|
|
 |
| |
Write your opinion about this CD
Benjamin Schmid violin
Lisa Smirnova piano (Tracks 01–09, 14–16)
Miklós Skuta piano (Tracks 10–13)
Pièces de Concert
These are pieces played at the end of a
concert or as an encore. Compositions
which round off a musical menu like a dessert
or digestif. Admittedly I am an old-fashioned
advocate of such pieces at the end of a programme,
because they display an aspect of
the violin which is really also a part of the
magic of this already so venerable instrument:
when musical thought and instrumental realisation
form an alliance as equal partners,
when the latter is occasionally permitted to
outdo the former in attractiveness or brilliance
and in the next moment the music again
sings alone… when – just for fun – (because
fun and art are sometimes – thank goodness –
closely allied) very simple musical things are
made appealing through highly complicated
technical madness and are consequently
marvelled at – perhaps with half a wry smile.
The violin is quite simply the most “overdeveloped“
string instrument and has to cope
with its role as a pioneer of virtuosity. The
most unbelievable things are possible with it:
not only is it faster and higher and more
overtly emotional than all the others, not only
does its palette of tonal nuances range from
the softest, most luxurious intonation to a hilarious, spiky staccato, not only does it have the
most widely varied tonal modulation possibilities
(positively multiplied by two independent
“sound producers“ – the left and right hands),
thus confirming also in my CD text its reputation
as “the instrument which comes closest
to the human voice“ (it is claimed that great
singers also occasionally learn from great violinists,
not only the reverse), but also its
potential for “mystical” acoustics can hardly
be surpassed: from mellow to piercing, from
nebulously darting to martial, from sul ponticello
to col legno battuto – and far beyond
these – the aesthetics of sound can hardly be
more beautiful. Here its diabolical, flashing,
mysterious power is demonstrated.
But above all this, it’s greatest strength lies
in its ability to combine two sounds most
beautifully and with the greatest diversity. Is it
not true that the music is often found between
the notes, where it cannot be seen on the
score, in the gap in an interval?
We violinists and our listeners (“What was
that encore?“) want to experience this again
and again. And sometimes we enter the virtuoso
manége and find that the circus is not
only fun, it can also be very stimulating.
All this would mean nothing if it weren’t for
the composers and composer-violinists who
knew how to combine music and the violin in
the most incredible manner. One example is
Eugène Ysaÿe (1858–1931), who instantly
recognised the violinistic quality of Saint-
Saëns’ simultaneously song-like and virtuoso
waltz experiments, which need just a couple
of timid attempts – and sometimes seem to get
stuck in mid-air – before finally breaking out
into ecstatic musical turning moments, and
along with continuous violinistic feats also
equipped them with the most subtle piano dialogue.
Or the team of Johannes Brahms
(1833–1897) and Joseph Joachim (1831–1907):
here the numerous, indescribably brilliant
musical ideas (or empathy with a neighbouring
idiom – or was it the power of recollection?)
in the Hungarian Dances find a worthy
arranger for the violin.
In his Cinema Fantasie (effectively the main
work in this collection – not only because of its
length), Darius Milhaud’s (1892–1974) style is
not so violinistic, in part it is even very unpleasant
(you don’t necessarily grow up with scales
of ninths), but with its wonderfully bizarre
overlapping harmonies (comparable with
“outside playing“ in jazz), it’s one of my favourite
pieces. As well as a lot of original, quirky
South American folk music, the themes we
hear include an irresistibly nostalgic endless
melody; it’s worth sitting through the just
under 18 minutes for this alone (in the last
third, after the cadenza by Arthur Honegger,
which again surpasses the virtuosity of the
piece – as if it weren’t already difficult enough).
Jenö Hubay’s (1858–1937) Carmen Fantasy
begins almost where the opera stops – quite
an original idea, with which it’s possible to
steal the show even from Sarasate. Here too
we hear the wonderful braggadocio of Escamillo’s
song (track 8) – which means one has
great fun singing a strangled bass line on the
violin. Hubay (of whom I am a direct teacherpupil
descendent via Sandor Vegh) also interprets
the expression “fantasy“ more freely: he
has all kinds of original thoughts. And in the
finale he wants to experience it again: for brilliance
and virtuosity it can hardly be surpassed.
Then there is a nother waltz: a Valse triste
by Peter I. Tchaikovsky (1840–1893), which is
particularly captivating because of its melancholy
simplicity, brightened only by a tender
middle section; but soon again falling back
into an even more intimous timidity, to finally
prance in a coda over three giant octaves…
George Gershwin’s (1898–1937) Three Preludes
have been congenially transcribed for
violin and piano by Jascha Heifetz (1900–1987),
and naturally they are also numbered among my
favourite pieces because of their jazzy texture.
The pianist Miklos Skuta and I have been
linked for a long time through an approximately
equal number of classical and jazz experiences.
His Toccata is one of the pieces which he regularly
wrote for our duo. I like it because it combines
understated rhapsody with minimalism
and improvisation, making it a gripping connecting
link between our notated and improvised
experiences.
On a CD as much concentrated on the violin
as this one, of course Paganini must not be
missing. Moreover, his Cantabile really does
justice to its name and reminds us of what an
ingenious inventor of melodies this prototype
of a virtuoso was.
The whole thing begins with Antonio Bazzini’s
(1818–1897) inevitablbe Ronde des Lutins – I
have two explanations for this: firstly it’s one
of the best and most amusing encores on the
planet, and secondly I would like to be able to
give an affirmative answer to the question frequently
asked at “post-concert“ CD signings:
“Is the last encore on it?“.
Benjamin Schmid
“…a recital, that made you feel a great
deal better, when you came out than when
you want in” (Daily Telegraph, London)
“Performances with more interest per bar
than most can manage for entire sonatas”
(Gramophone, London)
“An exceptional violinist comes into his
own” (Examiner, San Francisco)
„Schmids Spiel ist wunderbar ausgereift
ohne an Offenheit verloren zu haben“
(Die Presse, Wien)
“A superb virtuoso with a beautiful tone”
(Strings, New York)
„Eine musikalische Kraft, die man wieder
hören will“ (Campanella, Tokio)
“Schmid spielte mit leidenschaftlichem
Temperament und höchster Brillianz in
einer nicht zu überbietenden Perfektion”
(Münstersche Zeitung)
Reviews| Ohne Angabe (Anonym) | Diese CD ist genial, einfach genial. Wenn man diese Aufnahmen hört, weiß man, dass es sich bei Benjamin Schmid um einen Musiker handelt, der die Musik und nicht sich selbst, als unübertrefflichen Virtuosen( was er in der Tat ist)in den Vordergrund stellt!! Benjamin Schmid gibt jedem Ton die Chance, der schönste seines Lebens zu werden. Eine Tugend, die nur noch wenige Geiger besitzen!!!
| | Date: 16.11.2004 | City: Ohne Angabe | Valoration:  | | Review about: Schmid, Benjamin: Pièces de Concert |
| Average valoration:  | |
|
|