Randall Goosby: Roots
£12.83
Usually available for despatch within 5-8 working days
Despatch Information
This despatch estimate is based on information from both our own stock and the UK supplier's stock.
If ordering multiple items, we will aim to send everything together so the longest despatch estimate will apply to the complete order.
If you would rather receive certain items more quickly, please place them on a separate order.
If any unexpected delays occur, we will keep you informed of progress via email and not allow other items on the order to be held up.
If you would prefer to receive everything together regardless of any delay, please let us know via email.
Pre-orders will be despatched as close as possible to the release date.
Label: Decca
Cat No: 4851664
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Release Date: 25th June 2021
Contents
Works
Deep RiverSonatina in G major for violin and piano, op.100
Shelter Island
Porgy and Bess
Adoration
Fantasie no.1 in G minor
Fantasie no.2 in F sharp minor
Suite for Violin and Piano
Artists
Randall Goosby (violin)Zhu Wang (piano)
Xavier Dubois Foley (double bass)
Works
Deep RiverSonatina in G major for violin and piano, op.100
Shelter Island
Porgy and Bess
Adoration
Fantasie no.1 in G minor
Fantasie no.2 in F sharp minor
Suite for Violin and Piano
Artists
Randall Goosby (violin)Zhu Wang (piano)
Xavier Dubois Foley (double bass)
About
The Perlman protégé celebrates his own journey and shows young people that music can inspire regardless of background. Produced by 2021 GRAMMY Producer of the Year, David Frost.
Sound/Video
Paused
-
1Foley - Shelter Island
-
2Perkinson - Blues Forms I. Plain Blues
-
3Perkinson - Blues Forms II. Just Blues
-
4Perkinson - Blues Forms III. Jettin' Blues
-
5Gershwin - Porgy and Bess Summertime (transc Heifetz)
-
6Gershwin - Porgy and Bess A Woman is a Sometime Thing (transc Heifetz)
-
7Gershwin - Porgy and Bess It Ain't Necessarily So (transc Heifetz)
-
8Gershwin - Porgy and Bess Bess, You Is My Woman Now (transc Heifetz)
-
9Still - Suite for Violin and Piano I. African Dancer
-
10Still - Suite for Violin and Piano II. African Dancer
-
11Still - Suite for Violin and Piano III. Garmin
-
12Price - Adoration
-
13Price - Fantasie No. 1 in G Minor
-
14Price - Fantasie No. 2 in F-Sharp Minor
-
15Coleridge-Taylor - 24 Negro Melodies op.59 10. Deep River (arr Maud Powell)
-
16Dvorak - Violin Sonatina in G Major, op.100, B.120 I. Allegro risoluto
-
17Dvorak - Violin Sonatina in G Major, op.100, B.120 II. Larghetto
-
18Dvorak - Violin Sonatina in G Major, op.100, B.120 III. Scherzo. Molto vivace
-
19Dvorak - Violin Sonatina in G Major, op.100, B.120 IV. Finale. Allegro
Europadisc Review
It opens with a sparklingly virtuosic duet for violin and double bass by Foley himself. Foley and Goosby first met in 2010 at the Sphinx Competition in Detroit, where Goosby at the age of 13 became the youngest winner of first prize in the junior division. Shelter Island is named after the venue of the Perlman Music Program where the two met again the following year. It’s a bluesy piece, technically demanding for both violin and double bass: edgy, spiky, snappy (at times literally), but with moments of introspection and an engaging swing to it, it’s surely destined to become a modern virtuoso showpiece.
Even more technically challenging is Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson's Blue/s Forms (1979) for solo violin, which combines the Baroque contrapuntal tradition of violin writing with strong Blues and American classical influences. Perkinson dedicated this three-movement work to Sanford Allen, and it’s obvious that Goosby has learnt much from his teacher. The tone from his ‘Sennhauser’ Guarneri of 1735 (on loan from Chicago’s Stradivari society) is rich but lithe and pliant, bringing out all of the music’s depth of feeling while fully responsive to the music’s virtuoso demands.
Four of Heifetz’s famous transcriptions from Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess receive thoroughly idiomatic performances, Goosby perfectly catching the dreamy inflections in ‘Summertime’ and the suggestive swoops in ‘It Ain’t Necessarily So’; this is generous-hearted playing, technically superb but with great emotional warmth and a natural flow even in the more obviously virtuosic moments. The set closes with an endearingly tender performance of ‘Bess, You Is My Woman Now’.
One of the highlights of the album is the Suite for Violin and Piano by William Grant Still (1895-1978), the leading African-American composer of the first half of the 20th century. Still was a key musical figure in the Harlem Renaissance, and each of the Suite’s three movements was suggested by a work from sculptors active within the movement: Richmond Barthé, Sargent Johnson and Augusta Savage. Most moving is the central ‘Mother and Child’ (after Johnson), where Goosby takes more time to dwell on the intimately expressive lines than Rachel Barton Pine did on her ‘Blues Dialogues’ disc for the Cedille label. The closing ‘Gamin’ (after a bust of a Harlem youngster by Savage) has an undeniable chirpiness to it, suggesting the cheeky swagger of the youth with his cap cocked to one side.
Three world premieres follow, all works by Florence Price (1887-1953) discovered as recently as 2009 and welcome additions to her growing representation on disc. Adoration is a moving miniature, but it is the two Fantasies, in editions prepared by John M. Cooper, that really catch the attention, particularly the second with its long piano introduction paving the way for a soulful violin solo that increasingly gives way to passages of real fire. These are splendid finds, and in Goosby and Wang they have perfect advocates.
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s transcription of the spiritual Deep River, in an arrangement by the great violinist Maud Powell (a pupil of Joachim who was an early champion of the Sibelius Concerto, as well as actively supporting African-American musicians), makes a lovely interlude. Goosby and Wang close the disc with Dvořák’s G major Sonatina, op.100. Composed during the composer’s time in the United States, this is a jewel of a piece, with clear Native American and African-American influences, as well as Dvořák’s trademark lyrical stamp. The idea for the Larghetto slow movement was scribbled down on Dvořák’s shirt cuff, supposedly during a visit to the Minnehaha Falls in Minneapolis, and it’s bathed in a glowing light in this performance, while the Scherzo has a delightfully confident spring in its step, the hurdy-gurdy like episodes for the violin dashed off with evident glee, and the closing Dvořák, in which the magic of Dvořák’s other ‘American’ works is palpable, has the disc ending on a real high.
This is a marvellous debut from a hugely gifted young artist, and a clearly heartfelt tribute to the lives, experiences and creations of musicians who paved the way for Goosby and many others. It wears its message lightly, and is an absolute joy from start to finish. Randall Goosby is clearly a name to watch, and we hope to hear more from him soon!
Reviews
Error on this page? Let us know here
Need more information on this product? Click here