Dark Velvet: An Autobiography in Music

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Julija Hartig

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Challenge Classics

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 72

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: CC72906

CC72906. Dark Velvet: An Autobiography in Music

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Guslarska Rudolf Bruči, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Dijalogi Tibor Hartig, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Maja Bogdanovic, Cello
Monolog Tibor Hartig, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
The Music of Erich Zann Florian Magnus Maier, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Air & Riffs Veljko Nenadić, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Reineke Broekhans, Piano
A Song for Isidora Calliope Tsoupaki, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Constellation Hartig Aleksandra Vrebalov, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Reineke Broekhans, Piano
De Jaque, Sal, Gala y Luna Juan Felipe Waller, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Oh, die, my love Isidora Žebeljan, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Dark Velvet Veljko Nenadić, Composer
Isidora Žebeljan, Composer
Julija Hartig, Composer
Reineke Broekhans, Piano

Music often means more when shaped by personal experience, as this album of compositions for solo and duo combinations performed by violinist Julija Hartig, pianist Reineke Broekhans and cellist Maja Bogdanović attests. Subtitled ‘an autobiography in music’, the programme’s 10 pieces were either written or arranged for Hartig, each one adding its own narrative strand to an interconnected journey linking the Serbian violinist’s Yugoslav heritage with subsequent musical life and activities in the Netherlands, where she has lived since 1994.

The most obvious autobiographical thread is seen in Hartig’s inclusion of two pieces by her father, Tibor, the expressively angst-ridden Monolog for solo violin contrasting with a more conversational and neoclassical tone heard in Dijalogi for violin and cello, the music’s repartee-like nature aided by Hartig and cellist Bogdanovic´’s slick exchanges.

Several pieces on the album were either written by or are linked to Serbian composer Isidora Žebeljan, described by Robert Hugill as ‘a vivid and restless talent’. Žebeljan’s Dark Velvet was originally written for solo piano (and often performed by her in that version) but appears here in a new arrangement for violin and piano by one of the composer’s pupils, Veljko Nenadić. Composed as a homage to Mahler (with Messiaen’s presence never far from the surface), its poignancy is further intensified by ebeljan’s death in 2020 at the age of only 53. An arrangement of Žebeljan’s ‘Oh, die, my love’, taken from the composer’s Rukoveti song-cycle, sung and played by Hartig, is given an almost Kopatchinskaja-like treatment.

A further tribute to Žebeljan’s legacy is provided by Greek composer Calliope Tsoupaki’s folk-imbued A Song for Isidora, while her presence is sensed in Nenadić’s Air & Riffs for violin and piano, a dreamlike opening section transforming into something altogether more nightmarish by the end. For me, at least, the main highlights belong to Aleksandra Vrebalov’s evocative, soundscape-like Constellation Hartig for violin and prepared piano, and Florian Magnus Maier’s The Music of Erich Zann for solo violin – the latter a visceral 10-minute tour de force that impressively harnesses both compositional and violinistic layers of virtuosity.

Explore the world’s largest classical music catalogue on Apple Music Classical.

Included with an Apple Music subscription. Download now.

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.67 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Full website access

From £8.75 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.