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Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Franco Alfano - Cello Sonata; Concerto (Elmira Darvarova; Samuel Magill; Scott Dunn)


Information

Composer: Franco Alfano
  • Concerto for Violin, Cello and Piano
  • Cello Sonata

Elmira Darvarova, violin
Samuel Magill, cello
Scott Dunn, piano

Date: 2009
Label: Naxos

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Review

Alfano’s 1925 Cello Sonata was a commission from Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, though its first performance didn’t materialise until three years later in Rome. It’s a big, powerful work written, like the majority of Alfano’s chamber music, on a self-confident and expansive canvas. It’s also deeply expressive, and has strong meditative qualities that make it an intriguing peripheral piece in the cellistic programming armoury. Being Alfano there are also powerfully vocalised melodies as well, as the composer loses no opportunity to explore the full compass of the instrument. Whether Elysian or surly, the first movement is a template of the sonata as a whole – wide-ranging emotively and with virtuosic elements imbued for both instruments. The slow movement is not just the ‘gentle lullaby’ hinted at in the notes because it has its fair degree of eruptive passages – plenty of fast, twitchy writing, and, as ever, mood changeability is omnipresent. The finale is powerful and intense once more. There’s a species of Irish-sounding folk melody coursing through its veins but it falters and ushers in a finale brooding soliloquy. It ends a work of real introspection; in ethos it’s rather late-Debussian, but flecked with hot-house and verismo melodic stamp.

The companion work is the Concerto, which might hint at an allegiance with Chausson, though it’s one that doesn’t fully materialise. What it does share with the latter’s Concerto, at least, is a sense of space, of tension and passionate sweep. In other respects this trio – premiered in 1933 – is a bold and extrovert work and offers other succulent pleasures. It’s sinuous, rich in glissandi, tremolandi, and moments of baroque-antique sounding passages, that vie with rich unison playing to titillate the ear. As before Alfano knows how to prepare for, and spin, a potent soliloquy. Above all one admires Alfano’s strong sense of narrative development. He laces the central movement with ‘fantastico’ voicings; leering in part, but hinting at both the folkloric and Ravel as well. The slithery Bacchanal is exemplary in its weirdness. The finale reverts to the columnar glory of ‘Old Rome’ – vigorous, exacting and exciting, though the least compelling thematically of the three movements.

This is music that thrives on assertive but subtle musicianship, and fortunately it has a fine match in the Naxos trio, who acquit themselves splendidly. There are no moments of faltering or tentativeness, either with regard to the idiom or technically. With a suitably warm acoustic, this off-beat offering racks up high marks.

-- Jonathan WoolfMusicWeb International

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Franco Alfano (8 March 1875 – 27 October 1954) was an Italian composer and pianist. Born in Posillipo, Naples, Alfano studied under Camillo de Nardis and Paolo Serrao at the Conservatory San Pietro a Majella in Naples, and later pursued further studies with Hans Sitt and Salomon Jadassohn in Leipzig. From 1918 he was Director of the Conservatory of Bologna, from 1923 Director of the Turin Conservatory, and from 1947 to 1950 Director of the Rossini Conservatory in Pesaro. He is best known today for his opera Risurrezione (1904) and for having completed Puccini's opera Turandot in 1926

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Elmira Darvarova has been so far the only-female concertmaster in the history of the Metropolitan Opera New York.

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Samuel Magill, pupil of the late Zara Nelsova, is currently a member of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in New York.

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Conductor, arranger and pianist Scott Dunn is noted for his advocacy of American and contemporary music.

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