Linus Roth & Jose Gallardo
Sonatas for violin and piano op. 105 & 121 - 4 song arrangements
CD | Challenge Classics | 0608917234121 | CC 72341 | 05-09
Linus Roth: violin | José Gallardo: piano
What do you particularly like about Schumann’s sonatas?
José Gallardo: These two sonatas are wonderful works; both parts are excellently balanced. The way the violin part dovetails with the piano and the two instruments supplement and communicate with each other is brilliantly composed.
Linus Roth: The third movement of the d minor Sonata is one of my personal favourites. The simplicity and beauty of this melody – but I also find the inner strife and emotional outbursts so characteristic of late Schumann simply heart-rending.
You have also arranged several songs by Schumann yourself for violin and piano. What gave you the idea?
Linus Roth: First of all we came across the version of “Abendlied” (Evening Song) written by Joseph Joachim. It was quite the normal thing for violinists of this era to make the beautiful melodies of a song their own, a tradition continued by violinists like Jascha Heifetz, Nathan Milstein and so forth.
José Gallardo: We think the sheer beauty of this music is truly without limits. The arrange-ments have been created with great respect towards Schumann and out of love for his music.
Were there any other musicians or events that inspired you to embark on this repertoire?
José Gallardo: Schumann has always enjoyed great popularity in Argentina and so his music was performed a great deal. I remember countless concerts with his works, which I heard as a child in Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires. I find it difficult to pick out a specific musician, because the artists who appeared there were always fantastic and world-famous.
Linus Roth: For me it was especially my teacher Prof. Ana Chumachenco.
While I was studying, I had the opportunity of working intensively on these two sonatas with her, and time and again I think back to those really inspiring lessons.
Der deutsche Geiger Lius Roth gehört zu den interessantesten Musikern der jüngeren Generation und wurde u.a. 2006 für seine Debüt-CD bei EMI CLASSICS mit dem Echo-Klassik-Preis der Deutschen Phono-Akademie als ?Bester Nachwuchskünstler? ausgezeichnet. Seit 1997 spielt er die Stradivari ?Dancla? aus dem Jahr 1703. Der argentinische Pianist José Gallardo ist ein international gefragter Solist und Kammermusikpartner und lehrt seit Herbst 2008 am Leopold Mozart Zentrum der Universität Augsburg. Gemeinsam präsentieren sie hiermit eine sehr eigenständige Interpretation der Schumann-Sonaten, die die Einfachheit und Schönheit der Melodien betont und gleichzeitig die innere Zerrissenheit und emotionalen Ausbrüche dieses späten Schumann-Werkes nachvollziehen lässt. 'Die künstlerische Reife Roths ist angesichts des jungen Alters außergewöhnlich, seine beiläufig kenntliche technische Sicherheit eigentlich Nebensache....' (FAZ)
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1Schumann Sonata no. 2 in d minor op. 121Ziemlich langsam. Lebhaft
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2Schumann Sonata no. 2 in d minor op. 121Sehr lebhaft
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3Schumann Sonata no. 2 in d minor op. 121Leise, einfach
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4Schumann Sonata no. 2 in d minor op. 121Bewegt
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5Sonata no. 1 in a minor op. 105Mit leidenschaftlichem Ausdruck
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6Sonata no. 1 in a minor op. 105Allegretto
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7Sonata no. 1 in a minor op. 105Lebhaft
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8In der Fremde
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9Aus den hebräischen Gesängen
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10Widmung
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11Abendlied
Linus Roth - Jose Gallardo - sonatas for violin and piano op. 105 & 121 - opusklassiek - maart2010
01-09-2009Linus Roth & Jose Gallardo - sonatas for violin and piano op 105 & 121- Concerti Hamburg sept 2009





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