This is a well considered 
                pairing. Martucci was Respighi’s composition 
                teacher and the fruitful juxtaposition 
                of master and pupil is one that Arts 
                has explored in a comparable release 
                of works for violin 
                . This time the focus is on the cello 
                and the works are of a commensurately 
                higher level than the rather salon-inspired 
                examples to be heard in the sister volume. 
              
 
              
The Cello Sonata is 
                a major Martucci chamber statement. 
                Written when he was twenty-four it has 
                formal limitations and an over-extended 
                first movement. It could have done with 
                enlightened revision but it also possesses 
                abundant lyricism and mid-century Romantic 
                engagement. 
                There’s no doubt that Schumann remained 
                an abiding influence but there’s a subtle 
                admixture here of the rhetoric of Brahmsian 
                passage-work and a smidgen at least 
                of Dvořák. One of the most distinctive 
                and appealing of its features is the 
                freewheeling and humorous Scherzo 
                with its marvellous drone-inflected 
                trio. But the lyrical and affectionate 
                Intermezzo is good too though the finale, 
                whilst forthright, is not especially 
                distinctive. The second of the Two Romances 
                is the better but it was the Tre Pezzi 
                that were amongst the composer’s own 
                favourite works. Like the similar works 
                for violin they can incline rather too 
                closely to the generic. However the 
                E minor is a little gem – moving with 
                real verve and colour and with a flexibility 
                and freedom that impress. These are 
                by no means mere morceaux – the B flat 
                minor lasts ten minutes. 
              
 
              
Coupled with these 
                is the Respighi Adagio con variazioni 
                in its version for cello and piano, 
                a transcription made in 1921 in which 
                I always feel the lack of the orchestral 
                version – search out the Cassado Vox 
                Box for that version. 
              
 
              
The recording level 
                is good. Soloist Arturo Bonucci has 
                a soft-grained tone that suits the more 
                relaxed patina of some of these pieces 
                but his intonation can wander now and 
                then. I’d have welcomed more athleticism 
                and colour in his playing. In the Sonata 
                Bacchelli is rather backward in the 
                balance and tends to be a mite brittle. 
                The notes are good and even take Martucci 
                to considerable task for formal and 
                other technical limitations and weaknesses. 
                That’s what friends are for! 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                
              
              
see also 
              
 
                Giuseppe 
                MARTUCCI 
                (1856-1909) Sonata 
                for Violin and Piano Op.22 (1874) Tre 
                Pezzi Op.67 for Violin and Piano 
                Op.67 (1886) Melodia for Violin 
                and Piano (1890) Ottorino 
                RESPIGHI (1879-1936) Cinque 
                Pezzi for Violin and Piano * Sei 
                Pezzi for Violin and Piano (1901) 
                * 
 
                Rodolfo Bonucci (violin)#Antonio Bacchelli 
                (piano) Pietro Spada (piano) * Recorded 
                in Rome, December 1991 (Respighi) and 
                October 1988 (Martucci) 
 
                ARTS 47138-2 [76.04] [JW]  
              
Some 
                fairly lightweight things here played 
                with commitment and just the right kind 
                of discretion. An enjoyable, relaxing 
                recital. ... see Full 
                Review