I can’t give you Kaufmann’s date of birth because 
                  it’s nowhere to be found in the frequently impenetrable booklet 
                  notes, which are simultaneously obscure and couched in language 
                  more commonly found in the writings of Ecstatics. Their overheated 
                  nature is a pity because thereby a simpler truth is occluded; 
                  Kaufmann’s aesthetic is lyrical, songful and specifically "Yiddish", 
                  to use a rather vague term that the composer himself uses in 
                  his pleasing cello suite. The Chant Concertant is affectingly 
                  declamatory, deep tremors in the bass, and the slow section 
                  from 4’50 spinning a succulent line – from 8’50 a Stravinskian 
                  allegro erupts flecked with ghostly orchestral slivers as the 
                  cadenza is introduced. His writing is more obviously but less 
                  complexly Jewish than Bloch’s and the neo-classical grit in 
                  the Chant gives it a spine that might otherwise seem 
                  lacking, The Suite Yiddish had its origin in a work for 
                  violin and piano, first performed by Olivier Charlier and Pascale 
                  Devoyon, both accomplished and sensitive artists. Here I find, 
                  in this arrangement for cello and piano, that the three pieces 
                  are rather too generic in their Hebraic impress although the 
                  concluding Priere has an affecting simplicity – think 
                  of a Jewish Keltic Lament. Selah was written for a quintet 
                  of two violins, two violas and a cello and is again explicitly 
                  Yiddish – a changeable piece, by turns lyrical and discursive 
                  with the cello assuming lyrical prominence and a gradual lightening 
                  of the density of string tone – there is frequent unison playing 
                  – before resuming rhythmic impetus toward the climax. It’s hardly 
                  the masterpiece claimed by the booklet note writer, though. 
                
 
                
The Duos for violin pay oblique homage – in 
                  their folk origins, not in texture, technique or ambition – 
                  to those of Bartok. These are not virtuosic studies but are 
                  very much simpler, less purposeful perhaps, instead mining a 
                  seemingly inexhaustible quarry of associative melodies. There 
                  is some trilling (No 7) but, except at the very end, no pizzicatos 
                  at all and no double-stopping. Which will alert one to the relative 
                  simplicity of the means of expression – the limited technical 
                  demands exist sufficient to express the entwined simplicity 
                  of the melodies - a gently affecting work, well played. L’eau 
                  retrouvee is made of rather sterner stuff. It’s the only 
                  piece on the disc without obvious Jewish references. Opening 
                  with thunderous vocal howls and burnished with deep strings 
                  and an important clarinet part this is a quizzical work, a substantial 
                  fifteen-minute Cantata with baritone soloist. Unfortunately 
                  the text of the poem – by the composer himself – is untranslated 
                  but seems to be a reflective-philosophical affair and the work 
                  ends, after struggle, in those same opening shouts now transformed 
                  through experience into cries of affirmation. It’s not an immediately 
                  likeable work but an accomplished one. Performances are sound 
                  if not breathtaking and the disc offers a good conspectus of 
                  this French composer’s compositional directions. 
                
                  Jonathan Woolf