
Röntgen: Three Viola Sonatas Herbert Kefer & Markus Schirmer
Album Info
Album Veröffentlichung:
2025
HRA-Veröffentlichung:
04.04.2025
Label: Nimbus
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Instrumental
Interpret: Herbert Kefer & Markus Schirmer
Komponist: Julius Röntgen (1855-1932)
Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)
- Julius Röntgen (1855 - 1932): Sonata in A-Flat Major:
- 1 Röntgen: Sonata in A-Flat Major: I. Andante tranquillo 03:25
- 2 Röntgen: Sonata in A-Flat Major: II. Allegro 02:29
- 3 Röntgen: Sonata in A-Flat Major: III. Vivace 01:21
- 4 Röntgen: Sonata in A-Flat Major: IV. Andante piangendo 04:54
- Sonata in A Minor:
- 5 Röntgen: Sonata in A Minor: I. Andante; Thema & Variations 08:37
- 6 Röntgen: Sonata in A Minor: II. Allegro vivace 04:58
- 7 Röntgen: Sonata in A Minor: III. Allegretto 05:25
- Sonata in C Minor:
- 8 Röntgen: Sonata in C Minor: I. Allegro assai 06:01
- 9 Röntgen: Sonata in C Minor: II. Andante mesto 05:23
- 10 Röntgen: Sonata in C Minor: III. Allegro molto 04:11
- 11 Röntgen: Sonata in C Minor: IV. Un poco sostenuto 06:14
Info zu Röntgen: Three Viola Sonatas
Die drei Violinsonaten auf diesem Album wurden zwischen November 1924 und März 1925 geschrieben. Sie zeigen Julius Röntgen auf dem Höhepunkt seines Könnens. Sein freundschaftlicher Respekt vor den großen norddeutschen und Wiener Meistern hat ganz offensichtlich Eingang in sein kreatives Denken gefunden, und er bedient sich mit sicherer Hand der unterschiedlichsten Verfahren. Röntgen verfügt über ein tiefgreifendes Wissen über die Instrumente – er selbst ist ein hervorragender Pianist, und der Klavierpart stellt hohe Anforderungen. Der Bratschenpart nutzt die Vorteile des Instruments geschickt aus, ohne es jemals zu überfordern.
Der Bratschist Herbert Kefer schloss sein Studium an der Universität für Musik in Wien mit Auszeichnung ab. 1980 gründete er zusammen mit drei Kollegen das Artis-Quartett. Das Quartett hat mehr als dreißig Aufnahmen gemacht, von denen einige mit dem Grand Prix du Disque und dem Diapason d’Or ausgezeichnet wurden. 1991 wurde Herbert Kefer zum Leiter der Viola an der Universität für Musik in Graz / Institution Oberschützen ernannt.
Energie, Ausdruck und Emotion zeichnen das Musizieren des österreichischen Spitzenpianisten Markus Schirmer aus. Er gewann zahlreiche Preise und Auszeichnungen und eroberte eine Reihe bedeutender Konzertsäle und Festivals im Sturm. Er hat mit vielen renommierten Orchestern zusammengearbeitet und Kammermusik spielt eine wichtige Rolle in seiner Arbeit.
Herbert Kefer, >Viola
Markus Schirmer, Klavier
Herbert Kefer
was born in Eisenerz, Austria, in 1960. At the age of five he received his first musical education on the violin. He continued his studies with Prof. Karl Frischenschlager in Leoben and with Prof. Karl Stierhof at the University of Music in Vienna. In 1986 he graduated with distinction.
In 1980 he founded, together with three colleagues, the Artis-Quartett. From 1984 to 1985 they spent one year in Cincinnati/Ohio with the LaSalle-Quartet to profit from their knowledge as much as possible. After that, an international career including concerts at all well known festivals began (‘Salzburger Festspiele’, ‘Schubertiade Feldkirch’, ‘Wiener Festwochen’, ‘Casals Festival’ to name a few). The quartet has made more than thirty recordings, some of which have been honoured with the Grand Prix du Disque and the Diapason d´Or.
In 1991 Herbert Kefer was appointed to head of Viola at the University of Music in Graz / Institution Oberschuetzen. From 2005-2010 he was director of the Weinklang-Festival. He is in demand as a soloist as well as a sought after partner for chamber music groups.
Herbert Kefer is playing a J.B. Guadagnini from 1784 out of the collection of the Austrian National Bank.
