Bach (Бах) - Sonatas & Partitas for Solo Violin [Ehnes (Энес)] 2CD (FLAC)
20:08
Six Sonatas And Partitas For Solo Violin by Johann Sebastian Bach Performer:
James Ehnes (Violin - ex-Marsick Stradivarius of 1715)
Period: Baroque Written: 1720; Cöthen, Germany Release Date: 11/28/2000 Length: 2 Hours 30 Mins. Format: FLAC
Hard on the heels of Gregory
Fulkerson's recent superb recording of these works for Bridge Records
comes this equally fine but wholly different version by young Canadian
violinist James Ehnes. This is in every way an astounding performance,
and I can't think of any other that sounds quite like it. Analekta has
captured the soloist in an intimate yet flattering acoustic, and aside
from a lovely tone and virtuosity to spare, what Ehnes brings to this
music is an incredible sense of rhythm and a precise knowledge of how to
use it. The final movement (Allegro assai) of Sonata No. 3, for
example, isn't as quick as Fulkerson, Milstein, or Grumiaux play it, but
what a wealth of detail, what a firm sense of line, and what clear harmonic direction Ehnes gives the music!
In the three great fugues (one in each sonata), Ehnes makes less of the
dynamic contrast between subject and answer than many other players, and
you would think this a liability, but in reality it gives the music a
welcome fullness of texture and energizes Bach's contrapuntal lines,
both real and implied. Similarly, the Chaconne's majestic pace (it's one
of the slower ones, lasting a bit longer than 16 and a half minutes)
never seems heavy or sluggish thanks to Ehnes' amazing ability to
project a steady, clear, triple-time rhythm that inexorably sustains
(indeed enhances) the music's incredibly powerful harmonic tensions over
its entire, epic length. It goes without saying that anyone who can
achieve this will do wonders in differentiating and characterizing the
various dances that comprise the remaining numbers in the three
partitas.
One of Bach's more amazing feats of transcription was his recasting of
the Preludio from the E major Partita as the introduction to Cantata No.
29, rescoring it for solo organ and large orchestra (including trumpets
and drums). Ehnes manages to match that arrangement in brilliance,
depth, and grandeur, and no other single example of his playing offers
finer testimony to his ability to project the music's scale, its very
completeness, despite the theoretical limitations of writing for a
single violin. And that, in a nutshell, is the whole point, isn't it?
[2/28/2001]
--David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
На мой взгляд, самое лучшее исполнение сонат и партит Баха.
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