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Schumann: The Violin Sonatas
Robert Schumann, Dénes Várjon
Schumann: The Violin Sonatas
Genre: Classical
 
Carolin Widmann, Schumann: The Violin Sonatas

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Robert Schumann, Dénes Várjon
Title: Schumann: The Violin Sonatas
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: ECM Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 11/18/2008
Genre: Classical
Styles: Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830), Instruments, Strings
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 028947667445

Synopsis

Album Description
Carolin Widmann, Schumann: The Violin Sonatas
 

CD Reviews

Excellence with an Edge
J. F. Laurson | Washington, DC United States | 05/04/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Before receiving ECM's new disc of the three Schumann Violin Sonatas, I'd almost forgotten how wonderful these works are. Violinist Carolin Widmann (sister to the clarinetist/composer Jörg Widmann) reminds me vividly and energetically of that fact. There is no dearth of recordings, but no glut, either. For one, you really want a complete set of them--including the Third Sonata, (new Grove says WoO27, the Bärenreiter and Schott Urtext scores say WoO2), not just opp. 105 and 121. The last work Schumann composed before he decomposed three years later, it's a sonata spotted with inspired, echt-Schumann moments. It took its final shape when Schumann added two more movements to the two (second and fourth movement) that he had already contributed to the "FAE-Sonata"--the sonata that he, Brahms (third movement), and Albert Dietrich (first movement) co-wrote for the birthday of Joseph Joachim.



Widmann and pianist Dénes Várjon are not household names, although collectors of Hungaroton releases might be familiar with the latter as part of the Takács Piano Trio and piano partner of Miklós Perényi. This recording shows Widmann and Várjon as fabulous musicians who are--particularly important in this repertoire--very well matched. Fleet and spunky, finding a good balance between assertive and lyrical, without overdoing either, Carolin Widmann navigates through sonatas every bit as securely as colleagues Marwood, Kremer, Faust & Co.



Gidon Kremer, who recorded the first two sonatas with Martha Argerich (DG), floats above the music, his slightly abbreviated phrases and beautifully contained violin sound seemingly unconcerned by gravity. Underneath him (sonically, though not interpretively) Argerich is her tempestuous best, bursting out at the seams, eager and independent minded. The sonatas becomes two stories, Kremer's and Argarich's, and it's ever titillating. Tempos change from one second to another, and movements like the third of op.105 ("Lively") run along like mice on tip-toes. It's a terrific way to interpret Schumann and even "incomplete" that disc should be on every well-stocked Schumann shelf.



Isabelle Faust and Silke Avenhaus on CPO offer all three sonatas and excellent performances, making it the ECM disc's primary competition. Like Kremer, Faust has a tendency towards clipped phrases, but her touch is not as soft as Kremer's which gives her consistently fast readings a trace of aggression and restlessness. No one plays the 2nd movement of op.121 so fast, though Widmann and Várjon come close and are even more rhythmically incisive. The dry acoustic allows for all details to come out, the balance between the instruments is perfectly even.



Compared to those accounts, Maria Egelhof and Mathias Weber (Thorofon) sound merely competent and sometimes even flatfooted (better in op.121 than op.105), as do Alban Beikircher and Benedikt Koehlen (ArteNova), who, however, delight with a stunning slow movement in op.121, the closely recorded pizzicato beginning being particularly delightful.



Widmann/Várjon meanwhile are a more cohesive unit than any of the couples above. They are the most flexible with tempos, allowing themselves time to indulge (3rd movement of op.105 or 1st movement of op.121) and really stepping on it, too (2nd movement of op.121, Scherzo of WoO2). Widmann's tone is particularly soft, her touch more supple even than Kremer's. When fortissimo is asked for, she remains sonorous with no hint of screeching. And for the gorgeous third movement of op.121, they have something truly special in store. It begins with Carlolin Widmann's pizzicato that barely sounds like pizzicato and more like a spiccato sulla tastiera. It's the most gentle way you'll ever hear this movement opened--slow, but melodious and with a forward momentum that gracelessly plucked notes could never muster. According to Widmann, who is very fond of exploring new ways of treating pizzicatos lovingly, that movement started out as a casual after-Dinner jam session but was surreptitiously recorded by Manfred Eicher who sensed that something beautiful was going on. It was, said Widmann, a moment of music-making that comes very rarely; that it doesn't get any better that. She was talking about the moment itself, but the same could be said about the result.



