蕭士塔的別墅 蕭士塔高維契: 中提琴奏鳴曲, 即興曲 / 佩爾特: 兄弟
馬克希姆.狄澤爾 中提琴
瑪麗安.馬夏爾 鋼琴
"In the quiet retreat of his dacha in Zhukovka, far from the bustle of the city, Dmitri Shostakovich composed his final work in 1975: the Sonata for Viola and Piano, Op. 147. This place was his refuge, where his thoughts took shape and every note became a confession. Yet this work is not just a musical testament; it is also a gift, a gesture of deep friendship. He dedicated it to violist Fyodor Druzhinin, his close friend and loyal interpreter, a member of the Beethoven Quartet, who premiered his quartets from the tenth onward. Their bond was more than a collaboration—it was an absolute trust, a soul-to-soul dialogue where music became a language of its own.
This album seeks to evoke that dacha, both intimate and timeless—a place where Shostakovich entrusted his final notes to his friend, where music cemented an unbreakable fraternity. Alongside the Sonata, we have gathered works that, in their own way, weave the thread of this story. The recently rediscovered Impromptu reveals another facet of the composer, while Arvo Part's Fratres resonates as an eternal meditation. Jean-Paul Dessy's DSCH pays a vibrant tribute to the master's indelible mark, and Anne Martin's Cette colline honors the memory and legacy of Fyodor Druzhini
1 Part: Fratres 11:19
2 CMartin, A: Cette colline, Hommage a Fiodor Droujinine 07:47
Dessy:
3 DSCH, In Memoriam Dmitri SCHostakovitch I. Iniziabile e fluente 05:00
4 DSCH, In Memoriam Dmitri SCHostakovitch II. Teneramente 05:41
5 DSCH, In Memoriam Dmitri SCHostakovitch III. Spirale 06:30
Shostakovich:
6 Viola Sonata, Op. 147 I. Moderato 09:10
7 Viola Sonata, Op. 147 II. Allegretto 07:08
8 Viola Sonata, Op. 147 III. Adagio 13:39
9 Shostakovich: Impromptu for Viola & Piano, Op. 33 01:42 |
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