Sonia Wieder-Atherton - Chants d'est (2009)
BAND/ARTIST: Sonia Wieder-Atherton
- Title: Chants d'est
- Year Of Release: 2009
- Label: Naive
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 01:01:37
- Total Size: 285 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
Vespers, Op. 37 (Nunc dimittis) (Serge Rachmaninoff)
1. Vespers opus 37 (Nunc dimittis) 03:48
Ruralia Hungarica, Op. 32b (Ernö von Dohnanyi)
2. Ruralia Hungarica opus 32b (Andante rubato, alla zingaresca) 06:44
3. Ruralia Hungarica opus 32b (Presto) 03:51
Jewish traditional (Song in remembrance of Schubert) ((traditional))
4. Jewish traditional (Song in remembrance of Schubert) 04:25
Songs and dances (Tatar dance) (Various Composers)
5. Songs and dances (Tatar dance) 02:45
Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (Franck Krawczyk)
6. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (I) 01:52
7. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (II) 01:55
8. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (III) 01:14
9. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (IV) 01:22
10. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (V) 01:26
11. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (VI) 05:20
12. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (VII) 03:13
Alexander Nevsky, Op. 78 (Serge Prokofiev)N
13. Alexander Nevsky (The Field of the Dead) 04:56
Variations on a Slovak folksong (Bohuslav Martinů)
14. Variations on a Slovak folksong (Theme, Rubato) 01:57
15. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 1, Moderato) 01:07
16. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 2, Poco Allegro) 01:23
17. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 3, Moderato) 01:59
18. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 4, Scherzo, Allegretto) 02:08
19. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 5, Allegro) 01:22
5 Rückert-Lieder (Gustav Mahler)
20. Rückert-lieder (Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen) 06:32
Jewish traditional (Dance) (Various Composers)
21. Jewish traditional (Dance) 02:18
Performers:
Sonia Wieder-Atherton, cello
Vespers, Op. 37 (Nunc dimittis) (Serge Rachmaninoff)
1. Vespers opus 37 (Nunc dimittis) 03:48
Ruralia Hungarica, Op. 32b (Ernö von Dohnanyi)
2. Ruralia Hungarica opus 32b (Andante rubato, alla zingaresca) 06:44
3. Ruralia Hungarica opus 32b (Presto) 03:51
Jewish traditional (Song in remembrance of Schubert) ((traditional))
4. Jewish traditional (Song in remembrance of Schubert) 04:25
Songs and dances (Tatar dance) (Various Composers)
5. Songs and dances (Tatar dance) 02:45
Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (Franck Krawczyk)
6. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (I) 01:52
7. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (II) 01:55
8. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (III) 01:14
9. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (IV) 01:22
10. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (V) 01:26
11. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (VI) 05:20
12. Jeux d'enfants, After Janacek's moravian folksongs (VII) 03:13
Alexander Nevsky, Op. 78 (Serge Prokofiev)N
13. Alexander Nevsky (The Field of the Dead) 04:56
Variations on a Slovak folksong (Bohuslav Martinů)
14. Variations on a Slovak folksong (Theme, Rubato) 01:57
15. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 1, Moderato) 01:07
16. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 2, Poco Allegro) 01:23
17. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 3, Moderato) 01:59
18. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 4, Scherzo, Allegretto) 02:08
19. Variations on a slovak folksong (Variation 5, Allegro) 01:22
5 Rückert-Lieder (Gustav Mahler)
20. Rückert-lieder (Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen) 06:32
Jewish traditional (Dance) (Various Composers)
21. Jewish traditional (Dance) 02:18
Performers:
Sonia Wieder-Atherton, cello
It's impossible to avoid an aura of profound mournfulness, once Sonia Wieder-Atherton embarks on her mission of music-gathering from Central and Eastern Europe. The Sinfonia Varsovia, from Warsaw, provides a highly sensitive surround here, for what is essentially a cello showcase. The album is subtitled Songs from Slavic Lands, but its orientation isn't as folkloric as initial impressions might suggest. Traditional sounds are filtered through the studied compositional process, with the repertoire including works by Rachmaninov, Dohnányi, Prokofiev, Martinů and Mahler. A living composer, Franck Krawczyk, provides the longest work, as a midway centrepiece. There is also a pair of traditional Jewish songs to further broaden the palette.
The separate pieces are invariably episodic, but gradually make up a woven whole as they progress, building up a pseudo-suite of compatible atmospheres. Wieder-Atherton's sonorous tone always lies at the heart, her romantic flourishes taming an imagined gypsy wildness, slowing its expression down to an introverted hover. These songs might not feature any actual vocals, but the cello takes on a suitably singing role throughout. Alexander Tcherepnin's Tatar Dance is frustratingly brief, failing to hit three minutes, but it acts as a bridge into Franck Krawczyk's seven-part Jeux D'Infants. The composer might be barely 40 years old, but this work is completely in keeping with the older pieces that surround it, turning into a harrumphing waddle for oboe and clarinet, introducing theatrical percussion that suggests a tumbling clown. In a sudden schizophrenic switch, it develops a sincere sadness which marches on into Prokofiev's Field of the Dead.
Martinů's Variations on a Slovak Folksong provide the album's second extended section, once again passing through a variety of humours. Mahler follows, still morose, but with hope for the new dawning. Then, there's a short dervish romp to conclude, with another Jewish traditional dance tune.
Fingers are left itching for the next turntable selection, which has to be a double session with Taraf De Haïdouks and the Terem Quartet.
The separate pieces are invariably episodic, but gradually make up a woven whole as they progress, building up a pseudo-suite of compatible atmospheres. Wieder-Atherton's sonorous tone always lies at the heart, her romantic flourishes taming an imagined gypsy wildness, slowing its expression down to an introverted hover. These songs might not feature any actual vocals, but the cello takes on a suitably singing role throughout. Alexander Tcherepnin's Tatar Dance is frustratingly brief, failing to hit three minutes, but it acts as a bridge into Franck Krawczyk's seven-part Jeux D'Infants. The composer might be barely 40 years old, but this work is completely in keeping with the older pieces that surround it, turning into a harrumphing waddle for oboe and clarinet, introducing theatrical percussion that suggests a tumbling clown. In a sudden schizophrenic switch, it develops a sincere sadness which marches on into Prokofiev's Field of the Dead.
Martinů's Variations on a Slovak Folksong provide the album's second extended section, once again passing through a variety of humours. Mahler follows, still morose, but with hope for the new dawning. Then, there's a short dervish romp to conclude, with another Jewish traditional dance tune.
Fingers are left itching for the next turntable selection, which has to be a double session with Taraf De Haïdouks and the Terem Quartet.
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