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 | Béla BARTÓK 
              (1881-1945) Works for Violin and Piano - Volume 1
 Rhapsody No. 1, BB 94a [10:25]
 Sonata No. 2, BB 85 [20:07]
 Rhapsody No. 2, BB 96a [10:33]
 Sonata No. 1, BB 84 [33:35]
 Andante, BB 26b [4:00]
 Alternative ending for Rhapsody No. 1 [1:48]
 
  James Ehnes (violin) Andrew Armstrong (piano)
 rec. Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk; 30 May - 1 June 2011
 
  CHANDOS CHAN10705 [80:30] |   
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                I’ve spent a lot of energy recently praising to 
                  the skies James Ehnes’ work as a concerto soloist, both 
                  live in Edinburgh 
                  and on disc with Tchaikovsky. 
                  He is a musician of the most outstanding calibre, and this CD 
                  of his work in Bartók will only raise his reputation 
                  higher.
 
 The title of the disc suggests that Ehnes and Armstrong are 
                  embarking on a project, though no further details are given 
                  in the liner-notes. If so then it’s one worth keeping 
                  an ear on, as the results on display on this disc are extraordinary, 
                  a worthy successor to his disc 
                  of Bartók concertos, also on Chandos. Bartók’s 
                  violin sonatas are among his most interesting but challenging 
                  works, and it’s a master-stroke to couple them with some 
                  of his most accessible writing for violin and piano. The disc 
                  begins with the first Rhapsody which, with its fiercely rhythmic 
                  opening, is immediately stamped with the flavour of Hungarian 
                  folk dance. In fact, the composer even refers to this in his 
                  sub-heading for the work: Folk Dances. The first movement 
                  has an earthy quality to its main melodies but a lovely songful 
                  feel to the great central section. The second movement is more 
                  showy, perhaps even more indebted to the composer’s love 
                  of Hungarian folk tunes. It’s full of dazzling inflections 
                  tossed off by Ehnes as if it were all in a day’s work. 
                  For the sake of completeness the disc also supplies an alternative 
                  ending which is interesting enough, if a bit superfluous. The 
                  Second Rhapsody is more angular than the first with some astonishing 
                  double-stopping from the soloist but also some bright-eyed humour 
                  too.
 
 Make no mistake, though, the main events here are the two sonatas. 
                  It’s a shrewd programming move to put the more approachable 
                  Second Sonata first. The playing here is imbued with a lovely 
                  sense of questioning, of exploration, especially in the violin 
                  line. The piano underpins it with something more adamant, still 
                  exploring but more insistently than his partner. There is a 
                  lovely sense of the two listening to one another, as it should 
                  be in all the best sonata performances. The second movement 
                  is more reckless than the first, runaway and playful in many 
                  places, especially in the regular violin glissandi and double-stops, 
                  but always maintaining a hint of an edge. I loved the interplay 
                  of the pizzicato violin with the grumbling piano just before 
                  the lightning quick perpetuo section. The listener is 
                  treated to two great artists striking sparks off each other. 
                  The ending is particularly sublime, played with beautiful subtlety 
                  as the violin heads gently into the stratosphere.
 
 The angular dissonant landscapes of the First Sonata present 
                  more of a challenge to the listener, but Ehnes and Armstrong 
                  assail this terrain with breathtaking skill. The spiky, often 
                  discordant world of the opening gives way to a slow movement 
                  of astounding humanity, the stillness coming across all the 
                  more powerfully after the drama of the opening, and the unaccompanied 
                  violin line that opens this movement draws the finest playing 
                  on the disc. It’s followed by a finale whose energy and 
                  attack will knock your socks off. Then, as if to surprise us 
                  all, the disc ends with the earliest, and most instantly accessible, 
                  work of all, the Andante that the composer wrote for 
                  the Arányi sisters who were the great-nieces of Joseph 
                  Joachim. Its arching, lyrical melody is beautiful in its simplicity, 
                  played here with intense beauty and just the right degree of 
                  schmaltz.
 
 This is a magnificent disc, wonderful playing captured in fantastic 
                  sound, and a fine way to begin an exploration of Bartók’s 
                  work in this genre. Roll on Volume Two.
 
 Simon Thompson
 
 see also review by Leslie 
                  Wright
 
 
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