drawing from a number of sources.

The Ouverture in the French Style BWV831 for solo keyboard was originally published in 1735 as the second half of the Clavier-Übung (paired with the Italian Concerto). Here, the appeal is three-fold. Not only are Alessandrini’s arrangements meticulously constructed but the movements were thoughtfully chosen. Furthermore, the playing itself is stylish and elegant with the ten-member ensemble producing a warmly cohesive sound in which violinist Boris Begelman and violist Ettore Belli deliver particularly polished performances.

The Partita for flute, strings and continuo and the eight-movement Ouverture in G Major for strings and continuo utilize various sources including those from the Violin Sonata BWV1016, the keyboard Partitas BWV825 and 828 and the Ouverture BWV820. Again, the ensemble performs with a solid conviction with flutist Laura Pontecorvo’s sensitive and controlled tone melding perfectly with the string ensemble.

How could Bach not have approved of these arrangements? He himself frequently transcribed and reused his own music (and that of others). With modern technology AI can undoubtedly produce a competent refashioning of a composer’s work, but there is still ample room for the human touch and creativity, as this recording so admirably demonstrates.

03a Carnaval Edna SternSchumann: Carnaval and Kinderszenen
Edna Stern
Orchid Classics ORC100338 (edna-stern.com/recordings)

The Young Schumann
Charles Owen
Avie Records AV2647 (avie-records.com/releases/the-young-schumann-carnaval-op-9-•-papillons-op-2-•-intermezzi-op-4-•-abegg-variations-op-1)

The evergreen Carnaval is the main work on two new recordings of music for solo piano by Robert Schumann. There is an exciting sense of youthful impetuousness in Edna Stern’s recording, with fast movements taken very quickly and slower movements treated flexibly, with a generous use of rubato throughout. The quirkiness of Schumann’s language is brought to the fore as Stern emphasizes Schumann’s many sudden accents and contrasts of dynamics. Listen to the sense of improvisation in the Valse noble and the breathtaking abandon Stern brings to the infamously difficult Paganini. The final pages of the closing March are truly thrilling. This is high-octane playing, capturing a sense of live performance on the wing in a warmly recorded acoustic.  

03b Young SchumannIn comparison, Charles Owen’s performance prizes sensitivity of phrasing and clarity of texture over sheer visceral excitement. Accents and inner voices are less prominent, and tempos are less extreme. This is a carefully considered performance, though this serious-mindedness doesn’t always translate into the same thrill of excitement that Stern produces. Owen fills out his album with Schumann’s first two published works, the Abegg Variations, Op.1 and Papillons, Op.2. I find Papillons, in particular, a much fresher performance, with light textures and dancing rhythms that emphasize this music’s roots in the ballroom. Owen also includes the rarely heard Intermezzi, Op.4, in a committed performance that makes one wish these six pieces were heard more often. The confident swagger of the first piece, the syncopated playfulness of the second, and the varied moods of the fifth are all vintage Schumann. The clarity of the recorded sound complements Owen’s overall textural precision and beauty of tone.

Stern’s coupling is the popular and often-recorded Kinderszenen, Op.15. These “Scenes from Childhood” can sound overly precious in the wrong hands, but Stern manages an appealing freshness and innocent charm. There is originality too, in Stern’s own composition which ends her recording. The title, To-nal or not-to-nal, refers to the pull in contemporary writing between tonal and atonal harmonies. In five short sections inspired by literary quotations (Schumann, too, took much inspiration from the literature of his time), Stern’s work is a constantly shifting kaleidoscope of textures and colours. 

Lovers of Schumann’s piano music will enjoy the contrasting approaches Stern and Owen bring to these inspired works.

04 Frederick BlockChamber Works by Frederick Block
ARC Ensemble
Chandos CHAN 20358 (shop.rcmusic.com/products/chamber-works-by-frederick-block)

After fleeing from Europe to New York City in 1940, Vienna-born Friedrich Bloch (1899-1945) resumed composing as “Frederick Block.” In the few remaining years before his death from cancer, Block busily composed many works, including three symphonies, his seventh opera and the brief, five-movement Suite, Op.73 for clarinet and piano (1944) in which jaunty playfulness alternates with wistful lyricism. 

Far more substantial are three works dating from 1928-1930, filled with the lush songfulness of Viennese late-Romanticism. In the Piano Quintet, Op.19, two buoyant movements, with melodies resembling those of Erich Korngold, frame a nostalgia-perfumed slow movement. The sweet, slightly decadent sentimentality of a fin-de-siècle Viennese ballroom permeates the four lively movements of Block’s String Quartet, Op.23.

