Time & Eternity
£14.49
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Label: Alpha
Cat No: ALPHA545
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Orchestral
Release Date: 13th September 2019
Contents
Works
Als Jesus Christus in der Nacht, BWV265 (arr. for strings)St John Passion, BWV245
Concerto funebre
Unsterbliche Opfer (arr. Wieslaw Pipczynski)
Messe de Nostre Dame
Dwa serduszka (Two hearts)
Kol Nidre
Artists
Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin)Camerata Bern
Works
Als Jesus Christus in der Nacht, BWV265 (arr. for strings)St John Passion, BWV245
Concerto funebre
Unsterbliche Opfer (arr. Wieslaw Pipczynski)
Messe de Nostre Dame
Dwa serduszka (Two hearts)
Kol Nidre
Artists
Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin)Camerata Bern
About
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Zorn - Kol Nidre
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2Hartmann - Concerto funebre for Violin and String Orchestra: I. Introduction (Largo)
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3Hartmann - Concerto funebre for Violin and String Orchestra: II. Adagio
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4Hartmann - Concerto funebre for Violin and String Orchestra: III. Allegro di molto
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5Hartmann - Concerto funebre for Violin and String Orchestra: IV. Choral
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6Machaut - Messe de Nostre Dame: Kyrie (Transcription for String Orchestra)
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7Martin - Polyptyque for Violin and Two Small String Orchestras: I. Image des Rameaux
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8JS Bach - Johannes-Passion, BWV 245: Choral 'Ach grosser Konig' (Transcription for String Orchestra)
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9Martin - Polyptyque for Violin and Two Small String Orchestras: II. Image de la Chambre haute
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10JS Bach - Choral 'Als Jesus Christus in der Nacht', BWV 265 (Transcription for String Orchestra)
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11Martin - Polyptyque for Violin and Two Small String Orchestras: III. Image de Juda
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12JS Bach - Johannes-Passion, BWV 245: Choral 'Durch dein Gefangnis (Transcription for String Orchestra)
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13Martin - Polyptyque for Violin and Two Small String Orchestras: IV. Image de Gethsemane
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14JS Bach - Johannes-Passion, BWV 245: Choral 'Wer hat dich so geschlagen' (Transcription for String Orchestra)
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15Martin - Polyptyque for Violin and Two Small String Orchestras: V. Image du Jugement
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16Fiser - Crux for Violin, Timpani and Bells
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17Martin - Polyptyque for Violin and Two Small String Orchestras: VI. Image de la Glorification
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18JS Bach - Johannes-Passion, BWV 245: Choral 'O grosse Lieb' (Transcription for String Orchestra)
Europadisc Review
Hartmann’s Concerto was written in response to the early years of Nazi terror in Germany, and to the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia and then Poland. Its introduction quotes the Czech Hussite hymn ‘Ye who are God’s warriors’ (familiar to music-lovers from Smetana’s Má vlast), while the final ‘Chorale’ movement quotes the Russian song ‘You fell victim’ that served as a memorial to the dead of the 1905 Bolshevik revolution (similarly familiar from Shostakovich’s Eleventh Symphony). The finale also quotes the Jewish song ‘Eliyahu hanavi’, and it is from these various threads that Kopatchinskaja and her colleagues begin to weave the fabric of this enthralling album. The Hartmann Concerto, perhaps his best known work, receives one of its most thrilling and deeply-felt performances on disc, the Allegro di molto third movement delivered with particular venom. It is framed most effectively by ‘Eliyahu hanavi’ and ‘You fell victim’, both sung by folk singers Beata, Sarah and Minika Würsten, with the latter song splintering into a terrifying group improvisation (an instrumental and vocal ‘War Cadenza’) that vividly suggest the horrors of war, including screams, gasps, and muttering voices.
‘Eliyahu hanavi’ is itself preceded by John Zorn’s five-minute piece for strings Kol Nidre, a work of deep introspection that owes much to the ‘spiritual minimalism’ of Pärt and Górecki. Kol Nidre is the solemn declaration made on Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, and it is this text that is read at the outset of the album by a Jewish cantor from Bern. After ‘You fell victim’ and the ‘War Cadenza’, a Polish priest from the Swiss capital delivers a prayer for forgiveness, and the first half of the album concludes with the folk-style Dwa serduszka (‘Two hearts’), again featuring the Würsten sisters.
Just as the first half of the disc seems to grow organically and expressively out of the Hartmann Concerto, so the second half develops from the inspiration behind Martin’s work. Composed for Yehudi Menuhin, Polyptyque was inspired by a 14th-century Byzantine-style polyptych of the Passion story by Duccio di Buoninsegna. Each movement depicts a panel from the work, from Jesus’s entry into Jerusalem, through the Last Supper, the Garden of Gethsemane and Jesus’s trial, to the Glorification of the risen Christ. Only the scene of Crucifixion itself is omitted by Martin, and here Kopatchinskaja makes the marvellous insertion of Czech composer Luboš Fišer’s Crux for violin, timpani and bells, a work whose searing intensity and concentrated scoring make it ideal for this gripping performance. Interweaved between the movements of the Martin are string orchestra arrangements of a series of Bach chorales, most of them taken from the St John Passion, whose expressive and musical resonance more than make up for the missing sung voices, and whose pure Baroque tone splendidly complements Frank Martin’s emotionally febrile style. Before the final Bach chorale, a Russian orthodox priest recites the Easter troparion, ‘Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death’, holding out the possibility of hope after suffering (part one of the disc) and death (part two).
And, just as the disc had opened with ‘Kol Nidre’, so the second half is launched by a string orchestra arrangement of the Kyrie from Guillaume de Machaut’s Messe de Nostre Dame, a work dating from the same century as Duccio’s polyptych. Here the string sound has the voice-like clarity of a viol consort (as well as a brief passage of pizzicato), and one of the disc’s many virtues is the sheer range of tone on offer, from crystalline purity, through opulent and often deliberately unsettling vibrato in passages of the Martin, to almost instrument-breaking incisiveness in Fišer’s Crux. As so often on the Alpha label, the artistry of the musicians is matched by superb recording and presentation, including colour reproduction of all the Duccio panels and a new painting by Camerata Bern’s second violinist Sibylla Leuenberger inspired by the music, its ‘feeling of darkness, of the abyss’. Listen to the disc and you’ll find it emotionally both immersive and draining, devised and executed with deep passion and commitment, and opening up new windows onto both the music itself and human experience. What more is there to say?
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