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Pristine Classical
©2006 SARL Pristine Audio

 
Pristine Classical Recorded Music
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PACM037: Sonata for Violin and Piano (1838) - Mendelssohn
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Yehudi Menuhin, violin
Gerald Moore, piano

Recorded in 1953, issued as HMV ALP 1085
Download ID: 223711, 434944
(Duration 19'44")

 

 

PACM037: Sonata for Violin and Piano (1838) - Mendelssohn

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"...what is particularly remarkable is not that they are “timeless” performances in the sense of being fine classical pieces, but that Menuhin was as consistently interesting an artist at age 19 as he was at age 36. The ecstatic opening lines of the violin in the Beethoven are matched by the equally impassioned playing of the Mendelssohn, which in a sense was a “world premiere.” Menuhin had been given a photostat copy of the original manuscript, and no evidence has been found that this sonata was ever played except perhaps by Mendelssohn and a friend (or family member) the year it was written. Certainly, this was its world premiere recording...

The Mendelssohn, aside from being an excellent piece, also gives us a very rare glimpse of Gerald Moore as a chamber-music partner. The famed accompanist was well known for his work with singers, but seldom ventured into the realm of sonata work. This is unfortunate. His playing here is exuberant, crystal-clear, and a good foil for the violinist’s rhapsodic lyricism. Also, Moore’s penchants for structural clarity and brisk tempos help move the music and keep it from becoming languorous or thick. Menuhin, sadly, does have moments in each performance where he goes a bit flat, but for most listeners this is easy to overlook in the face of such artistry." - Fanfare, March/April 2008

 

 

Introduction: Felix Mendelssohn was born in Hamburg, Germany on 3rd February, 1809 into a distinguished and afflluent family of bankers, intellectuals and artists. A child prodigy, he produced his first composition in 1820; a constant stream of work continued throughout his relatively short life - he died in Leipzig on 4th November, 1847 at the age of just 38. These notes, which accompany Pristine Audio's Mendelssohn Edition, released to mark the 160th anniversary of his oratio Elijah, our first award-winning release for Divine Art, follow Mendelssohn's life through eight compositions newly remastered for August 2006.


The Mendelssohn Trail - Part 4 of 8
Music composed 1838

"Sonata in F Major"

This work finished June 15, 1838... has never been published, and the original manuscript is the only source of the photostat copy which has come into my possession. This Sonata fills a great gap in violin literature as there is only one other work which Mendelssohn wrote for violin and piano - an earlier sonata in F minor.
- Yehudi Menuhin, 1952

In his statement, Menuhin does not refer to a very early sonata, written before the age of 10; the early sonata he does mention, Op. 4, was written in 1925 at the age of 16. Thus here we have a highly important piece of music, written but not published, and effectively lost for over 110 years. This is surprising - in the opinion of biographer Philip Radcliffe, "The Sonata as a whole is one of the best instrumental works of its period, and it is surprising that its composer did not consider it worth of publication."

Mendelssohn did write and publish a Cello Sonata in the same year (Op. 45), as well as two string quartets (Op. 44) - clearly a good year for chamber music. By this stage he was installed at Leipzig, having moved there in 1835 to take charge of the Gewandhaus Orchestra, championing both historical and modern works - of the former he is particularly well known for reviving interest in the music of Bach; in 1838 he was also championing Naumann (1741-1801), Righini (1756-1812) and Vogler (1696-1765), all of whom have once more been virtually forgotten. But take a listen to the brilliant finale in the example given here - a superb piece of writing which uses a constant interweaving of the two parts to greater effect than many of his later finales in a similar vein - and you will surely agree that this is one aspect of Mendelssohn's work in 1838 that did not deserve to be forgotten.

The Mendelssohn Trail - on to part 5
Back to start

 

REVIEW OF:
Mendelssohn: Trio #1 in D Minor (Santoliquido Trio) (1955); Trio #2 in C Minor (Zilcher Trio) (1930); Violin Sonata in F (1838) (Menuhin, Moore) (1953)

These are three very fine works that give the lie to the view that Mendelssohn was "played out" in his later years. It is true that many of the later compositions (the later Songs Without Words, the Organ Sonatas, etc.) are not first class compositions. They are plagued by Mendelssohn's fatal fluency, his thinking with his fingers and not with his head and heart. These three works are almost entirely free of that.

The Trio #1 in D Minor is a mostly superb work and has greatly outshone its sister trio (#2) in popularity if not quality. Much of its popularity is due to the magnificently sweeping opening cello theme of the first movement. It is ironic that the piano part, which has, it seems, thousands of arpeggios, never really gets to play a primary role. It's constant motion moves things forward without saying anything on its own. Under lesser pianists, its endless chattering can become tiresome. Not so under the Santoliquido Trio. They open the work rather more slowly and somberly than usual, but soon rise to powerful climaxes. To make up for the first movement, the piano takes the lead in all three splendid remaining movements with the Santoliquido playing the third movement with great panache. One notices that wonderful integration of the playing in this trio, usually only a characteristic of ensembles that have been together a long time. The trio was formed in Rome in 1942, made a few very fine records, but never achieved the international prominence they deserved. The sound is entirely worthy of the performance-clean, noisefree and rich.

The Pristine Audio editor has suggested that the Trio #2 in C Minor, the neglected younger sister of the D Minor, may actually be a finer work. Though it has no such sweeping melody as the opening of #1, its material is actually richer and bolder and the working out is often more imaginative. The first movement opens with the piano giving out a restless and really minorish theme. A triumphant theme in the major follows. The development is ingenious in manipulating the themes. The coda is wonderful, inspired, touching. The second movement does not match the first in quality, sounding an extended song without words although played with great feeling by the Zilcher Trio. The third movement is another Mendlssohnian exercise with fairies and elves and the Zilcher give a quicksilver lightness to it. The finale really sounds like a finale with emphatic themes and a sense of real completion at the end. The Zilcher Trio is new to me and they are a superb ensemble. I am quite thrilled with the playing of the trio. Pristine Audio has reprocessed the 1930 sound so that it has plenty of bite and warmth.

The Violin Sonata (1838) is almost unknown, but deserves to be ranked with the three Schumann sonatas, though not with the Brahms' works. The first movement begins with a stalwart Mendelssohnian pronouncement (meant to be powerful but not completely convincing) and continues with a yielding second theme. The development begins on a soft note but does a good job of dissecting the opening theme.

There is a brilliant and extended coda which Menuhin plays very well. The second movement presents a pensive theme on the piano, beautifully restated on the violin which then modules to a second theme. There is considerable agitation in the middle part. A rapid, moto perpetuo finale which never stops spinning finishes the sonata. Menuhin and Moore do excellent justice to this this work which deserves to be better known. The sound is clear and, for my taste, unexceptionable.

It has been a real privilege to rehear these Mendelssohn's chamber works, particularly to gain a greater appreciation of the Trio #2

Reviewer: Bill Rosen


Find out more:

 

3rd Movement (Finale):
Assai vivace

About Mendelssohn:

BBC Artist Profile
FelixMendelssohn.com
Classical Music Pages

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