Elgar & Vaughan Williams - Violin Sonatas, The Lark Ascending
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Label: Chandos
Cat No: CHAN20156
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Chamber
Release Date: 31st July 2020
Contents
Works
Violin Sonata in E minor, op.82The Lark Ascending (version for violin and piano)
Violin Sonata in A minor
Artists
Jennifer Pike (violin)Martin Roscoe (piano)
Works
Violin Sonata in E minor, op.82The Lark Ascending (version for violin and piano)
Violin Sonata in A minor
Artists
Jennifer Pike (violin)Martin Roscoe (piano)
About
Sound/Video
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1Elgar: Violin Sonata in E minor, op.82 (1918): 1. Allegro
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2Elgar: Violin Sonata in E minor, op.82 (1918): 2. Romance. Andante
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3Elgar: Violin Sonata in E minor, op.82 (1918): 3. Allegro, non troppo
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4Vaughan Williams: Violin Sonata in A minor (1954): 1. Fantasia. Allegro giusto
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5Vaughan Williams: Violin Sonata in A minor (1954): 2. Scherzo. Allegro furioso ma non troppo
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6Vaughan Williams: Violin Sonata in A minor (1954): 3. Tema con variazioni. Andante
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7Vaughan Williams: The Lark Ascending, Romance for Violin and Piano (original version, 1914)
Europadisc Review
Though praised on its premiere in 1919, Elgar’s E minor Violin Sonata has only relatively recently become a firm favourite with violinists in the recording studio. One of three works (the others being the String Quartet and Piano Quintet) composed in 1918 during a period of renewed strength following his move to a new country home at ‘Brinkwells’ near Fittleworth, West Sussex, which stand together with his Cello Concerto as Elgar’s last great creative flowering, the Violin Sonata pays obvious tribute to his new, idyllic rural surroundings in music of rapt lyricism, as well as subtle nostalgia for an Edwardian era lost forever to the horrors of the Great War. Pike understands this inherent duality from the outset, and her playing has an urgency that doesn’t distract from the more reflective, poetic aspects of the work. Her playing combines vigour with immaculate intonation and exquisite cantabile tone, gentle gradations of pianissimo as well as ardent intensity. The emotional range is cast wide in the opening movement, and the tone deepens still further in the central Romance, where every throwaway gesture seems loaded with implied meaning, the intersection between a fondly remembered past and a bittersweet present.
The third and final movement appears to start out most idyllically of the three, yet the return, just before the coda, of the middle section from the Romance recalls another moment of intense sadness, added to the work after the unexpected death of the Sonata’s dedicatee, Marie Joshua, just days after she had written to Elgar expressing her honour in accepting the dedication. In his own comments, Elgar emphasised the work’s traditional credentials, yet at the hands of Pike and Roscoe it is a work of remarkable resilience and potency, and it receives from them one of the most persuasive performances on disc, certainly one to make one reevaluate its place within the composer’s oeuvre and within the violin repertoire in general.
Much rarer on record is the A minor Violin Sonata by Elgar’s successor as England’s leading composer, Ralph Vaughan Williams. Composed in 1954, it is another ‘late’ work, again with a three-movement design, but here the similarities end. The opening movement is a Fantasia which contains elements of sonata form but in which the modally inflected themes are in a state of continuous development. The middle movement is a biting Scherzo with more than a nod to the ‘modernism’ of Bartók and Shostakovich, yet with unmistakable English roots, while the finale is a highly distinctive theme and variations, including canonic as well as instrumental solo episodes, an elegiac variation for the violin, and a rhapsodic recall of the opening Fantasia. As with the Elgar work, the emotional, tonal and dynamic range is wide, although the work has more ‘edge’, and arguably less wistfulness. Once again, Pike and Roscoe do the work proud in a performance that brings out the music’s strengths as well as its striking originality. Indeed, it emerges as an ideal coupling for the Elgar, complementary in many ways, but also with some striking parallels in a bittersweet longing for a vanished past.
The disc is rounded off with the original version, for violin and piano, of Vaughan Williams’s perennially popular romance The Lark Ascending, to which the end of the preceding Sonata seems to allude. Here Jennifer Pike’s tone is simply magical, conjuring up a kaleidoscope of imagery that more than makes up for the loss of orchestral colour: indeed, there are details that emerge with greater clarity in this version, while it seems expressively to provide the necessary balm for the emotional wounds of the two Sonatas. Composed some years before the Elgar Sonata, but premiered after it, The Lark here ties up the loose ends very nicely to a disc that no lover of English music will want to be without. It’s certainly one of Pike’s best yet – which is saying much.
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