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Isabelle Faust, Alexander Melnikov - Schubert: Duos for piano & violin (2006)

Isabelle Faust, Alexander Melnikov - Schubert: Duos for piano & violin (2006)
  • Title: Schubert: Duos for piano & violin
  • Year Of Release: 2006
  • Label: Harmonia Mundi
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 57:41
  • Total Size: 264 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Fantaisie en Ut majeur, Op. posth.159, D.934
1. I. Andante molto
2. II. Allegrett
3. III. Andantino
4. IV. Allegro vivace
Sonate en La majeur, Op. posth.162, D.574
5. I. Allegro moderato
6. II. Scherzo presto
7. III. Andantino
8. IV. Allegro vivace
Rondo brillant en si mineur, Op. 70, D.895
9. Andante
10. Allegro

Performers:
Isabelle Faust (violin)
Alexander Melnikov (piano)

In nearly every respect this is outstanding. The Rondo and the Fantasie, both written for the virtuoso duo of Karl von Bocklet and Josef Slawik, can sound as if Schubert were striving for a brilliant, flashy style, foreign to his nature.
Both are in places uncomfortable to play (when first published, the Fantasie's violin part was simplified), but you would never guess this from Faust's and Melnikov's performance; they both nonchalantly toss off any problem passages as though child's play. The Fantasie's finale and the Rondo are irresistibly lively and spirited, and this duo's technical finesse extends to more poetic episodes – Melnikov's tremolo at the start of the Fantasie shimmers delicately, while the filigree passagework in the last of the variations that form the Fantasie's centrepiece have a delightful poise and sense of ease. The Sonata's more intimate style is captured just as convincingly; in all three performances Faust and Melnikov observe Schubert's often very detailed, careful expression marks, not as a matter of duty, but as a stimulus to the imagination, as a way of entering more deeply into the music. The one slight reservation concerns Isabelle Faust's manner of expression. She makes the most of any passionate phrases and is equally convincing at cool, mysterious or dreamlike moments. But the lyrical phrases in the Rondo's introduction surely demand a more heartfelt utterance. In the Sonata, too, there are places where one longs for more warmth. This quibble aside, it's a lovely disc, one to listen to over and over again.





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  • olga1001
  •  wrote in 13:25
    • Like
    • 0
I love Klimt's landscape paintings.
You can see this one at Galerie Belvedere.
His "Schubert at the piano" was lost by fire at evacuated castle from World War II :((
One of the best composer's portraits where Schubert time-travels in the end of the century