Echoes of Korngold re-emerge in the opening Andante of Block’s Piano Trio No.2, Op.26, followed by a sprightly scherzo marked Molto vivace, a ruminative Adagio and the cheerful Vivace-Tango, not only pre-dating but also, for me, more entertaining than anything by Astor Piazzolla.

This is the latest in the Music in Exile series curated by Simon Wynberg, artistic director of Toronto’s ARC Ensemble, devoted to unheralded composers displaced or suppressed by war or dictatorship. Wynberg discovered Block’s compositions while exploring archives at the New York Public Library. Thanks to him, and the ensemble’s fine musicians – violinists Erika Raum and Marie Bérard, violist Steven Dann, cellist Thomas Wiebe, clarinetist Joaquin Valdepeñas and pianist Kevin Ahfat – the music of yet another deserving composer lives again.

05 Zlata ChochievaWorks for Piano and Orchestra – Prokofiev; Rimsky-Korsakov; Tsfasman
Zlata Chochieva; BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra; Karl-Heinz Steffens
Naïve V8448 (zlatachochieva.com/music)

Recordings of two of the three composers (certainly not these compositions, though), may be abundant and varied. They may be performed with attention to historical practices or conceived as a series of romantic flights. But what strikes you through her performances of Rimsky-Korsakov, Prokofiev, Tsfasman is that Zlata Chochieva doesn’t impose doctrinaire impulses on these three orchestral works but explores – with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra conducted by Karl-Heinz Steffans – a range of expressive and rhythmic nuances. 

Her playing is absorbing and sensitive, full of insightful phrasing, reflective subtlety and joie de vivre. Rimsky-Korsakov’s Piano Concerto in C-sharp Minor, Op.30: Note that the choice of this work (not operatic extracts from Scheherazade) puts a spotlight on the composer’s genius for infusing his works with primary instrumental colours, and progressive harmonies, particularly in the third, Allegro movement.

Prokofiev, on the other hand, was a genius of the piano, but his concertos – among the most inventive ever written –  are rarely performed. This Piano Concerto No.2 in G Minor, Op.16 is a case in point. It begins as an almost backward-looking composition but the performer in him soon takes over and by the time we get to the Finale - Allegro tempestoso movement we are presented with the composer’s barnstorming prowess. 

Tsfasman’s Jazz Suite is a glowing echo of his idol, Gershwin. Consummate performances by pianist and orchestra bring an alluring dénouement to this programme.

01 Noemie Raymond DialoguesTwo monumental sonatas from the early 20th century are presented on Dialogues, the superb new CD from cellist Noémie Raymond and pianist Zhenni Li-Cohen (Leaf Music LM295 leaf-music.ca/music/lm295).

Rachmaninoff’s Cello Sonata in G Minor, Op.19 from 1901 is a glorious four-movement work full of the rich sentimentality and Romanticism so typical of his music. Raymond has a wonderfully deep, warm tone that perfectly illustrates the comment in the booklet note that Rachmaninoff gave the cello line “an expressiveness and intensity previously unheard in the repertoire for cello and piano.” The piano is certainly an equal partner here – in fact, it’s hard to think of a duo sonata in which the piano part is more demanding and more crucial, and Li-Cohen delivers an outstanding performance.

There are times when Rebecca Clarke’s Viola Sonata from 1919, heard here in her own transcription for cello, inhabits the same Romantic world as the Rachmaninoff, but influences of Debussy, Ravel and Vaughan Williams are also there. Again, superb playing and ensemble work – a true dialogue indeed – make for a terrific performance.

Recorded at the beautiful Domaine Forget concert hall in Saint-Irénée, QC the exemplary sound quality completes as fine a cello and piano CD as I’ve heard in a very long time.

Listen to 'Dialogues' Now in the Listening Room

02 American SketchesAmerican Sketches is the remarkable debut solo album from the Korean-American violinist Kristin Lee, brilliantly supported in all but one of the tracks by pianist Jeremy Ajani Jordan (First Hand Records FHR147 firsthandrecords.com/products-page/upcoming/american-sketches-kristen-lee-violin-jeremy-ajani-jordan-piano).

From the moment that John Novacek’s dazzling Intoxication, the first of his Four Rags from 1999, explodes from the speakers you know you are in for something very special, and the standard never drops throughout a mesmerizing and beautifully-recorded CD. The duo swings through Jordan’s arrangements of Gershwin’s But Not for Me and Joplin’s The Entertainer, melts your heart with J. J. Johnson’s lovely 1954 Lament and Henry Thacker Burleigh’s gorgeous Southland Sketches from 1916, and acknowledges contemporary works with Jonathan Ragonese’s fascinating non-poem 4 from 2017/18 and Kevin Puts’ Air from 2000. The final track is Thelonious Monk’s sultry Monk’s Mood from 1943/44, Lee noting that Jordan improvised throughout the Gershwin, Johnson, Joplin and Monk recordings.

