Emanuel Moór (1863-1931)
Music for Viola
Prelude and Fugue for string quartet, P182 (1917)
Prelude in E major for viola and piano, Op 123 (1910–12; arr. Hegemann, 2021)
Pičces lyriques for string quartet, Op 139
Romanze for viola and piano, P202 (1895)
Concertstück in C-sharp minor for viola and piano, P166
Concertstück in C-sharp minor for viola and orchestra, P167 (orch. Beraldo, 2020)
Dirk Hegemann (viola)
Dávid Báll (piano)
Rosenstein String Quartet
Anima Musicae Chamber Orchestra/Mátyás Antal
rec. 2021, Pannonia Studios, Budapest
TOCCATA CLASSICS TOCC0650 [62]
As so often Toccata has opened a window on a previously unexplored area of a composer’s oeuvre and in this case it’s Emanuel Moór’s music for viola. Back in the mists of time I reviewed a disc of his works for cello (review) but pickings since then have been few, which makes this authoritative disc that much more worthwhile.
He seems to be known these days rather more as the inventor of the Duplex-Coupler piano than as the man Tovey described as being ‘eminently noble in style’. The viola music, which includes music for string quartet, shows that nobility strongly. The Prelude and Fugue for string quartet was written for the Flonzaley Quartet and its clear expressive qualities, which include an intriguing consort evocation as the opening Prelude ends, are strongly audible. The fluid Fugue is exceptionally attractive, avoiding the trap of academism at every turn. The Pičces lyriques, also for string quartet, consists of five compact movements, of which the jovial Viennese waltz is immediately pleasing though the slow movement goes deeper in terms of expressive density. The freshness and rugged songfulness of the finale ends this mini-quartet.
The only one of these works to have been published is the Prelude in E major, Op 123 originally composed for cello – for Casals, in fact – but heard here in Dirk Hegemann’s viola arrangement of 2021. Its dignity would well have suited Casals and it receives a suitably assured and refined reading from Hegemann. The Romanze sounds a touch Fauréan and is certainly a viable song-without-words. Moór’s lyricism is a given, but it is heard to strong advantage when contextualised with other works for viola. The Concertstück are medium-sized at twelve minutes and share common themes that are developed differently. The version for viola and piano encodes some ripe Hungarian elements then slows for more reflective material and includes a cadenza missing from the version for orchestral accompaniment. The orchestrated version of 2020 was made by Andreas Luca Beraldo and reprises the Magyar element.
Hegemann is the disc’s leading light, but Dávid Báll proves a worthy accompanist, the Rosenstein String Quartet plays with tonal richness and, in the final work, the Anima Musicae Chamber Orchestra is finely directed by Mátyás Antal. As always from this source, the booklet notes are a source of nutritious biographical and musicological information; they deserve a thorough read.
Jonathan Woolf