Markus Schirmer
No matter where he tours he receives audience acclaim for his charismatic musicianship and his ability to tell vivid stories with the instrument. One of his reviews sums him up precisely:
“A pied piper on the piano…music that comes straight from the heart, the brain and the fingertips.”
After intense studies with Rudolf Kehrer, Karl-Heinz Kämmerling or Paul Badura-Skoda
the Graz born artist went on to win numerous prizes and honours and to take a number of major concert halls and festivals by storm: the Wiener Musikverein and Konzerthaus, Herkulessaal and Philharmonic (Munich), Suntory Hall (Tokyo), Wigmore Hall (London), Gewandhaus (Leipzig), Philharmonie and Konzerthaus (Berlin), Rudolfinum (Prague), Palais des Beaux Arts (Brussels), Finlandia Hall (Helsinki), Teatro Teresa Carreño Caracas), Palau de la Musica (Valencia), Victoria Hall (Geneva), Festspielhaus Baden-Baden, Teatro Olimpico (Vicenza), Megaron (Athens), Lucerne Festival, Rheingau Musik Festival, Festival international de piano “La Roque d´Antheron“, Ruhr piano festival, “Stars of White Nights Festival” (St.Petersburg), Festival pianistico internazionale “Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli” (Brescia), Vilnius Festival, Kissinger Sommer, styriarte, Bregenz Festival, Mondseetage, ISCM Music Festival and many more.
He has worked with renowned orchestras: Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra,
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra London, Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, Mariinsky Orchestra St.Petersburg, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, Vienna Symphony Orchestra, English Chamber Orchestra, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Sinfonia Varsovia, the Radio Symphony Orchestras of Vienna, Munich and Leipzig, Borusan Philharmonic, Czech Philharmonic, the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra under Valery Gergiev, Sir Neville Marriner, Vladimir Fedoseyev, Lord Yehudi Menuhin, Jukka Pekka Saraste, Sir Charles Mackerras, Michael Gielen, John Axelrod, Fabio Luisi, Yan-Pascal Tortellier, Philippe Entremont, James Judd, Paul Goodwin and Philippe Jordan among others.
He adores Schubert above all but is also enthusiastic about more obscure works such as Britten’s ironic piano concerto, the transcendental solo piano oeuvre of Szymanowski or “Castelli Romani”, an epic piano concerto by Joseph Marx.
Chamber music plays an important role in his work and his partners have included Vadim Repin, Renaud Capuçon, Julian Rachlin, Benjamin Schmid, Veronika & Clemens Hagen, Isabelle van Keulen, Sharon Kam, Nils Mönkemeyer, Christian Poltéra, Linus Roth, Natalia Prishepenko, Danjulo Ishizaka, Boris Giltburg, Patrick Demenga, Christian Altenburger, the Ensemble Wien-Berlin, the Artis-, the Auryn-, the Carmina Quartet, the String Trio Berlin and many others.
His love affair with the unusual, his daring and his eagerness to explore new territories ensure the development of sensational events outside the traditional classical repertoire:
– SCURDIA is an improvisation project which brings together extraordinary musicians from all over the world on one stage, thus allowing new artistic and creative energies to be set free by bridging various cultures.
– Markus Schirmer has great pleasure in working with actors, combining literature and music, and has developed unusual programs which are celebrated by audience and critics alike.
In collaboration with the American singer and actress Helen Schneider f.e. he presents his own adaptation of Kurt Weill’s ”The Seven Deadly Sins” for voice and piano.
For his exceptional artistic diversity Markus Schirmer was awarded the “Music Manual Award“ at the Euromusic International Music Convention and is a recipient of one of Austria’s most prestigious awards, the Karl Böhm Interpretation Prize.
He received the German Record Critics’ Award for his debut CD of Schubert Sonatas.
Further recordings including works by Haydn, Beethoven, Ravel, Mussorgsky and his strongly acclaimed outing “THE MOZART SESSIONS” together with the uplifting US chamber orchestra A FAR CRY have won numerous international prizes.
In the upcoming season he will be performing at many festivals and concert series in the United States, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, South Africa, Russia and Austria.
In addition to his work as a very successful Professor of Piano at the Music University in his hometown Graz – many of his students are acclaimed prizewinners – Markus Schirmer regularly gives international masterclasses for piano and is a sought after adjudicator at several prestigious piano competitions.
Furthermore, Markus Schirmer is artistic director of the annual international music festival ARSONORE, which every September engages top chamber musicians to perform in the Hall of Planets at Eggenberg Castle (UNESCO World Cultural Heritage) in Graz.
Booklet für Röntgen: Three Viola Sonatas