Wydawnictwo: Orfeo
Nr katalogowy: C 781091
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: październik 2009
EAN: 4011790781129
Nr katalogowy: C 781091
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: październik 2009
EAN: 4011790781129
Nasze kategorie wyszukiwania
Epoka muzyczna: romantyzm
Obszar (język): niemiecki
Instrumenty: wiolonczela
Epoka muzyczna: romantyzm
Obszar (język): niemiecki
Instrumenty: wiolonczela
Schumann / Volkmann: Cello Concertos a-moll
Orfeo - C 781091Schumann:
Konzert a-Moll op. 129 für Violoncello und Orchester
Daniel Muller-Schott recital:
Strauss:
Romanze F-Dur AV 75 für Violoncello und Orchester
Volkmann:
Konzert a-Moll op. 33 für Violoncello und Orchester
Bruch:
Kol nidrei d-Moll op. 47 für Violoncello und Orchester (Adagio nach hebräischen Melodien) – Adagio
Konzert a-Moll op. 129 für Violoncello und Orchester
Daniel Muller-Schott recital:
Strauss:
Romanze F-Dur AV 75 für Violoncello und Orchester
Volkmann:
Konzert a-Moll op. 33 für Violoncello und Orchester
Bruch:
Kol nidrei d-Moll op. 47 für Violoncello und Orchester (Adagio nach hebräischen Melodien) – Adagio
On his latest CD, Daniel Müller-Schott devotes himself to the cello's Romantic and late-Romantic solo concerto repertoire. It is a voyage of exploration that offers things both known and worthy of (re )discovery. After the Classical period, the cello fell out of fashion as a concertante instrument.When that changed again in the mid-19th century, it fascinated composers more than ever, and this in turn had an impact on their creative muse. For Robert Schumann, to be sure, the composition of his Cello Concerto was bound up with major disappointments - he himself did not live to hear its world premiere. But the concerto's interplay between soloist and orchestra is exciting, as are its contrasts between discretion and impulsiveness, and it is today well-loved by both audiences and interpreters and a firm feature in the repertoire. The dramatic aspect of the music comes as much to the fore here as it does in our recording of the Concerto by Schumann's contemporary Robert Volkmann. It is considerably less popular than Schumann's, but it thrives on singing, melodic themes and their sophisticated elaboration.These two concertos are complemented by two shorter pieces: Max Bruch's Kol Nidrei after Old Hebrew melodies, whose rich musical spectrum is savoured uninhibitedly and to the full by Daniel Müller-Schott, Christoph Eschenbach and the NDR Symphony Orchestra.Then there is the Romance in F Major for cello and orchestra by Richard Strauss, who despite his youth (he wrote it when 19) already offers us a hint of the originality of his later tone poems.