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- Mozart, Complete Sonatas for Keyboard and Violin vol. 7/8
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| SACD or CD? | SACD (plays on all cd players) | |||||||
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| Year of release | 2009 | |||||||
| Main artist | Podger, Rachel - violin |
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| Performers | Rachel Podger - violin Gary Cooper - fortepiano | |||||||
| Introduction by artist | A Producer's Note Before embarking upon these recordings of Mozart's complete duo music for piano and violin, my experience of many of these works was as a typical post-war listener. That is to say, these were sonatas for violin and these should be performed only one at a time, usually as a good way to limber up the bowing arm and lubricate the fingers before the serious recital 'material' began. The journey of a producer in such a project - apart from all the generic responsibilities of supervising the sessions, ensuring all the music is covered and choosing the 'takes' which constitute the final product - involves regularly questioning the underlying motivation for wanting to communicate these pieces in a certain way. Both Gary Cooper and Rachel Podger have discovered a particular essence in this music, which has illuminated our understanding of the genre in Mozart's hands. For this reason, this is a radical series. For some, it may lack a tradition of the kind of structured and cultured elan which Szymon Goldberg and Radu Lupu perpetuated (produced by that wonderful Decca doyen of the dark art, Christopher Raeburn) but for others it will lift the dialogue and characterisation onto new and irradiating levels. Of course, each volume has its own narrative and how brilliantly Gary has managed to programme early (some very early!), middle and late sonatas in ways which allow one to understand Mozart's various ploys and distinctive ambitions in this music. In an ideally balanced oeuvre, one wishes there were another three big mid-to-late works. Yet what this series has done is highlight the care Mozart took in the refinement of sonatas or variations 'to order'- a touching insight into awareness of capability, perhaps individual characters of performers, and that delectable turn of domestic tenderness which these pieces often exhibit. These two players bring these intimacies to bear wonderfully and, as producer, I had great fun working with them to find the shifting moods in music whose unpretentiousness belies the supreme quality of most of these works. Indeed, some of the sonata are far greater than I had imagined. If the piano sonatas (well, say the last ten) draw upon microcosms of allusion and reference to fellow instruments and their idioms (serenades and the like), then these 'high end' piano-violin sonatas take trips which almost exceed their bounds - think of those great long adagios. So, my lasting impression, having dissected every note of the music, is of a cornucopia of hidden gems; hidden because history has under-rated, misunderstood and bowdlerized the collective meaning of these works by assuming that it is an uneven genre - but then so are the symphonies and even the operas! Finally, one asks why there hasn't previously been a complete recording on historical instruments. From my 'privileged' position as listener-in-chief, I can tell you it is because no pair can make such transparent and difficult music sound so effortless, elegant, witty, emotionally persuasive and enjoyable. | |||||||
| Composer | Mozart | |||||||
| Producer | Jonathan Attwood | |||||||
| Recording Engineer / Mastering | Jared Sacks | |||||||
| Technical Specifications | Microphones: Bruel & Kjaer 4006, Schoeps Digital Converters: DSD Super Audio/Meitner Design AD/DA Speakers: Audiolab, Holland Software: Pyramix Editing, Merging Technologies Mixing Board: Rens Heijnis, custom design Mastering Room: B+W 803d series speakers, Classe 5200 Amplifier Cables: Van den Hul | |||||||
| Inlay | Vol. 7 Allegro in Bb major, K.372 [from an incomplete Sonata first movement, completed by Abbe Maximilian Stadler] Sonata in Eb major, K.26 Fantasia in C minor for Piano, K.394 [after a fragment of a work for Violin & Piano by Mozart, composed by Stadler] 12 Variations in G major, 'La Bergère Célimène' K.374a 6 Variations in G minor, 'Hélas, j'ai perdu mon amant' K.374b vol 8 Sonata in B Flat Major, KV10 Sonata in G Major, KV11 Sonata in A Major, KV12 Sonata in F Major, KV13 Sonata in C Major, KV14 Sonata in B Flat Major, KV15 |
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| Awards |
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| Quotes | Throughout their immense survey of Mozart's sonatas for keyboard and violin, the first played on instruments of the period, Gary Cooper and Rachel Podger have been acclaimed for restoring Mozart's little-known works in the genre. That's an understatement. These penetrating players have reinvented the species, long ignored by recitalists or used as warm-up numbers. In the last two volumes of their survey, they continue lifting the veil, especially in the 1764 sonatas by the eight-year-old Mozart, where the duo add a cello (Alison McGillivray) and Cooper switches from fortepiano to harpsichord. Superlative. Classical Abschluss einer großartigen Gesamteinspielung (…) Nooit eerder in de fonografische geschiedenis van Mozarts oeuvre werden deze werken zo voorbeeldig recht gedaan. De 7e cd biedt rijpere Mozart, werken waar een verhaal bij hoort. (…) (…) geschickte Programgestaltung, ungmein liebenswürdige Interpretation.
Fono Forum (...) verblüffend und herzallerliebst. FAZZ. |
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| Running time | 1.59.54 | |||||||
| Number of cd's | 2 | |||||||
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Digital Converters: DSD Super Audio/Meitner Design AD/DA
Speakers: Audiolab, Holland
Software: Pyramix Editing, Merging Technologies
Mixing Board: Rens Heijnis, custom design
Mastering Room: B+W 803d series speakers, Classe 5200 Amplifier
Cables: Van den Hul
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Rachel Podger
Rachel Podger is one of the most creative talents to emerge in the field of period performance. Over the last two decades she has established herself as a leading interpreter of the music of the Baroque and Classical periods... |
Gary Cooper - fortepiano
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Classical
Abschluss einer großartigen Gesamteinspielung
(...) Das Ergebnis ist ein ungemein intimes und klanglich ausgewogenes Musizieren (...)
Klassik.com
(…) Nooit eerder in de fonografische geschiedenis van Mozarts oeuvre werden deze werken zo voorbeeldig recht gedaan. De 7e cd biedt rijpere Mozart, werken waar een verhaal bij hoort. (…)
(…) Het sprankelende samenspel van Rachel Podger en Gary Cooper, de compleetheid en de klankschoonheid van spel en opname maakt deze serie tot een mijlpaal in de Mozartdiscografie.
Luister 10
(…) A seriously exciting pair of discs, it comes with an impressive list of high-end audio equipment used in the recording and mastering. (…) this is a duo with a deliciously intimate and entirely credible sound, underpinned with a fine sense of the recording venue’s ambience around the listener, thanks to the use of the SCD surround channels to hint at the space.
Super Audio Corner/Gramophone Awards 2009
“A fascinating collection of ‘leftover’ to conclude the Cooper/Podger series”. Two cds: full of interest!
(…) Cooper plays a fine sounding Kirckman harpsichord, dating from the exact period of Mozart’s English visit. With it he can make the most of the youthful virtuoso’s ebullient keyboard invention (…)
(…) Cooper and Podger perform the variations with typical verve, the many repeated sections provide opportunities for ornamentation, especially in KV359, where Mozart obligingly indicates a pause-with the possibility of a mini cadenza-in each variation.
(…) It’s impossible to ignore the individuality, vitality and commitment of their performances.
Gramophone
(…) geschickte Programgestaltung, ungmein liebenswürdige Interpretation.
Fono Forum
(...) verblüffend und herzallerliebst.
FAZZ.
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