Coincidentally it's also the movement that works best in the resonant, not to say cavernous, Auditorio Radio Svizzera in Lugano. The acoustic is delightful bordering lush to these ears--for the most part. Friends of a dry acoustic, though, might find the natural reverb of the ECM recording to be testing their limits. Both instruments come to the ears from a little further back than the closer recorded recordings of Kremer & Faust.



It's my favorite recording of these works now, but it's not perfect. What I find somewhat objectionable is the soft rumble in the bass that's caused by every stomped foot, heavily pressed pedal, and every soundly rung low note on the piano. These low, ambient sounds feel as if someone upstairs ran about barefoot. On headphones that's not a problem, nor at low levels, but with bass-rich speakers at neighbor-unfriendly levels it can be rather distracting. Fortunately that's but a small caveat in light of all the goodness contained on this disc."
Compared with Kremer and Argerich
Y. Dai | Austin, TX USA | 04/09/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"First I have to say that I am a layman of classical music although I own many classical music CDs. So my comment is clearly not from an expert.

I have already owned Kremer and Argerich's version of Schumann's violin sonatas. However, upon hearing the sampler of this CD, I did not hesitate to buy it. Compared with this CD, Kremer and Argerich's version is clearly too coarse to be labeled as maestros' work. In that version, piano and violin seem to fight with each other fiercely. I don't think Schumann's work needs to be played like that. Widmann's version is clearly more sublime and refined. It reminds me of the similarity between the style of these violin sonatas and that of Schumann's piano work. So if Schumann formed a coherent style, then Widmann's version is clearly more consistent with what the composer wanted to express."
Where Has This Been All My Life?
Moldyoldie | Motown, USA | 05/13/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is my long-delayed introduction to these works, and if the performances found on this 2008 release from the now-venerable ECM label are an indication, it's a wonder why these haven't been more popular or widely propagated in the vast Schumann discography. There has seemingly been a spate of new recordings released in the past decade, so perhaps the situation is being rectified. All three sonatas were composed within a brief three-year period (1851-3) late in the emotionally troubled composer's life. Sonata No. 3 actually consists partially of two movements originally supplied by Schumann as part of a conglomerate work for violin virtuoso Joseph Joachim and whose remaining two movements were supplied by Brahms and the young Albert Dietrich. Schumann later appended two additional movements to his original two, but apparently the completed No. 3 was never published until the 1950s!



Without getting into specific descriptions, the aggregate vibe across the three works is surprisingly affirmatory with a wonderfully varied, formally uncontained, yet thoroughly exhilarating Romantic expression that's unmistakably Schumannesque! The performances by Widmann and Várjon are exemplary in their balance and barely controlled exuberance while projecting a most satisfying emotional ebb and flow. The recording is intimate -- close enough to hear Widmann's breath and Várjon's coaxing of the piano pedals -- but not so dry as to not allow for a marvelously complementing aural warmth. Probably the most ear-catching moments are heard in the beautiful "Leise, einfach" third movement of the Sonata No. 2, introduced by the most ghostly soft pizzicato plucking (so soft and subtle that one might imagine the notes were generated by barely rendered col legno bow hits!) followed by its meltingly disarming melody. This is one beautiful recording which I've been playing at least twice daily since I first unwrapped it!



One of the things characteristic of this Widmann/Várjon recording, which may either be a virtue or fault depending on one's sensibility, is its seeming uniformity; i.e., not swaying too far tempo-wise from an overall agreeable median across its entire 70+ minutes. Having sampled the competing Faust/Avenhaus recording on CPO (Schumann: Violin Sonatas 1-3), I can say that some of the latter's fast movements are noticeably headlong, perhaps providing more overt variance in tempo from movement to movement, if that's what the listener desires."