The only track on which Jordan is not the pianist is Amy Beach’s lovely Romance Op.23, recorded with Jun Cho in 2023; all other tracks were recorded in November 2019 and March 2020. I’m not sure why we had to wait so long but boy, was it ever worth the wait!

03 SouvenirsSouvenirs, the new CD from the Swedish-Norwegian violinist Johan Dalene with pianist Peter Friis Johansson is a recital of pieces that have been with him since his childhood, and that he has played in competitions and concerts (BIS-2770 johandalene.com/recordings/souvenirs).

Three virtuoso works form the foundation of the programme: Ravel’s Tzigane opening the disc with Bizet’s arrangement of Saint-Saëns’ Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso Op.28 at its centre and the “other” Carmen Fantasy, by Franz Waxman and not Sarasate, as the final track. In between are Massenet’s Méditation from Thaïs, Tchaikovsky’s Souvenir d’un lieu cher, Falla’s Spanish Dance No.1, Kreisler’s dazzling solo Recitative and Scherzo-Caprice Op.6 and the delightful Allegro molto by the Swedish violinist/composer Amanda Maier, who died of tuberculosis in 1894 at the age of 41.

Dalene is clearly in his element here in works that he has known and loved for years, ably supported by Johansson.

04 Navigator of SilencesNavigator of Silences sees American violinist Francesca Anderegg join Brazilian pianist Erika Ribeiro on an album described as exhibiting the cadence and choreography of Brazilian instrumental music, blending samba, chôro and forró with classical music and inspiration from folk, Indigenous and African traditions (Rezurrection Recordz RZRC-0122 rezrecordz.com/navigator-of-silences).

Included are works by Yamandu Costa, Radamés Gnattali, Léa Freire, André Mehmari, Luca Raele, Toninho Horta, Bianca Gismonti, Salomão Soares and Clarice Asad, most of them in arrangements and transcriptions by the performers. It’s a selection of really lovely pieces with Anderegg’s strong, warm and bright violin and Ribeiro’s rich, resonant piano providing gorgeous playing on a highly entertaining CD.

05 Rachel Barton PineOn the 2CD release Corelli Violin Sonatas Op.5 violinist Rachel Barton Pine is joined by period instrument specialists David Schrader, John Mark Rozendaal and Brandon Acker in historically informed performances of Arcangelo Corelli’s seminal set of 12 sonatas for violin and continuo from 1700 (Cedille Records CDR 90000 2320 cedillerecords.org/albums/corelli-violin-sonatas-op-5).

Pine’s research led to her holding the violin against her chest, and not on her collarbone, the resulting difference in position for the left hand and – in particular – the bowing arm creating a noticeably different and extremely effective sound.

To capture the nuances of Corelli’s music the performers used a variety of period instruments, Schrader alternating between harpsichord and positive organ, Rozendaal between cello and viola da gamba and Acker between theorbo, archlute and baroque guitar to produce 24 different combinations throughout the recital. In addition, Pine plays the final “Follia” variations on an original-condition six-string Gagliano viola d’amore, made from the same tree as her original-condition Gagliano violin. It provides a dazzling conclusion to a quite superb release.

06 Talla RougeAll of the works on Shapes in Collective Space, the new CD from Tallā Rouge, the Cajun-Persian duo of violists Aria Cheregosha and Laura Spaulding, are world-premiere recordings. Motivated in part by experiencing a close relative lose their memory to dementia, the album is described as a search for light in the passage of time, reflecting on life’s fleeting yet profound moments and drawing from a kaleidoscope of diverse American influences (Bright Shiny Things BSTC-202 brightshiny.ninja/shapes-in-collective-space).

Works include Karl Mitze’s Seesaw, Kian Ravaei’s four Iranian-influenced Navazi, Gemma Peacocke’s Fluorescein, Gala Flagello’s Burn as Brightly, Akshaya Avril Tucker’s Breathing Sunlight and Leilehua Lanzilotti’s silhouette, mirror. The title track by inti figgis-vizueta is a particularly fascinating and inventive soundscape.

The playing throughout an engrossing CD is of the highest level.

07 Partita PartyPartita party – a collaborative work for viola is the new CD from violist Atar Arad and four other violist-composers, all of whom studied with Arad. Inspired by Bach’s Partita No.2 for Solo Violin, it features five movements, each played by the particular composer (SBOV Music SBO224 sbovmusic.com/partita-party).

