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Joseph Swensen
← назадКупить LINN Dvorak Violin Concerto in A minor
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Joseph Swensen, the newly appointed Conductor Emeritus of the SCO, continues to delight fans in his dual role of solo violinst and conductor, in this, the seventh disc in the SCO/Linn series.
The SACD layer is both 5.1 channel and 2-channel. The Studio Master files are 48kHz / 24-bit.
Download includes - cover art, booklet
Notes
Produced by Andrew Keener
Recorded on 22nd & 23rd February 2004 at the Usher Hall, Edinburgh.
Engineered by Calum Malcolm
Post Production by Julia Thomas at Finesplice, UK
Photo of Joseph Swensen by Douglas Robertson
There is a story, related by one of the composer’s pupils after his death, that Dvorak preferred his Violin Concerto to his great B minor Cello Concerto. While the Violin Concerto certainly justifies its role as a much-loved constituent of the repertoire, the judgement of history has favoured the ‘Cello Concerto, which is now one of Dvorak’s two most popular orchestral works. His preference for the violin concerto may have had much to do with his notorious mistrust of the timbre of the cello (‘thin on top and grumbling in the bass’); it may also reflect Dvorak’s own instrumental expertise since he was a good viola player and, when occasion demanded, an able violinist.
Dvorak wrote the Violin Concerto during the summer of 1879 as his reputation was fast acquiring its international dimension. Along with a large admiring public, Dvorak now found himself in the company of such luminaries as Brahms and his violinist friend, Joseph Joachim. An inscription on a sketch for the Violin Concerto, made in July 1879, indicates that Dvorak intended it for Joachim. At the end of the same month, Dvorak visited him in Berlin and presumably discussed his new concerto. A version of the concerto was completed later that summer, but this was far from being the end of the story. Joachim recommended numerous revisions which Dvorak, an almost compulsive reviser of his own works, undertook meticulously. While it is not possible to assess the full extent of these revisions since Dvorak destroyed the original material, it is clear from a letter that the changes were very far reaching touching every aspect of the concerto’s musical fabric and organisation.
Even these alterations were not enough for Robert Keller, a much valued adviser of Dvorak’s publisher Simrock, who wanted the composer to write a new ending for the first movement rather than letting it lead straight into the slow movement. For Dvorak, who was usually receptive to Keller’s suggestions, the time for accommodation was past, and he refused to make this change, not least, perhaps, because the passage linking first and second movements is one of the loveliest in the concerto. Simrock accepted his judgement and in 1883, four years after its completion, the Concerto was published. It is interesting to reflect that Joachim may have been in agreement with Keller since he never performed the work at a public concert, though he had run through it in a fairly full orchestral rehearsal in Berlin; the premiere was given in 1883 by Dvorak’s friend the violinist František Ondøíèek.
Even by Dvorak’s standards, the concerto is a richly lyrical work. The first movement begins boldly with a forceful unison statement from the orchestra answered by a bitter-sweet melody from the solo violin. Another exchange between solo and orchestra, and a cadential flourish lead into the main part of the movement in which the violin is rarely silent. A miniature cadenza initiates the exquisitely crafted link into the slow movement whose rapt melodic lines are interrupted by a stormy minor-key central episode - a direct anticipation of the slow movement of the cello concerto composed sixteen years later. The finale is close to the world of the “Slavonic Dances” and the “Czech Suite”. The main theme is imbued with the cross-rhythms of the Czech Furiant and provides the frame for a number of memorable episodes, including a reflective D minor interlude, before the exhilarating end.
The Nocturne in B major is something of a ‘time-traveller’ in Dvorak’s output. Over a period of some fourteen years, it appeared in as many as five guises. It began life as the slow section of one of Dvorak’s most experimental works, the string quartet in e minor (B 19) from the late 1860s. This astonishing work is cast in a single movement lasting some forty minutes; the music that became the Nocturne provides a gentle interlude in a bold, often tumultuous, exploration of contemporary tonality. While Dvorak made no attempt to rescue the main part of the quartet through revision, he salvaged the slow section and used it as the first slow movement of the ‘Double Bass’ string quintet of 1875. Proving to be rather too much of a good thing, this extra slow movement was dropped and the Nocturne achieved independence in versions for piano four hands, violin and piano, and for string orchestra possibly as late as 1883. In this version for strings, either solo or orchestral, the Nocturne is an attractive occasional piece, richly textured with affecting harmonies set over a sustained pedal bass note.
Dvorak’s best known piano music, in the shape of the “Slavonic Dances” and “Legends”, are duets, but he also wrote numerous collections of pieces for two hands. One of these was a group of Eight Waltzes composed late in 1879 and the first two weeks of 1880. Later that year, for a concert of his own promotion, Dvorak arranged two of the dances, the first and fourth, for string orchestra. The first, in A major, is amiable and relaxed, although a more plaintive mood is struck in the slightly brisker Trio.