Knudåge Riisager was a violinist as well as a composer and he composed for 
      the instrument over the course of his working life. The works in this disc 
      are written for small-scale forces and date from the youthful Romance 
      in C, composed in 1914, to the works written in his maturity in the early 
      1950s.
       
      He was certainly in thrall to Scandinavian models when, as seventeen year-old, 
      he penned the Romance; Svendsen, maybe, is the most prominent and 
      the Minuet which followed the following year hints, here and there, 
      that he knew his Kreisler as well. Rather defter, and showing more awareness 
      of contemporary changes in harmony, is the Aquarelle in E major 
      of 1917. This attractive watercolour reveals a fairly rapid mastery of material.
       
      Continuing chronologically – though the disc doesn’t do so – we reach the 
      Sonata No.2, Op.5, which was written in Paris between 1923 and ’24. This 
      work represents an even bigger advance and ushers in Riisager’s maturity. 
      There are late-Romantic elements, certainly, some of them indeed quite lush. 
      But with some tart post-War harmonies and sideways glances at Stravinsky 
      and even Prokofiev, the music is often tensile and exciting. The slow movement, 
      whilst not in any way inexpressive, is quite cool, and this acts as a good 
      foil to the outer one’s drive.
       
      We’ve not discussed Riisager and neo-classicism, but that must be faced 
      when, in 1933, he completed his Concertino for five violins and 
      piano, Op.28a. He had been influenced by his studies in Leipzig the previous 
      year and this clean-limbed piece, so cleverly written for the seemingly 
      awkward combination, achieves a rare beauty in the slow movement. This is 
      beautifully textured and reveals some unashamed romanticism amidst the more 
      motoric freedoms of the outer movements.
       
      After the War, Riisager found a muse in Wandy Tworek, a splendid violinist 
      who made quite a few discs. He wrote Bricconata (Prank) for Tworek 
      in 1952 and this genial virtuosic caprice pays testament to that effervescent 
      fiddle player, who was also the dedicatee of Riisager’s excellent Violin 
      Concerto: listen to Kai Laursen’s performance of the revised version on 
      Danacord DACOCD468. Palavas (19510)is a Paganinian Fingerbuster, 
      written for Tworek to dazzle his audiences. Whilst Sovesang (Lullaby) 
      is an arrangement of a song it’s tastefully laid out for violin and piano 
      and shows the composer’s gift for melody. Finally there is the Sonata for 
      Two Solo Violins which could almost rival Prokofiev’s work for the same 
      combination. It’s a neo-baroque piece full of resinous drive, sonic interest 
      and interplay.
       
      It’s worthwhile to point out that Tworek recorded the Lullaby and 
      Palavas for Polyphon and the Second Violin Sonata – and the Piano 
      Trio – for Decca LP. I think Danacord’s Historic wing is perfectly placed 
      to restore these and other performances from a nearly forgotten fiddle player: 
      I have a considerable wish-list.
       
      The performances in this Dacapo disc however are excellent. Johannes Søe 
      Hansen is very well teamed with Christina Bjørkøe and they make a fine case 
      for the music. The other string players make a commendable ensemble in the 
      Concertino. With first class notes and recorded sound Riisager is in the 
      finest of hands here.
       
      Jonathan Woolf
       
      Riisager is in the finest of hands here.
    
       
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