Album info

Album-Release:
2011

HRA-Release:
02.09.2011

Label: Chandos

Genre: Classical

Subgenre:

Artist: Daniel Myssyk & Appassionata

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Idyla, Andante 04:06
  • 2 Idyla, Allegro 02:53
  • 3 Idyla, Moderato 03:55
  • 4 Idyla, Allegro 03:38
  • 5 Idyla, Adagio 05:42
  • 6 Idyla, Scherzo 03:34
  • 7 Moderato 04:02
  • 8 Heart´s Wounds 03:15
  • 9 The Last Spring 05:06
  • 10 Adagio 11:17
  • 11 Serenata Notturna Marcia Maestoso 04:29
  • 12 Serenata Notturna Menueto 04:12
  • 13 Serenata Notturna Rondeau 05:52
  • Total Runtime 01:02:01

Info for Idyla

If one were competing to put together the most unusual program of diverse works to showcase a string orchestra, I would expect this one to take first prize. It kind of reminded me of some of the creations one encounters on California cuisine menus, like sardines sautéed in suet and wrapped in seaweed. That was pretty much my initial reaction at surveying the list of ingredients represented by the composers on this disc. But that was before I listened to it. Two of the works with which I was totally unfamiliar—Janáček’s Idyla and Lekeu’s Adagio for string orchestra—turned out to be some of the most gorgeous music to caress these jaded ears in quite some time.

I’m not sure whether to call Idyla (“Idyll”) a suite or a serenade, as it subscribes to the formal layout of neither, yet contains elements of both. The piece is in seven movements, and either Smetana or Dvořák would have been proud to claim it as his own. Written in 1878 when Janáček was 24 (he was a fairly late bloomer when it came to developing his personal modernistic style), the piece is ripe Romanticism at its best. I’m a little embarrassed at not having heard it before—or for not remembering it if I had—for there are a number of prominent conductors and ensembles that have recorded it: Iona Brown and the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra for Chandos, František Jilek and the Brno State Philharmonic Orchestra for Supraphon, and Ross Pople and the London Festival Orchestra for Arte Nova, among them. In any case, I’m glad to have discovered (or rediscovered) it in this exceptionally fine account by the French Canadian, Montreal-based Ensemble Instrumental Appassionata.

When it comes to Lekeu’s Adagio for strings, I know for certain that I’ve never heard it before, and I find no other current recordings of it listed. Guillaume Lekeu (1870–1894) belongs near the very head of the list of shortest-lived composers, dying of typhoid fever at the age of 24. Off the top of my head, I think only Arriaga (1806–1826) died younger. Belgian by birth, Lekeu, like a number of the Franco-Belgian school of composers, ended up in Paris, where he became a student of César Franck and, upon Franck’s death, of Vincent d’Indy. Of Lekeu’s approximately 50 works, the only one that has retained some currency is the Violin Sonata he was commissioned to write by the great violin virtuoso Eugène Ysaÿe. Menuhin took it up, and gave the piece its first outing on a recording in 1938 with sister Hephzibah at the piano, a performance remastered and available on Naxos’s “Great Violinists” series.

Written in 1891 when Lekeu was 21—barely an adult by normal standards, but with only three years left to live), the Adagio for strings is shocking in its uncanny pre-echoing of Schoenberg’s 1899 Transfigured Night. Did Schoenberg know Lekeu’s piece? Who knows? But premonitions of the Schoenberg at certain points in Lekeu’s 11-minute work seem almost too strong to be accidental or coincidental. Again, as is the case with Janáček’s Idyla, Lekeu’s Adagio is an exquisitely beautiful piece.

Little needs to be said about the Grieg and Mozart numbers on the disc. They’ve both been done to death by countless ensembles and on countless recordings. So, buying this release for either the Two Elegiac Melodies or the Serenata notturna, superbly as they are played here by the Ensemble Instrumental Appassionata, will probably make for redundant additions to your collections. But for the Janáček and the Lekeu, I cannot give this CD a stronger recommendation. It’s over an hour’s worth of pure bliss. The ensemble’s official Web site lists this as their sole recording. Based on the sheer beauty and sheen of their playing, I hope there will be many more to come. (Fanfare Magazine, Jerry Dubins)

Ensemble Instrumental Appassionata
Daniel Myssyk, Director


Selections:

Leos Janacek (1854-1928)

Idyla (1878)


1. Andante

2. Allegro

3. Moderato

4. Allegro

5. Adagio

6. Scherzo

7. Moderato


Guillaume Lekeu (1870-1894)

Adagio Pour Orchestre A Cordes, Op. 3 (1891)


8. Adagio


Edvard Grieg (1843-1907)

Two Elegiac Melodies, Op. 34 (1881)


9. Heart's Wounds

10. Last Spring


Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

Serenata Notturna, K. 239 (1776)


11. Marcia

12. Menuetto

13. Rondeau


'Nomination for best classic album of the year!' - PRIX OPUS, January 2010

No biography found.

Booklet for Idyla

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