Fischer & Müller-Schott: Duo Sessions
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Ervín Schulhoff, Zoltán Kodály, Johan Halvorsen, Maurice Ravel
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Orfeo
Magazine Review Date: AW16
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 64
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: C902 161A

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Duo |
Zoltán Kodály, Composer
Daniel Müller-Schott, Cello Julia Fischer, Violin Zoltán Kodály, Composer |
Duo for Violin and Cello |
Ervín Schulhoff, Composer
Daniel Müller-Schott, Cello Ervín Schulhoff, Composer Julia Fischer, Violin |
Sonata for Violin and Cello |
Maurice Ravel, Composer
Daniel Müller-Schott, Cello Julia Fischer, Violin Maurice Ravel, Composer |
Passacaglia |
Johan Halvorsen, Composer
Daniel Müller-Schott, Cello Johan Halvorsen, Composer Julia Fischer, Violin |
Author: Rob Cowan
There’s not much to choose between the two teams in the finale, whereas at the start of Kodály’s Duo Kennedy’s natural penchant for folk-style music lends a spot of added pungency to his attack, and when it comes to the gypsy-style fiddle solo over a cello drone at 4'24" into the finale (Fischer/Müller-Schott) or 4'34" (Kennedy/Harrell), Kennedy captures the music’s sense of improvisation to a T. Fischer sounds just a little too formal, even urbane. Talking in conversation about Erwin Schulhoff’s Duo of 1925 (in the booklet), she’s admirably honest about how she finds certain passages elusive, whether slow or fast, though I’d never have guessed as much had I not read the interview before listening to the CD. The fast Zingaresca has real drive, the finale a dogged, insistent quality.
Filling out their CD, Kennedy and Harrell add a Bach two-part Invention and the brilliant ‘encore’ that Fischer and Müller-Schott also include, the Passacaglia after Handel by Halvorson. Kennedy and Harrell open the piece emphatically and stretch its duration a minute beyond that of Fischer and Müller-Schott. Kennedy and Harrell offer a far more eventful reading, opting to turn some of the slower music into a shimmering tremolando. Fischer and Müller-Schott, on the other hand, rest content with the odd added embellishment, though both employ sul ponticello.
Choosing between the two duos is difficult but for me the presence of Schulhoff’s enigmatic work on the new CD is a little too much of a draw to resist. Paradoxically, were that not the case, I’d incline more towards Kennedy and Harrell, simply because they throw themselves at the Ravel and Kodály works with such wholehearted abandon. Fischer and Müller-Schott are evidently en route to the same destination but they never quite get there.
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