ViolAlive
Canny Shostakovich but Lewensohn’s musical search doesn’t find too much
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Gideon Lewensohn, Dmitri Shostakovich
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Sony Classical
Magazine Review Date: 13/2011
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 69
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: 88697894552

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Sonata for Viola and Piano |
Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer
Ariel Zuckermann, Conductor Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer Gilad Karni, Viola Zürcher Kammerorchester |
ViolAlive |
Gideon Lewensohn, Composer
Ariel Zuckermann, Conductor Gideon Lewensohn, Composer Gilad Karni, Viola Zürcher Kammerorchester |
Author: David Fanning
Whether Gideon Lewensohn’s ViolAlive (2005) is preferable as a coupling to the orchestration of Shostakovich’s Violin Sonata on the Kremerata Baltica disc may depend on your taste for emotionally upfront, allusion-driven theatricality of a very spaced-out kind. The central conceit of Lewensohn’s 13 movements, of “an ongoing search for theatrical aspects of musical ideas and gestures”, is all well and good.
The trouble is that his musical invention is flaccid by comparison with, say, that of Schnittke’s Viola Concerto or Kancheli’s Styx, with whose idiom and aesthetic it significantly overlaps. Even when the piece occasionally shakes off its lethargy, the flame of inspiration burns only fitfully, and without the visual aspect of the soloist’s wanderings between groups of instrument, the impression is of self-absorption rather than anything particularly theatrical or characterful. A pity this, because Sony’s recording is of demonstration quality.
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