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- Violin Sonata: I. Allegro con fuocoComposer(s) Francis PoulencArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Violin Sonata: I. Allegro con fuoco
06:09$2.30 - Violin Sonata: II. Intermezzo, tres lent et calmeComposer(s) Francis PoulencArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Violin Sonata: II. Intermezzo, tres lent et calme
05:51$2.30 - Violin Sonata: III. Presto tragico, strictement la double plus lent (1949)Composer(s) Francis PoulencArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Violin Sonata: III. Presto tragico, strictement la double plus lent (1949)
05:16$2.30 - Waltz from Coppelia (Leo Delibes)Composer(s) Ernst von DohnanyiArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Waltz from Coppelia (Leo Delibes)
04:57$2.30 - Violin Sonata: I. Molto ModeratoComposer(s) Bela BartokArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Violin Sonata: I. Molto Moderato
08:40$3.55 - Violin Sonata: II. AllegrettoComposer(s) Bela BartokArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Violin Sonata: II. Allegretto
11:47$5.00 - Tzigane, M. 76Composer(s) Maurice RavelArtist(s) Patricia Kopatchinskaja Polina Leschenko
Tzigane, M. 76
10:09$4.25
Total running time: 52 minutes.
Album information
An album which Gramophone described as 'a properly exciting, life affirming box of delights.' This album was nominated for a 2019 BBC Music Magazine Award.
For her third album on Alpha, Patricia Kopatchinskaja is joined by a highly talented pianist whose approach to music is as extremist as hers, Polina Leschenko. Together they explore pieces that have many points in common. The Hungarian violinist Jelly d’Arányi, grandniece of Joseph Joachim, was a "muse" to both Bartók and Ravel. In 1922 and 1923, she premiered the two Bartók sonatas for violin and piano and Ravel dedicated Tzigane to her. He wrote to Bartók: "You have convinced me to compose for our friend, who plays so fluently, a little piece whose diabolical difficulty will bring to life the Hungary of my dreams; and since it will be for violin, why don’t we call it Tzigane?" Of course, Tzigane by Patricia Kopatchinskaja, who has been playing and dancing this music since her childhood in Moldova, does not sound like salon music... After a much-fêted recital at Wigmore Hall in 2017, the Financial Times wrote: "In another life, Patricia Kopatchinskaja might have been a rock star. This is a violinist who loves taking risks . . . But the final reward was worth waiting for: a denouement of astonishing force." Debussy’s Sonata, with its Arab and Javanese influences, completes this voyage, along with a piece for piano solo by Dohnányi, the Valse Coppélia after Léo Delibes, another symbol of the relations between France and Hungary.