Martynov Edition
£24.65
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 96380
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 7
Release Date: 7th October 2022
Contents
Works
Christmas MusicCome In!
Dance with the Dead Friend
Der Abscheid
Night in Galicia
Requiem
Singapore
Stabat Mater
The Lamentations of Jeremiah
Artists
Tatiana Grindenko (violin)Alexei Lubimov (piano)
Opus Posth Ensemble
The Sirin Choir
Dmitri Pokrovsky Ensemble
Conductor
Tatiana GrindenkoWorks
Christmas MusicCome In!
Dance with the Dead Friend
Der Abscheid
Night in Galicia
Requiem
Singapore
Stabat Mater
The Lamentations of Jeremiah
Artists
Tatiana Grindenko (violin)Alexei Lubimov (piano)
Opus Posth Ensemble
The Sirin Choir
Dmitri Pokrovsky Ensemble
Conductor
Tatiana GrindenkoAbout
Born in 1946, Vladimir Martynov is one of several composers from the former USSR whose music taps into a vein of perpetual memory and farewell. Literally so in the case of Der Abschied, an eight-movement cycle for small ensemble which stands on the threshold like a guest at a gathering of friends, unable or unwilling to shut the door behind them and venture out alone.
There are notable ancestors for this style among the Austro-German Romantics, especially Franz Schubert, but the style itself became defined by composers such as Martynov towards the end of the last century, and continues into this one, touched by an ineffable melancholy which seems to recognise an end-point for music itself, and takes comfort in the fragmentary recovery of melody and harmony from an Edenic state of Classicism.
One of Martynov’s most distinguished contemporaries was the Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov, who talked of a ‘genetic aural well’ for Russian music which, like Orthodox prayer, cannot be learnt as a text, but which exists beyond any text. Silvestrov explicitly recognised his own output as ‘meta-music’ or even ‘post-music’, and the same could be said of many pieces in Martynov’s output. Tiny motifs and gestures are layered and expanded across a meditative space in a distinctively Russian form of Minimalism that bears certain similarities with the better-known outputs of Pärt and Schnittke but pursues a consciously more austere path: both the Requiem and Stabat mater are imbued with the timeless qualities of chant and ancient melisma.
Martynov’s music began to attract a certain cult following in the West during the 1990s with performances and recordings made principally by the violinist Gidon Kremer and his former partner, Tatiana Grindenko. As both both a violinist and conductor, Grindenko has continued to keep Martynov’s flame burning, and she leads most of the performances here, which were made mostly in Moscow over the course of several years and in several cases receive here their first international release.
Released to mark Martynov’s 75th birthday, the collection is introduced by a major new essay from Alexei Lubimov (another performer who, like Grindenko, has been immersed in the composer’s output for decades) and features extensive notes on the individual works. As Lubimov concludes: ‘In the combination of his various roles as “non-composer”, scholar, creator of his own rituals, provocateur to the audience, Martynov succeeds to an astonishing degree in putting his finger on the points of pain in our time, and offers us the hope of healing through music.’
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