Isang Yun: Chamber Music
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REVIEW:
Yun radically cut sections from his 1991 Sonata for violin and piano shortly before its premiere, ostensibly to reinforce the transparency of the violin part. In Walter-Wolfgang Sparrerās view this was a mistake, and here Egidius Streiff and Kaya Han deliver a majestic performance of the original version in what is its first recording. By Yunās standards the opening is rather conventional, with the expressive violin singing over the pianoās chordal, punctuating accompaniment but this soon develops more unpredictably, with a rapid piano episode echoed by the violin in lively, almost neo-classical vein. Essentially the first part of the work is mercurial and turbulent, at times almost Bartokian. But the second part is slow and, reflective. There is a magical passage at 15:00 which is prayer-like in its simplicity, whereby Streiffās violin almost seems to speak. The sonataās conclusion is profoundly affecting as the work evaporates into nothingness.
It is largely down to CPO, ECM and Capriccio (three German labels) that Isang Yunās legacy is primarily being maintained and reinforced. Connoisseurs of the finest modern music have much to thank them for.
ā MusicWeb International
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Isang Yun: Chamber Music
Isang Yun: Chamber Music
-----
REVIEW:
Yun radically cut sections from his 1991 Sonata for violin and piano shortly before its premiere, ostensibly to reinforce the transparency of the violin part. In Walter-Wolfgang Sparrerās view this was a mistake, and here Egidius Streiff and Kaya Han deliver a majestic performance of the original version in what is its first recording. By Yunās standards the opening is rather conventional, with the expressive violin singing over the pianoās chordal, punctuating accompaniment but this soon develops more unpredictably, with a rapid piano episode echoed by the violin in lively, almost neo-classical vein. Essentially the first part of the work is mercurial and turbulent, at times almost Bartokian. But the second part is slow and, reflective. There is a magical passage at 15:00 which is prayer-like in its simplicity, whereby Streiffās violin almost seems to speak. The sonataās conclusion is profoundly affecting as the work evaporates into nothingness.
It is largely down to CPO, ECM and Capriccio (three German labels) that Isang Yunās legacy is primarily being maintained and reinforced. Connoisseurs of the finest modern music have much to thank them for.
ā MusicWeb International
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Description
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REVIEW:
Yun radically cut sections from his 1991 Sonata for violin and piano shortly before its premiere, ostensibly to reinforce the transparency of the violin part. In Walter-Wolfgang Sparrerās view this was a mistake, and here Egidius Streiff and Kaya Han deliver a majestic performance of the original version in what is its first recording. By Yunās standards the opening is rather conventional, with the expressive violin singing over the pianoās chordal, punctuating accompaniment but this soon develops more unpredictably, with a rapid piano episode echoed by the violin in lively, almost neo-classical vein. Essentially the first part of the work is mercurial and turbulent, at times almost Bartokian. But the second part is slow and, reflective. There is a magical passage at 15:00 which is prayer-like in its simplicity, whereby Streiffās violin almost seems to speak. The sonataās conclusion is profoundly affecting as the work evaporates into nothingness.
It is largely down to CPO, ECM and Capriccio (three German labels) that Isang Yunās legacy is primarily being maintained and reinforced. Connoisseurs of the finest modern music have much to thank them for.
ā MusicWeb International