The concept of an innovative celebration of Bach’s masterpiece featuring new compositions for solo viola was inspired by Arad’s pandemic work on Bach’s monumental Chaconne, Arad having written his own Ciaccona as a commission for the 2021 Hindemith International Viola Competition. Duncan Steele’s Allemanda opens the collection, followed by Yuval Gotlibovich’s Corrente, Melia WatrasSarabanda and Rose Wollman’s terrific Giga (the closest to the Bach original); Arad’s original Ciaccona ends the disc.

It’s a brief – just short of 25 minutes – but fascinating CD, rightly described in the publicity release as an exciting new addition to the viola repertoire and a celebration of Bach’s enduring legacy.

08 Beethoven CalidoreThe Calidore String Quartet continues its Beethoven project with the 3-CD set Beethoven The Middle Quartets, the second issue in their recording of the complete cycle, having issued The Late Quartets in February 2023 and with the final volume The Early Quartets planned for January 2025 (Signum Classics SIGCD872 signumrecords.com/product/beethoven-quartets-vol-2-middle-string-quartets/SIGCD872).

This set contains the three “Razumovsky” quartets Op.59 and the Op.74 and Op.95 works. CD1 has the String Quartet in F Major, Op.59 No.1; CD2 has the String Quartets in E Minor Op.59 No.2 and in C Major Op.59 No.3. The final disc has the String Quartet No.10 in E-flat Major Op.74 “Harp” and the String Quartet No.11 in F Minor Op.95 “Serioso.”

The first set generated extremely positive reviews, and it’s easy to hear why. The quartet members have been together for 14 years, having immersed themselves in Beethoven’s quartets during that time. The unity of the ensemble playing is of the highest quality, and there’s a wonderfully varied dynamic range.  

09 Vagn HolmboeThe outstanding series of complete string quartets of the Danish composer Vagn Holmboe (1909-96) continues with Vagn Holmboe String Quartets Vol.3, Denmark’s Nightingale String Quartet again presenting superb performances of warmth, depth and sensitivity. Included on this current disc are two works from the peak of his creativity –String Quartets No.4, Op.63 (1953-54) and No.5, Op.66 (1955)together with the String Quartet No.16, Op.146 from 1981 (Dacapo Records 8.226214 hbdirect.com/products/holmboe-string-quartets-vol-3).

Holmboe’s 21 numbered quartets preoccupied him throughout almost half a century, moving from early influences of Bartók and Shostakovich to his distinctive personal method of metamorphosis of thematic and motivic fragments. The Nightingale Quartet’s committed performances of these strongly tonal and immediately accessible works continue to make the strongest case for their recognition as one of the major quartet series of the 20th century. 

10 Bruckner KloseThe Quatuor Diotima celebrates the bicentennial of the birth of Anton Bruckner with Bruckner & Klose String Quartets, presenting the three works Bruckner wrote as composition exercises when studying with Otto Kitzler in 1861-63 together with the only string quartet written by his student Friedrich Klose (1862-1942) (Pentatone PTC5187217 pentatonemusic.com/product/bruckner-klose-string-quartets).

The main Bruckner work is his String Quartet in C Minor, WAB111, with the Rondo in C Minor, WAB208 a possible alternative finale. The Theme with Variations in E-flat, WAB210 is the third work. They are solid and accomplished pieces – as you would expect from a composer nearing 40 years of age – and despite tending to sound more concerned with structure than content have a great deal to offer.

Klose studied with Bruckner from January 1886 to July 1889 and wrote his lengthy String Quartet in E-flat in 1908-11. Subtitled “A tribute paid in four instalments to my stern German schoolmasters” it clearly references classical forms and structures, but with what the booklet note calls “an almost unprecedented wealth of musical ideas.”

11 Ehnes SibeliusSibelius: Works for Violin and Orchestra is the new CD from James Ehnes and the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra under Edward Gardner (Chandos CHSA 5267 chandos.net/products/catalogue/CHSA%205267).

Ehnes’ playing in the Violin Concerto Op.47 is, as always, seemingly effortless perfection, with a smooth warmth – no icy Finnish landscape here – but also strength and power. Gardner and the orchestra provide spirited accompaniment, but this is perhaps one concerto that doesn’t need a sheen of perfection to be most effective. Still, Ehnes is always a force to be reckoned with.

He certainly shines throughout the short pieces which, although beautifully written, don’t come close to the concerto in stature: the Two Serenades Op.69; the Two Pieces Op.77; the Two Humoresques Op.87; the Four Humoresques Op.89 and the Suite in D Minor Op.117.

