Galina Ustvolskaya – Complete works for Violin and Piano

Price range: £8.99 through £14.99

Label:
Catalogue No: DDA 25182
EAN/UPC: 809730518225
Artists: ,
Composers:
Release Date: May 2019
Genres: ,
Periods:
Discs: 1
Total Playing Time: 49:19

Unfairly named ‘The Lady with the Hammer’ for her uncompromising use of massive thunderous chords and ostinato rhythms, Ustvolskaya was a pupil of Shostakovich but forged her own unique way into many genres. Recently, artists have concentrated, as here, on bringing out the richness of the works and their innate lyricism. This album includes all of the composer’s music for violin and piano in two major works – the Sonata and the Duet.

Russian violinist Evgeny Sorkin was a child prodigy and performed for Isaac Stern at the age of 10 and was compared at 16 to David Oistrakh by no less than Yehudi Menuhin. He moved to Australia and balanced teaching at Sydney Conservatory with a busy recital schedule.

Natalia Andreeva is a Russian pianist who is currently Lecturer in Piano at the University of Sydney, Australia. Her 2015 recording of the complete solo piano music of Galina Ustvolskaya was very well received; she is a pianist of consummate skill who can express the power and lyricism which exist side by side in these works

Track Listing

    Galina Ustvolskaya (1919-2006):
  1. Sonata for Violin and Piano - I. Crotchet=112 (2:18)
  2. Sonata for Violin and Piano - II. Crotchet=112 (9:36)
  3. Sonata for Violin and Piano - III. Piu mosso (2:25)
  4. Sonata for Violin and Piano - IV. Tempo I (5:28)
  5. Duet for Violin and Piano - I. Espressivo (4:22)
  6. Duet for Violin and Piano - II. Very rhythmical beat (fugato) (5:47)
  7. Duet for Violin and Piano - III. Tempo I (2:54)
  8. Duet for Violin and Piano - IV. Not faster (fugato) (4:49)
  9. Duet for Violin and Piano - V. Meno mosso (1:20)
  10. Duet for Violin and Piano - VI. Tempo I (3:00)
  11. Duet for Violin and Piano - VII. (in tempo) (7:16)

Reviews

Fanfare

The objective and dispassionate approach feels very much in tune with Ustvolskaya’s uncompromising aesthetic. The performers rarely exaggerate the dynamic extremes and seem as concerned with maintaining tight ensemble and careful balances as with exploiting the music’s Expressionist drama. Sorkin plays with a controlled vibrato, which adds color, but without tipping the music over into overtly Romantic expression. And the fact that Andreeva is the guiding force behind the project is apparent from the amount of detail and commitment in the piano playing.

” —Gavin Dixon
Fanfare

Both of these works demand much from the listener, and should not be taken lightly. [The Sonata] is a harrowing work, but still a human one. The Duet [is] even more fragmented and confrontational… Tone clusters, extreme dynamics, extreme registers, and violent gestures converge to create an alienating environment. I like Sorkin’s wiry sound in the sonata, and also the way both players work to ex¬tract expressivity from the music’s frequent cul-de-sacs.

” —Raymond Tuttle
BBC Music Magazine

The passion for this music is evident in the performances of the sonata and duet.

” —Michael Beek
Classical CD Reviews

The approach feels very much in tune with Ustvolskaya’s uncompromising aesthetic. The performers rarely exaggerate the dynamic extremes—and there are plenty of dynamic extremes notated in the scores—and seem as concerned with maintaining tight ensemble and careful balances as with exploiting the music’s Expressionist drama. The fact that Andreeva is the guiding force behind the project is apparent from the amount of detail and commitment in the piano playing.

” —Gavin Dixon
De Standaard

Anyone who finds the music of Shostakovich oppressive must listen to that of his eccentric student Ustvolskaya. Pianist Natalia Andreeva has researched and played the scores of Ustvolskaya for more than ten years. Every choice she makes here with violinist Evgeny Sorkin is well thought out.

” —AVB
The Chronicle

[Ustvolskaya] composed using unusual combinations of instruments, and often used piano or percussion to beat out regular rhythms. [The music] is atmospheric. It’s harsh in the sense of not being romantic but it’s not strident; it’s thoughtful and sad more than anything. Music reflecting on the harshness of life.

” —Jeremy Condliffe
MusicWeb International

The performances of these typically unsmiling works are exceptional. They reveal commitment and understanding from both soloists which transcends the bleakness of the music. Amongst this dark music there are the occasional flashes of light and even beauty. The sound quality is excellent.

” —John France
Sunday Times

A brilliantly executed centenary tribute. A style one can fancy as at once an expression of suffering under Stalin and defiance of his rule.

” —Paul Driver
New Classics

Natalia Andreeva is a Russian pianist of consummate skill who can express the music’s power and beauty of this music. She is joined here by the exceptionally talented Russian-born violinist Evgeny Sorkin to mark the centenary of Ustvolskaya’s birth on June 17 with these assured recordings.

” —John Pitt
MusicWeb International

Fine accounts of music – well played and recorded – that has little time for conventional sheen or veneer. Ustvolskaya confides in you, but with an unwaveringly intimidating gaze and towering concentration. Performances demand and here receive such qualities.

” —Rob Barnett