The more time elapses since the death of great artists the more 
                precious their memory and their recorded legacy becomes. That 
                statement is particularly exemplified in relation to the two musicians 
                represented on this record. Sviatoslav Richter (1915-1997), who 
                gave his first public recital in Odessa at the age of 19, was 
                a pupil of Heinrich Neuhaus at the Moscow Conservatory, and gained 
                a huge reputation in the USSR. His status proceeded ahead of him 
                to the West where a visit was eagerly awaited and where he finally 
                played in 1960. Richter, however, was notoriously choosy, not 
                only about the piano he played but the venues he played in, preferring 
                small intimate halls rather than large ones. He decided against 
                playing in the USA ever again after an extensive tour there in 
                1970. This only served to make his appearances more anticipated 
                than ever and it was at places such as Aldeburgh and a few venues 
                in France and Italy that had the privilege of welcoming him, always 
                to huge acclaim. One could say that he was one of those rare people 
                who became a legend in his own lifetime. He was a prodigious concert-giver 
                on his own terms, however, and gave a staggering 91 concerts in 
                4 months during a massive tour by car from Leningrad to Vladivostok 
                (about 9,000 miles!). 
              
Oleg Kagan (1946-1990) 
                    was born in Sakhalin but was brought up in Latvia until his 
                    family moved to Moscow where he was able to study with David 
                    Oistrakh. Kagan collected prizes with ease: the Enescu competition 
                    in Bucharest (1964), Sibelius, Helsinki (1965), Tchaikovsky, 
                    Moscow (1966) and Bach in Leipzig (1968). Kagan became a regular 
                    partner to Richter from 1969 who said of him that he had ‘a 
                    true understanding of Mozart’.
                  
The music represented 
                    here is supreme, and so are the performances. Both of these 
                    artists had an almost uncanny relationship that resulted in 
                    playing of the highest order. Richter himself, who could be 
                    very self-critical said of the Haydn and Brahms on this disc 
                    ‘This was an extremely successful concert and it really should 
                    come out on record’; we are lucky that someone took notice! 
                    An interesting, general comment Richter made about Haydn was 
                    ‘Dear Haydn, how I love you! But other pianists? They’re rather 
                    lukewarm towards you which is a great shame.’ (see: Sviatoslav 
                    Richter – Notebooks and Conversations by Bruno Monsaingeon, 
                    Faber 1998/2001). His love for Haydn certainly shows in his 
                    committed playing in the sonata on this record. Indeed this 
                    same sonata was played by Richter in public no less than 36 
                    times and was one of 19 sonatas by Haydn that Richter programmed. 
                    It is largely due to him that these piano sonatas are back 
                    in fashion today.
                  
The publishers 
                    of Mozart’s violin sonatas urged in a magazine in April 1783 
                    that both amateurs and professionals should try them for themselves. 
                    They were sure that this would prove that what they said about 
                    the sonatas was true, namely that they were rich in new ideas 
                    and showed the ‘great musical genius of their composer’ … 
                    with a ‘violin accompaniment that is so cleverly combined 
                    with the piano part that both instruments are continuously 
                    employed’. It seems such a shame that people in those days 
                    either had to be fortunate enough to play instruments themselves 
                    or to hear such works in performance in order to enjoy them. 
                    By contrast we are so incredibly lucky to have been born after 
                    the development of recording and so can enjoy them anywhere, 
                    anytime. The performance here of the Mozart sonata is superlative 
                    in its beauty with the two artists creating a feeling of being 
                    totally at one with each other; the second movement is a perfect 
                    example of this and is extremely moving. At the end of the 
                    work, which was recorded live, there is a cry of delight from 
                    one audience member and no wonder!
                  
Brahms composed 
                    his violin sonata No.1 with his great friend, the violinist 
                    Joseph Joachim in mind. The liner-notes indicate that Richter 
                    first played this sonata in February 1985 whilst this recording 
                    is from March the same year during the final series of concerts 
                    that he and Kagan gave; Kagan died prematurely aged only 44 
                    in 1990 while organizing a festival in Germany. If the implication 
                    is that Richter had only recently learned the work when this 
                    recording was made it is all the more remarkable for it sounds 
                    for all the world as if he had always been playing it, such 
                    is the richness in the playing of both artists.
                  
This is a disc 
                    to cherish, particularly since the sterling work done by Paul 
                    Arden-Taylor in remastering the original has made it feel 
                    as fresh as if it had been recorded yesterday.
                  
Steve Arloff