12 Hartmann RediscoveredThere’s a tragic modern-day relevance to the new CD Thomas de Hartmann Rediscovered, with one of the two concertos by the Ukrainian composer (1884-1956) written in 1943 in occupied France described as mourning the destruction of Ukraine by war (Pentatone PTC5187076 pentatonemusic.com/product/thomas-de-hartmann-rediscovered).

Joshua Bell is the soloist in the 1943 Violin Concerto Op.66, with the Ukrainian INSO-Lviv Symphony Orchestra under Dalia Stasevska. It’s the world-premiere commercial recording of a cinematic, four-movement work, with Bell calling it heart-wrenching and uplifting, and commenting that he was “astonished that such a powerful work could have escaped me and most classical music listeners until now.”

The Cello Concerto Op.57 from 1935 is a lush, Romantic work with an even more cinematic feel than the violin concerto, at times evoking Hollywood biblical epics. Matt Haimovitz is the soloist, with the MDR Leipzig Radio Symphony Orchestra under Dennis Russell Davies. Haimovitz notes that de Hartmann was deeply affected by Jewish music and culture, and while Ukrainian folk idioms pervade the finale the prayerful middle movement channels the voice of a Jewish cantor.

13 Bowen Walton ViolaGoodness knows where the viola repertoire would be without Lionel Tertis. Not only did the English violist almost single-handedly establish the viola as a solo concert instrument, he was also the recipient of numerous works written specifically for him. Two of these are presented on the outstanding CD York Bowen & William Walton Viola Concertos, with soloist Diyang Mei, principal viola of the Berlin Philharmoniker, and the Deutsche Radio Philharmonie conducted by Brett Dean, himself a violist (SWR Music SWR19158CD naxos.com/CatalogueDetail/?id=SWR19158CD).

The orchestral music of Bowen is surely overdue for reappraisal, his strongly tonal and Romantic style resulting in his larger works being essentially ignored following his death in 1961. The Viola Concerto in C Minor, Op.25 from 1907 is the real gem here, a rhapsodic work that sweeps you along with it, leaving you wondering how on earth it isn’t at the front and centre of the concerto repertoire. It’s wonderful playing from all concerned.

Walton’s Concerto in A Minor was written in 1929 at Thomas Beecham’s suggestion but surprisingly premiered by Paul Hindemith and not Tertis, who initially found the work to be too modern. It’s not lacking for top-notch recordings, but this superb performance will take some beating. 

14 Magdalena HoffmannNightscapes, the first album from harpist Magdalena Hoffmann was reviewed here in April 2022, and the beautifully nuanced and virtuosic playing noted at that time is once again fully evident in her new CD Fantasia (Deutsche Grammophon 00028948659128 deutschegrammophon.com/en/catalogue/products/fantasia-magdalena-hoffmann-13555).

The focus this time is on the Baroque period, with a collection of fantasias and preludes originally composed for keyboard or lute by J. S. Bach, his sons Wilhelm Friedmann and Carl Philipp Emanuel, plus contemporaries George Frideric Handel and Silvius Leopold Weiss.

Hoffmann uses the music here to explore the resonance and versatility of her instrument in a delightful recital of predominantly brief works, Bach’s sons providing the three more substantial offerings: W. F. Bach’s Fantasia in D Minor, F19; and C. P. E. Bach’s Fantasia in E-flat Major, H348 and in particular his remarkable Fantasia in F-sharp Minor, H300, “C. P. E. Bachs Empfindungen.”

It’s more outstanding playing from a supremely-gifted performer.

15 PastichesOn Pastiches guitarist John Schneider adopts a fascinating and innovative approach to pieces that pay homage to music of the past (MicroFest Records M-F 27 microfestrecords.com/pastiches).

Schneider wondered how works written “in the style of” pastiches would sound if performed in the appropriate temperaments of the period they evoke. The result is a CD using a variety of refretted guitars and Well-Tempered, Meantone and Just Intonation tunings.

There are older works by Manuel Ponce, Alonso Mudarra and Mauro Giuliani, with Dusan Bogdanovich’s Renaissance Micropieces from 2014 the most recent. Percussionist Matthew Cook provides support on six short pieces by Lou Harrison and Benjamin Britten’s Courtly Dances from Gloriana, all arranged by Schneider. Gloria Cheng adds harpsichord to Ponce’s Preludio in E.

It’s an interesting experiment, but I’m not sure that it ever amounts to anything more than that; despite the fine playing there’s a resulting and understandable loss of brightness to many of the pieces – most of which were after all written for a modern instrument – and consequently a limited dynamic range. 

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