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Gil Shaham plays Haydn and Mendelssohn on new CD

Offering an ebullient counterbalance to the often shadowy intensity of many of the works Gil Shaham is performing this season in his ongoing “Concertos of the 1930s” project, the celebrated violinist presents a new recording of Haydn’s Violin Concerto No. 1 in C major and Violin Concerto No. 4 in G major and Mendelssohn’s Octet.  Shaham is joined by the Sejong Soloists on the new CD, due for release on March 30 on his own label, Canary Classics. 

Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) died in the same year that Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) was born; the new recording grew out of the centenary concerts that Shaham and Sejong gave in 2009.  Haydn was no doubt an influence on Mendelssohn’s music, and the younger composer held the earlier master in the highest esteem. The works featured on the new album share a buoyant enthusiasm reflective of both composers’ youth:  Mendelssohn was just a teenager when the debut of his Octet in 1825 catapulted him to fame; Haydn wrote the two concertos heard on this disc during the 1760s, when he was in his 30s and still in his self-proclaimed “extended youthful period.”

Gil Shaham comments on the recording of Mendelssohn’s Octet:  “Documents from the time show Mendelssohn thought of this piece as a ‘brand new type of music’ – revolutionary music from a 16-year-old who was out to prove himself and change the musical world.  Although we stuck almost exclusively with Mendelssohn’s final revised version of the Octet, looking at the original was inspiring. The faster tempo markings and the attention to staccato articulation in Mendelssohn’s own handwriting persuaded us to try to conjure up a magical spirit world conveyed in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer’s Night Dream and Goethe’s Faust, both works that greatly fired the young composer’s imagination.”

Haydn’s Concerto in C major was written for the violinist Alois Luigi Tomasini, whose star as a soloist was rising throughout Central Europe and who had recently begun his tenure as concert-master of the Esterhazy Orchestra, for whom Haydn would write so many of his works during his decades of service to the Esterhazy family in Eisenstadt. The C major presents greater technical challenges than the G major concerto, although as Stephen Somary explains in the album’s liner notes: “it allows the composer to focus [in the G major] on rhythmically driven and soaring melodic lines, as well as beautiful long phrases, especially in the slow second movement.” 

Gil Shaham and Sejong’s association extends back more than ten years. Shaham says that performing the Mendelssohn Octet with Sejong is “like playing basketball with seven Michael Jordans. It was a privilege for me, sitting there with my graying hair, to try and keep up with their artistry.” Sejong is renowned for its cohesiveness and refreshing musical style, and together with Shaham the ensemble brings to this repertoire a sense of intimacy, compelling intensity and engagement. (Shaham, incidentally, studied at Juilliard with renowned violin professor Hyo Kang, Sejong’s Artistic Director.)

Shaham and Sejong have toured the featured repertoire extensively, and as the concert review in the Santa Barbara Independent noted: “Shaham manages to combine extraordinary virtuosity with uncommon restraint … The majestic sweep of the augmented quartet form was given full rein … Two powerful forces in the service of a higher cause.”

Shaham’s previous recording for Canary Classics was a tribute to Spanish violinist and composer Pablo de Sarasate in his centenary year.  In its December issue, BBC Music magazine noted: “With his pure tone, immaculately clear delivery and refusal to over-indulge, Shaham proves to be an almost ideal interpreter of this repertory.  There’s a palpable sense of excitement in the live recordings as he surmounts all the technical hurdles of the Carmen Fantasy and Zigeunerweisen with outrageous ease.”  Gramophone’s similarly enthusiastic review followed in January: “Both violinists [Shaham and Adele Anthony] have a real feeling for the music – its sometimes outrageous showmanship, which Shaham is particularly good at portraying, combined with easy, graceful, aristocratic manners.”

Complete liner notes for the new album and additional information are available at the Canary Classics web site: http://www.canaryclassics.com/canaryclassicsreleases.php

A list of Shaham’s upcoming engagements follows.

 

Mendelssohn: Octet in E-flat major;
Haydn: Concertos in C major and G major
Gil Shaham, violin
Sejong Soloists
Available March 30, 2010 on Canary Classics

 
Gil Shaham – upcoming engagements in 2010
 
March 13
Istanbul, Turkey
Solo Bach recital
 
March 15
Bologna, Italy
Solo Bach recital
Teatro Comunale
 
March 16
Varese, Italy
Solo Bach recital
Sala Napoleonica
 
March 17
Cologne, Germany
Solo Bach recital
Kölner Philharmonie
 
April 9 & 10
St. Louis, MO
Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
 
April 11
St. Louis, MO
Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 2
Stravinsky: Violin Concerto
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
 
April 14
Los Angeles, CA
Stravinsky: Violin Concerto
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
Walt Disney Concert Hall
 
April 15
Palm Desert, CA
Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
McCallum Theatre
 
April 16
Davis, CA
Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
Mondavi Center, UC Davis
 
April 17
San Francisco, CA
Stravinsky: Violin Concerto
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
Davies Symphony Hall
 
April 18
San Francisco, CA
Prokofiev: Violin Concerto No. 2
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
Davies Symphony Hall
 
April 24
Richmond, VA
Program includes music by Sarasate
Richmond Symphony / conductor TBA
Carpenter Center
 
April 29 & 30
Baltimore, MD
Stravinsky: Violin Concerto
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra / Alsop
 
May 12 & 13
London, UK
Walton: Violin Concerto
Philharmonia Orchestra / Hugh Wolff
 
May 19 & 20
London, UK
Barber: Violin Concerto
Philharmonia Orchestra / Karabits
 
June 13-15
Dresden, Germany
Berg: Violin Concerto
Staatskapelle Dresden / Robertson
 
June 24 & 25
Stravinsky: Violin Concerto
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra / Jansons
 
August 26
London, UK
Barber: Violin Concerto
BBC Symphony Orchestra / Robertson
Royal Albert Hall

 

www.canaryclassics.com

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© 21C Media Group, March 2010

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