Kodály - Cirri - Halvorsen - Clière
Zoltan Kodály (1882–1967): Duet for Violin and Violoncello op. 7
Giovanni Battista Cirri (1724–1808): Duet op. 12 in G Major (first
recording)
Johan Halvorsen (1864–1935): Passacaglia
Reinhold Glière (1874–1956): Eight Duets for Violin and Violoncello
op. 39
Eight Strings: Valeria Nasushkina & Mikael Samsonov
Zoltan Kodály’s Duet from 1914 can be considered as
one of the major standard works for the combination
of violin and violoncello. The duet by Italian composer
Giovanni Battista Cirri, on the other hand, is a
rarity, and it is now being presented on recording for
the first time here. Cirri, who was himself a cellist, is
known today primarily for his cello sonatas and concertos,
which are frequently used as teaching material.
The duet, however, is absolutely worthy of concert
performance and offers a broad range of moods and
sound effects.
Reinhold Glière taught at the Moscow Conservatory;
Prokofieff and Myaskovsky were among his
students. He held a number of high posts in Russian
cultural politics; his works embody a Russian-nationalistic
style that was completely in line with socialist
realism. His Eight Duets portray various musical forms
and movements in charming musical miniatures.
Moldavian violinist Valeria Nasushkina and
Byelorussian-born cellist Mikael Samsonov are the
Duo Eight Strings. They won prizes at the International
Gaetano Zinetti Competition in 2008, the
International Marco Fiorindo Chamber Music Competition
in 2009 and at the International Cittá di
Padova Prize Competition in 2009 as well.
Valeria Nasushkina
As soloist and chamber musician, Valeria
Nasushkina has performed at multiple
international festivals, such as the Cardiff
Festival (Wales, England), Schwetzinger
Festspiele, the 6th Hambacher Musikfest
(Germany), the Evian Rostropovich Festival,
Royaumont Festival (France) as well as in numerous
prestigious Concert Halls – Queen
Elizabeth Hall (London), the Tempelliaukion
Hall (Helsinki), Liederhalle (Stuttgart), Alte
Aula (Heidelberg) etc. The young Moldavian
violinist has studied with and received
high praise from the leading personalities of
our days such as David Takeno, Joseph Rissin
and the distinguished Alban Berg Quartet.
In the course of her career, Valeria has
been awarded a number of prizes, including
the First prize at the National Young Artists’
Competition (USSR, 1988), Winner of
the First Year String Prize (London, 1995),
First prize at the Chamber Music Competition
of the Kulturfonds Baden (Germany,
2002), First prize at the International Chamber
Music Competition in Karlsruhe (Germany,
2004), Premio “Luoghi di confine”
all’eccellenza and Premio Speciale “Artists in
residence” at the International “Gaetano Zinetti”
Competition (Italy, 2008) and the first
prize at the International “Marco Fiorindo”
Competition (Torino, Italy) in 2008. Valeria
Nasushkina has gained valuable experience
working with such remarkable musicians as
Mark Lubotsky, Sir Yehudi Menuhin, Jörg-
Wolfgang Jah and Ensembles like Tokyo
String Quartet and the Borodin String Quartet.
She has not only received criticical acclaim
in press but has also been hailed by her
audiences. Valeria is continuously taking part
in radio broadcasts: 2002 – Südwestrundfunk
(Tchaikovsky Foundation Tübingen),
2003 – SWR2 Live Broadcast (Schwetzinger
Festspiele), 2003 – Bavarian Radio (14th Oleg
Kagan Music Festival Kreuth), 2005 – Radio
Berlin-Brandenburg “Podium Junger Künstler”,
2009 – SWR Classic.
“Valeria Nasushkina aroused enthusiasm by her
confident and virtuoso playing. She drew miraculous
full sounds of her violin and enchanted
her audience already with the very first tone of
her performance …”
Stuttgarter Nachrichten
Mikael Samsonov
Born in Minsk (Republic of Belarus),
Mikael Samsonov studied at the State
Academy of Music in his hometown and was
awarded a scholarship at London’s Guildhall
School of Music and Drama. In 2004, he
graduated with distinction at the Staatliche
Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende
Kunst Stuttgart (Germany). He has been
invited as soloist and chamber musician to
concert halls throughout Europe, Russia and
the United States, including the Megaron
Hall (Athens), the Great Hall of the Moscow
Conservatoire (Russia) and the United Nations’
Hall (New York). Mikael has taken part
in several international festivals: Festspiele
Passau, 6th Hambach Festival, Schwetzinger
Festspiele, and the 14th Kagan Music
Festival Kreuth. The young cellist has been
performing as soloist with orchestras such
as the Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra,
the Virtuosi di Praga, the Nizhni Novgorod
Philharmonia Orchestra, the Minsk Philharmonic
Symphony and Chamber Orchestras
as well as playing the Principal Cello of the
Radio Symphony Orchestra in Stuttgart,
North German Radio Symphony Orchestra
in Hamburg, South West German Philharmonic
Orchestra in Konstanz and Wuerttemberg
Philharmonic Orchestra. In the course
of his professional career, Mikael Samsonov
has been awarded a number of prizes, including
the first prize at the All-Union Cello
Competition (USSR, 1989), first prize at the
“Concertino Praga” International Competition
in Prague (Czech Republic, 1991), special prize at the “Leonard Rose” International
Cello Competition (USA, 1997), first prize
at the Chamber Music Competition of the
Kulturfonds Baden (Germany, 2002), first
prize at the International Chamber Music
Competition in Karlsruhe (Germany, 2004),
Premio “Luoghi di confine” all’eccellenza
and Premio Speciale “Artists in residence” at
the International “Gaetano Zinetti” Competition
(Verona, Italy) and the first prize at the
International “Marco Fiorindo” Competition
(Torino, Italy) in 2008.
