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Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Jean Sibelius - Works for Violin & Piano (Fenella Humphreys; Joseph Tong)


Information

Composer: Jean Sibelius
  • Four Pieces, Op. 78
  • Andante cantabile in G Major, JS 33
  • Five Pieces, Op. 81
  • Danses champêtres, Op. 106
  • Four Pieces, Op. 115
  • Three Pieces, Op. 116

Fenella Humphreys, violin
Joseph Tong, piano

Date: 2022
Label: Resonus Classics

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Review

Fenella Humphreys conveyed tangible identity with Sibelius through her recent accounts of the Violin Concerto and all six Humoresques (8/21), with this follow-up volume finding her equally perceptive in a substantial overview of the composer’s output for violin and piano.

As Andrew Barnett indicates in his booklet note, Sibelius wrote little for this duo in his maturity until the First World War, when financial constraints produced various miniatures in swift succession. Sets of four (1917) and five (1918) pieces are typical in their technical fluency and undemanding material, Humphreys finding cohesion in sequences centred on the eloquent poise of Op 78’s ‘Religioso’ or the robust gait of Op 81’s ‘Menuetto’. By the time of Danses champêtres (1924) Sibelius had written both his remaining symphonies; and while these pieces barely hint at such expressive intensity, they capture a limpid wistfulness found in Sibelius’s lighter music – not least the taciturn ‘Tempo moderato’. The final sets (1929), almost the last music published in his lifetime, find Sibelius exploring those harmonic and rhythmic innovations of Bartók and Stravinsky but also Nielsen in Op 115’s sardonic ‘Humoreske’ or Op 116’s acerbic ‘Danse caractéristique’; their emotional obliquity maybe intimating the mythical ‘Eighth Symphony’.

Humphreys and Joseph Tong again make a persuasive case for this music, heard to advantage at Cedars Hall in Wells. Pekka Kuusisto and Heini Kärkkäinen are equally appealing on their ‘Musical Soirée at Ainola’ (Ondine), omitting the Andante cantabile (1887) that here judiciously represents the younger composer, but no prospective listener is likely to go wrong with this new recording.

-- Richard Whitehouse, Gramophone

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Jean Sibelius (8 December 1865 – 20 September 1957) was a Finnish violinist and composer of the late Romantic and early-modern periods. His music contributed to the development of a feeling of national identity in Finland where he is now celebrated as the country's greatest composer. Sibelius is widely known for his seven symphonies, the violin concerto and the tone poems, especially Finlandia and the Karelia suite. Throughout his career, the composer found inspiration in nature and Nordic mythology. He almost completely stopped composing after 1920s and did not produce any large-scale works in his last thirty years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Sibelius

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British classical violinist Fenella Humphreys is concertmaster of the Deutsche Kammerakademie.

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Joseph Tong enjoys a busy and varied career as soloist, duo pianist, chamber musician, Festival Director and teacher.

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  2. for a week I've been trying to access your downloads. Maybe it's my computer that'a infected ("protected" by Avast Protective, which keeps informing me of malware) but whatever the cause I can't get past the jump from the bar to "skip" and Mega. Hopefully it will clear up with the new year.

    As long as you are reading, I appreciate recordings of military and brass bands and wind ensembles. If you are ever offered any, grab them!

    I appreciate the variety and useful commentary you always provide.

    Happy new year!

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