Product Description Sergei Prokofiev's two Violin Concertos mark the beginning and the end of his exile: his early, challenging neoclassicism and the artistic route from his nomadic life in exile back to his home country. Ever since her career as a promising star of the GDR,Franziska Pietsch has felt at home in the music of this Russian composer, making her an ideal interpreter of Prokofiev's virtuosic and multifaceted idiom.Franziska Pietsch now presents an album featuring both Violin Concertos of the Russian composer,Alongside Cristian M celaru and the Deutsches SymphonieOrchester Berlin she presents a thrilling new recording. The two violin concertos represent two phases in, and two sides of, Prokofiev's life and work. The first was written during an era of early successes, stylistically and temporally close to his Symphonie classique, but not premiered until he was in exile. The second mirrors the itinerant existence of his life as a musician in exile, but also his longing to return to Russia. Franziska Pietsch, the Anne-Sophie Mutter of East Germany (W. Dulisch) From promising star of the GDR with a burgeoning solo career to boycott, via a new beginning, chamber music and leading orchestras, back to being a soloist and enriched by a transformed understanding of her own role: with this recording of the Prokofiev Violin Concertos, Franziska Pietsch has come full circle. Thanks to her intensive engagement with chamber music and her experience as a concertmaster, Franziska Pietsch's performances as a soloist are not only world-class, but also characterised by an exceptional sense of chamber-like intimacy. Review Turning her back on the recent fashion for mixing Prokofiev's concertante and chamber works and having already recorded the violin sonatas and Five Melodies (Audite, 8/16), Franziska Pietsch settles for the concertos alone. Should that sound ungenerous, the music-making is individual enough to make amends. Stravinsky admired Prokofiev's First Violin Concerto but he might not have cared for the passionate subjectivity of Pietsch's interpretation. Embracing more intrusive vibrato and rasp than most rivals though Leila Josefowicz (Philips, 12/01) is certainly grittier this is a compellingly individual account, profoundly lyrical where it needs to be, never cloying. Without ignoring the music's delicate fairy-tale element, Pietsch often moves the expression into a dangerous territory of real-world emotion which may or may not relate to her own back story as a victim of Communist repression. After her father's defection to the West in 1984, the East German authorities did their best to scupper her own burgeoning career, preventing the prodigy from giving concerts or taking lessons. Once in the West she specialised in chamber music and has experience as an orchestra leader. On disc at least she would seem to have avoided concertos.The proto-Soviet Second Concerto is paced quite deliberately, though with no trace of heavy-handedness. The adoption of an anxiously confidential manner here has the effect of bringing the two concertos closer together in terms of feeling. Again Pietsch is at pains to shed new light on the music's itinerary. In the second movement she makes less of the central climax than, say, Kyung-Wha Chung (Decca, 3/77), finding a special Innigkeit and sense of regret in the final restatement of the arioso theme. There is no celebration in the finale's final flight.Pietsch's relationship with the musicians of the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin seems close, helped by a fine studio recording made in the ideal acoustic of the Jesus-Christus-Kirche in Berlin-Dahlem. The conductor, himself a violinist, is Romanian-born Cristian Ma celaru, who recently took over the directorship of the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music long associated with Marin Alsop. On this evidence he too is someone to watch. You can usually sense whether you're in for a special performance of the D major Concerto even before the soloist enters. Making the most of its opening shimmer entails taking the dynamics down below what the composer actually asks for.Pietsch was once proclaimed the AnneSophie Mutter of East Germany . She hasn't quite the same sovereign command of intonation but her intense commitment is never in doubt. There are plenty of safer, cleaner, more generously coupled alternatives in these concertos James Ehnes (Chandos, 10/13) springs to mind but in its mix of tenderness, raw emotion and high fidelity this one is rather special. --David Gutman - Gramophone
P**Y
Beautiful, spacious readings of Prokofiev.
There have been quite a few recordings of these wonderful concertos lately, but these are quite excellent. Pietsch and Macelaru play them beautifully and take their time, too, producing a richly detailed sound in a realistic and spacious acoustic. I’ve enjoyed these performances as much as any I can recall. Glorious, really. Short playing time aside, this disc is highly recommended.
D**H
Top class new recordings
These concertos don't get much of an airing in the concert halls nowadays (though I did catch a riveting if rare performance last year of the number 2 in Tel Aviv with Lisa Batiasvhivili and the Israel Philharmonic) so it is too good to have so many fine performances on record. The first recording I owned in my teens was of the first concerto with David Oistrakh and it was only a few years later I became familiar with the second one which is more often paired with the Shostakovich first in order to fill up a cd. So it is good to have them both together on one disc albeit lasting less than an hour - not that it matters when like many people I can stream it from Amazon Prime.These recordings go right to the top. Detailed clear sound, emotional playing when appropriate but whimsical and humorous when required. Glorious listening.
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