Between pure art, education,
and adaptation
On the duo for violin and cello: Kodály, Cirri,
Halvorsen, and Glière
Perhaps it really is significant that, in his
three-volume work of 1782–93 Versuch
einer Anleitung zur Composition, Heinrich
Christoph Koch describes the flute duos
of Georg Philipp Telemann and Johann
Joachim Quantz as the first original instrumental
duos, on the basis of their contrapuntal
arrangements. In fact, it was Arcangelo
Corelli and Johann Sebastian Bach who set
genre-defining standards in chamber music.
Corelli, for instance, took the trio and the
violin sonata to new creative heights, but also
defined them for posterity in exemplary style.
These were the two key genres of chamber
music in the era of the basso continuo.
Bach, on the other hand, was the key innovator
when it came to the sonata for melody
instruments without continuo, though
with cembalo. However, the duo without
continuo is an almost unique genre, and it
is very difficult to understand its development.
This is because we just do not have
any great key works from the early period to
use as models, and there are also few leading
personalities to have taken on the duo. This
brings us back to the uniqueness of the genre
itself – the extreme restriction and reduction
of the instrumentation is a big challenge to
the composer. For this reason, Duo op. 7 for
violin and cello by Zoltán Kodály must count
as one of the great works, and one that also
enriches chamber music as a whole. It was
written in 1913 and first performed in 1918.
Kodály’s unusual tonal and harmonic
integration of the voices and the medium
is ample evidence of his creative originality.
One significant factor influencing Kodály’s
three-movement work was his own field
work in ethnomusicology. From 1905 onward
Kodály, himself a violinist, was one of the first
people to study the folk music of his native
Hungary. Starting in 1906, he published several
volumes of the results and sources of the
research, together with Béla Bartók. Listen if
you will to the final movement, where you will
hear a verbunkos mood, which was later to
characterize the main movement of Bartók’s
1938 Contrasts for violin, clarinet, and piano,
or his Violin Concerto No. 2 from 1930/31.
This Hungarian dance and musical style
evolved in the 18th century and was originally
played when recruiting soldiers. The
Sinti and Roma had a major influence on the
verbunkos. What is also particularly striking
is the distinctive pentatonic (five-tone)
scale, which the French Impressionists also
exploited. We can therefore hear in the Duo
op. 7 a preliminary study for Kodály’s 1917
essay Pentatonik in der ungarischen Volksmusik
(The Pentatonic Scale in Hungarian
Folk Music). Above all, however, in 1914 this
work heralded an exciting renaissance for the
serious duo; the duos that had prevailed in
the 19th century were written primarily for
teaching purposes. Prior to that, adaptations
of catchy tunes from the opera were particularly
popular. The Norwegian Johan Halvorsen
continued the tradition with his 1894
work Passacaglia on a theme by Handel.
Of course Halvorsen – who was also
concertmaster of the Leipzig Gewandhaus
Orchestra and was married to Edvard Grieg’s
niece – is not adapting a popular opera tune
here. However, the final Passacaglia from Suite
No. 7 in G minor (HWV 432 I/7) for piano by
Georg Friedrich Handel is always succinct. In
his duo, Halvorsen’s variations on the theme
show that the praise he received for his sense
of instrumentation was well founded – the
violin and cello lines intermingle with such
virtuosity that in places one could easily imagine
one was listening to a string quartet.
By contrast, for Reinhold Glière there was
only disdain, and it came not only from the
leading Soviet music theorists Boris Assafyev
and Ivan Sollertinsky, but also from Dmitri
Shostakovitch.
As a teacher at the Moscow Conservatory,
Glière was held in high esteem. His
best known pupils were Sergei Prokofiev and
Nikolai Myaskovsky. On the other hand, in
1954 Shostakovitch described Glière’s compositional
output as “large-scale production
planning.” Assafyev is even more explicit in his
1930 paper Music in Russia. He cites Glière as
having an “easy manner about his composing,”
a “complete lack of anything distinctive,” and
an “indifference to artistic progress.” Glière
was a talented eclectic, he said – though his
chamber music comes off much better.
The latter showed a “thorough acquisition
of rational principles in texture and form,” a
“command of thematic development,” and
an “ability one does not often see to drive the
sound of the ensemble most favorably.” This
is also true for the Eight Duos op. 39, which
reflect different forms and types of movement
– even if Glière’sV iolin Duo op. 49 does
represent a more weighty contribution to the
genre. On the other hand, whether the Duo
op. 12 No. 4 by Giovanni Battista – or Giambattista
– Cirri can be counted among the
didactic pieces is a matter of doubt. To be
sure, Cirri was himself a cellist and is known
today mainly for his cello sonatas and cello
concertos. His works have been used mainly
as teaching pieces, and remain almost completely
unknown to concert audiences.
However, the Italian from Forlì did receive
the rare honor of being allowed to perform
one of his symphonies at the “Concert
Spirituel” in Paris. That was in 1763. Apart
from Paris, Cirri also worked in London. His
Duo op. 12 No. 4 is part of a six-part series
of works. Alexander Feinland also published
it in his collection Three Duets from the 18th
century, calling it “Duet op. 5.” It is also a
matter of some doubt whether this work was
in fact composed for his own use – the slow
middle movement is full of bold voice lead
ing, cleverly invented melody, and the highly
original fusion of different, sometimes even
contrary, characteristics. No less impressive
are the sudden deviations into the minor key
in the final rondo and the melancholic playing
in the bridge.
Florian Olters
Translation: tolingo translations