FREE UK SHIPPING OVER £30!

David Oistrakh plays Schumann, Franck, Szymanowski and Ravel | Testament SBT1442

David Oistrakh plays Schumann, Franck, Szymanowski and Ravel

£10.87

Usually available for despatch within 2-3 working days

Label: Testament

Cat No: SBT1442

Barcode: 0749677144227

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Chamber

Release Date: 3rd November 2008

Contents

About

This Enescu Festival programme is a very interesting one, beginning with a ‘stepchild’ ofthe repertoire. Schumann’s music for violin and orchestra, intended for Joseph Joachim, has had even less exposure than his other violin music: the Concerto was buried in a library until the 1930s, when Joachim’s great-niece Jelly d’Arányi successfully lobbied for its release, and the fine C major Fantasy had few champions – Adolf Busch was one, playing it regularly, and Fritz Kreisler went to the trouble of making his own piano transcription. That is the version played here by Oistrakh and Yampolsky and it is new to the violinist’s discography. The Franck Sonata, on the other hand, featured frequently in Oistrakh recitals and he recorded it with both Oborin and Yampolsky, also leaving us three live versions with Richter. This performance captures him ‘on the wing’ when he was still in his prime.

Karol Szymanowski knew the violin well – one of his dearest friends was the Russian-born Polish virtuoso Pawel Kochan´ski – and wrote two concertos, a sonata, a set of three Myths, a Nocturne and Tarantella and some short pieces for it. Oistrakh and Yampolsky made famous studio recordings of the sonata and The Fountain of Arethusa, but this is their only known document of the other two Myths. The pieces, written in 1915–16 with the encouragement of Kochan´ski – who assisted with the exotic violinistic effects – are among the treasures of the late Romantic repertoire but need first-rate players like these to reveal all their beauties. The same can be said of Ravel’s exciting Tzigane, composed for d’Arányi. We do have other Oistrakh recordings of it, including one with Yampolsky, but it is a piece which thrives on the frisson of a live occasion and here it meets a great virtuoso who can do it justice.

Extract from the note © Tully Potter, 2008

Error on this page? Let us know here

Need more information on this product? Click here