Home Music Galina Ustvolskaya (1919-2006): Three pieces – 1949 to 1964

Galina Ustvolskaya (1919-2006): Three pieces – 1949 to 1964

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Galina-Ustvolskaya-Fnl-JDGGalina Ustvolskaya (1919-2006) – Sonata for violin and piano; Trio for clarinet, violin and piano; Duet for violin and piano: Patricia Kopatchinskaja: violin; Markus Hinterhäuser: piano; Rato Bieri: clarinet

There is an intimate spiritual and artistic relationship between Shostakovich and Galina Ustvolskaya; one that has been compared to that of Schoenberg and Webern. Musically, however, she owed allegiance to no one, but ploughed her lonely furrow as if she existed in a time warp. Ms. Ustvolskaya also had a flair for the dramatic, which was perfected by her very existence in that “lonely” place. The composer liked to insist that “there is no link whatsoever between my music and that of any other composer, living or dead,” however there is counterpoint in her music, melded, of course, with her own wild idiosyncrasies: considerable use of extreme dynamics; employing groups of instruments in order to introduce tone clusters; and the use of piano or percussion to beat out regular unchanging rhythms (all of her acknowledged works use either piano or percussion, many use both. And then there is the use of few melismas, but of repetitive motifs and of sound and silence. The selection here of three great pieces reiterates her musical values and the Camus-like strangeness–L’Étranger in music.

Galina-Ustvolskaya-Cover-FinalThis mesmerizing; this Outsider-ness is seemingly the sub-text of this music—the “Sonata for violin and piano,” “Trio for clarinet, violin and piano,” and the “Duet for violin and piano”. Bells and whispers abound. There is also as might be expected the impulse to adorn this music with the celebrated tone clusters that Ms. Ustvolskaya seemed to revel in. The pianist Markus Hinterhäuser makes sure that they ring out and take wing; as does violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja, who plays with great accuracy and sensitivity. It is also incumbent upon the clarinetist Rato Bieri to espouse with suppleness and animation the clarinet portions of the celebrated Trio. The deceptively difficult sonic gravitas of the tone clusters in the “Sonata for violin and piano” convey an effortless sheen that is often taken for granted and often missed, though not anywhere in these performances. Patricia Kopatchinskaja tosses off murderous repeated notes in the “Sonata for violin and piano”. Snappy rhythms and smoldering gestures ignite the “Duet for violin and piano.”

Markus Hinterhäuser’s three-dimensional performance is well-controlled as is his deft fingerwork on all of the pieces. His playing is expansive, subtly textured and full of hazy magic. His reading of the pieces stands out for the beautiful internal balances and melodic awareness and he fares best on “Duet for violin and piano. Mr. Hinterhäuser clearly and intelligently scales the composer’s constantly shifting dynamics, while bringing a degree of crispness and definition to the rapid, chattering passagework that surpasses some of the best-known interpretations of Galina Ustvolskaya’s difficult work. It is radically different from many of these interpretations and features headlong, Ustvolskayan flourishes that only become evident after the beauty of the music has vanished into thin air.

Label: ECM New Series | Release date: November 2014

Website: ecmrecords.com/ | Buy music on: amazon

Raul da Gama is a poet and essayist. He has published three collections of poetry, He studied at Trinity College of Music, London specialising in theory and piano, and he has a Masters in The Classics. He is an accomplished critic whose profound analysis is reinforced by his deep technical and historical understanding of music and literature.

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