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Philipp Scharwenka - Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 110 (1900) 

Bartje Bartmans
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Ludwig Philipp Scharwenka (16 February 1847, Samter, Grand Duchy of Posen - 16 July 1917, Bad Nauheim) was a German composer and teacher of music. He was the older brother of Xaver Scharwenka.
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Violin Sonata No. 1 in b minor, Op. 110 (1900)
Dedication: Willy Burmester (1869-1933)
1. Allegro (0:00)
2. Largamente - Andante con moto - Allegretto con moto (8:23)
Natalia Prischepenko, violin and Oliver Triendl, piano
Details Edition Silvertrust:
Scharwenka's Violin Sonata in b minor, composed around 1900, is certainly one of the most exciting and original late romantic sonatas ever written. The big opening movement, Allegro, in the form of a moto perpetuo, begins with brilliant, flashing downward strokes in the violin over an agitated tremolo in the piano. The development and expansion are breath-taking. This is very impressive and powerful writing so original as to be virtually unique. The huge second movement, Largamente--Andante con moto--Allegro con moto--is three movements in one, in the form of a fantasia. The Largamente opens in highly dramatic fashion creating great suspense. The writing is in the form of a recitative, tinged with Hungarian overtones. Without pause, the Largamente seamlessly becomes an Andante con moto. Here, the violin, in its highest register, plays a lovely song of hope. Again, as you can hear from our sound-bite, the Andante, seamlessly turns itself into an exciting finale, Allegro con moto.
This sonata is an unqualified masterwork. Out of print for many years now, we hope that hearing this great work will convince violinists looking for something special to acquaint themselves with amazing sonata.
Scharwenka dedicated the Sonata to his friend Willy Burmester. Burmester was a famous violinist renowned for his marvelous technical feats, especially his left hand pizzicato, and rapid runs in thirds and tenths.
Jean Sibelius originally dedicated his Violin Concerto to Burmester, who promised to play the concerto in Berlin. For financial reasons, Sibelius decided to premiere it in Helsinki in 1903, and since Burmester was unavailable to travel to Finland, Sibelius engaged Viktor Nováček, a violin teacher at the Helsinki Conservatory. The premiere performance was a disaster.[1] Sibelius revised the work and the new version premiered in 1905. Willy Burmester was again asked to be the soloist, but he was again unavailable, so the performance went ahead without him, the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra's leader Karel Halíř stepping into the soloist's shoes. Burmester was so offended that he refused ever to play the concerto, and Sibelius re-dedicated it to the Hungarian "wunderkind" Ferenc von Vecsey.

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7 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 19   
@malgorzatabator-schreiber817
@malgorzatabator-schreiber817 7 месяцев назад
Wow! What a breathtaking composition and interpretation!
@pietrolandri6081
@pietrolandri6081 3 года назад
Philipp's chamber music is top level. Shame on whom keeps ignoring him
@NovicebutPassionate
@NovicebutPassionate 3 года назад
He also composed a symphony and other orchestral music such as Dramatische Fantasie, Arkadische Suite, and Fruhlingswogen, not to mention his instructional piano music, thus, his great piano writing in this magnificent sonata.
@pietrolandri6081
@pietrolandri6081 3 года назад
@@NovicebutPassionate sure! His brother's music is also good but Philipp remains lesser known for reasons I can't understand
@pietrolandri6081
@pietrolandri6081 3 года назад
@@NovicebutPassionate .... However as a matter of fact his compositions are almost equally divided 1) before op 98 mostly solo piano, orchestral and concert jobs and songs (plus six, not unforgettable, miscellaneous chamber works) 2) As of op 98 and beyond all his chamber masterworks and a few (also great) piano solo, songs and orchestral works Apparently he waited his maturity to compose extensively for chamber ensemble
@natanaelmojica217
@natanaelmojica217 3 года назад
@@pietrolandri6081 Makes sense.. I think writing chamber music is not an easy task. In my opinion, It is even more difficult than writing a piano concerto or symphony.
@pietrolandri6081
@pietrolandri6081 3 года назад
@@natanaelmojica217 agree .... finding a suitable balance between 3 or 4 or 5 instruments in a way that all contribute individually but no one prevails and final music is not just summing up individuals but rather ONE music ..... requires mastery and craftmanship ....OK this is a duet, but ..... still .... is not a violin sonata with obbligato: it's a two peer instruments music
@pecator70
@pecator70 3 года назад
What a unknown beauty...thank you so much for posting 🥰 For me this masterpiece comes directly next the Strauss and Respighi sonatas!
@fransmeersman2334
@fransmeersman2334 3 года назад
Marvelous ! Thank you for the introduction to the excellent chamber music of Philipp Scharwenka.
@RichardYu-wz1kt
@RichardYu-wz1kt Год назад
really nice piece!
@mmbmbmbmb
@mmbmbmbmb 3 года назад
Truly significant. For me, a wonderful discovery from your (long admired) channel. Thank you much!
@OaktownGirl
@OaktownGirl 3 года назад
What a delightful little gem! Thank you!
@maximaxoo
@maximaxoo 2 года назад
Now one of my favorite violin & piano sonata! And no one talks about the interpretation in the comments, but both artists are quite excellent: their phrasing is perfect, and this is not so easy to render with all those repeated notes.
@SergioLOSOWICH
@SergioLOSOWICH 3 года назад
Sounds fantastic! The subjects in the piano and when the violin does the imitation sound Marvelous. Good music and awesome musicians Thank you for another great video
@rosannamasini2075
@rosannamasini2075 3 года назад
Stupenda e molto intensa grazie Maestro
@MrMDH1986
@MrMDH1986 3 года назад
What a beautiful Sonata! Thank you very much for posting this! The beginning of the 2nd movement is reminiscent of 2nd mov.of Franck's Sonata...
@maximaxoo
@maximaxoo 2 года назад
Definitely reminiscent of Franck's Sonata, but you probably thing of the 3rd one ("Recitativo - Fantasia"), not the 2nd movement ("Allegro")
@rarefied6820
@rarefied6820 Год назад
0:00-2:52 “Rushing into” 3:30-end of Mvmt I “Hubris”
@rarefied6820
@rarefied6820 Год назад
12:52-15:02 “Hubris”
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