Four Strings around the World

Irina Muresano
Four Strings around the World

18,29 EUR
CD
Sono Luminus
Release date: 27/Apr/2018
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Product No.: 2098201723

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Details / Tracklist: Lieder im Stile der rum?nischen Volksmusik
MP3 Audio listen now for free 01. "Nr. 1 Moderato, molto rubato"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 02. "Nr. 2 Allegro giusto"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 03. "Nr. 3 Andante"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 04. "Nr. 4 Allegro giocoso"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 05. "Tar is an Caoineadh'"
Capricen für Violine solo op. 1 Nr. 1-24 (Auszug)
MP3 Audio listen now for free 06. "Nr. 24 Caprice Nr. 24"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 07. "Rezitativ und Scherzo-Caprice op. 6 (für Violine solo)"
Partita für Violine solo Nr. 2 d-moll BWV 1004 (Auszug)
MP3 Audio listen now for free 08. "Chaconne"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 09. "Calligraphy Nr. 5"
Vák (für Violine und Elektronik)
MP3 Audio listen now for free 10. "1. Alap"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 11. "2. Jor"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 12. "3. Jhalla"
The stream flows (Auszug)
MP3 Audio listen now for free 13. "2. Ohne Satzbezeichnung"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 14. "Tango-Etüde Nr. 3"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 15. "Oshta (Vier)"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 16. "The cricket dance"
Number of discs: 1
Description:

The glamorous booklet photograph shows Romanian violist Irina Muresanu standing alluringly by a private jet, dressed in a chic red dress, her fiddle safely stashed on board. Presumably she's going to fly the crate herself as this is a solo-violin album of geographically widespread ambition. The programme divides in two: Western and Eastern Europe, which ranges from Bach to the contemporary David Flynn via Enescu, Paganini and Kreisler, and Music from the Middle East, Asia, and North and South America; quite a lot to include here all round. In these days of Trumpian Giganticism it's interesting to note that the USA is represented by the minuscule Cricket Dance by Mark O'Connor.

Muresanu has selected wisely when it comes to her fellow countryman, Enescu, whose Airs in Romanian Folk Style, though written in 1926, was not to be published until 2006. There aren't many recordings around. The four movements offer plenty of opportunities for characteristic rubato-style performance and for vital dance patterns. The taut melancholia of the third piece is followed by the giocoso vibrancy of the concluding Allegro. This galvanizing reading shows its charms in fine fashion. Post-wake celebrations are encoded in Flynn's Tar Éis an Caoineadh, the Irish equivalent of the New Orleans second line cutting free after the burial. This is an eight-minute piece that draws on homages to famous Irish fiddlers and their techniques, including drones, double-stops and sul ponticello. It was, understandably, written as a companion piece to Flynn's mournful String Quartet No.3 The Keeening/An Caoineadh.

Whatever consonances may be discerned between Irish and Romanian music, the juxtaposition of Bach's Chaconne - overstated and slightly exaggerated in places - Paganini's famous 24th Caprice, individually phrased, and Kreisler's Recitativo and Scherzo, are not easy to discern. She plays the Kreisler best, with feeling and fine tone.

For the second part of her journey she visits Iran via Reza Vali's Calligraphy No.5. This draws on traditional Persian modes, employing the Dastgah. This is something of which Behzad Abdi is an outstanding exponent and, like Abdi, Vali aims at a concordance between Persian and Western techniques: Bartók is a probable starting point. Representing India, Shirish Korde's Vák, for violin and electronic drone invariably owes its inspiration to Ragas. The drone effect allows Muresanu to negotiate the work's three unbroken sections with considerable virtuosity. Bright Sheng's international reputation is now of long standing and The Stream Flows, of which we hear only the second part (shame) evokes the sound of the erhu in this dance-patterned and pizzicato-flecked piece. Piazzolla's Tango Etude No.3 possesses all its resonant and driving capital in this solo reading. The Chickasaw Nation meanwhile is represented by the composer who has managed to defeat my symbol-heavy typing technology, Jerod Impichchaachaaha' Tate (the first 'a' of his surname is apparently underlined). Oshta (Four) is a long-established stylistic hybrid, like a number of pieces in this journey, based on a Choctaw church hymn, whereas The Cricket Dance is a bit of a romp from that master fiddler O'Connor.

There's certainly plenty of variety here though I can't help feeling excising the Chaconne and including less formally demanding pieces might have allowed the programme to flow more convincingly. But there are three world premiere recordings here - the Flynn, Korde and Oshta - so Muresanu's well recorded, passport-less adventures deserve reward.

Jonathan Woolf

No. of tracks: 16
Manufacturer No.: DSL92221
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