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| Kogan - Beethoven: Violin Concerto; Handel, Paganini, Et Al | |||||
| Beethoven / Kogan | |||||
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Release Date: 05/06/2003 Label: Emi Classics (Dvd) Catalog #: 92835 Encoding: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada) Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven, George Frideric Handel, Niccolò Paganini, Johann Sebastian Bach, Manuel de Falla, Johannes Brahms, Claude Debussy, Dmitri Shostakovich, Jean Marie Leclair Performer: Leonid Kogan, Andrei Mytnik, Naum Walter, Elizaveta Gilels Conductor: Louis de Froment Orchestra/Ensemble: ORTF National Orchestra
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| Notes & Reviews | Back to Top | ||||
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HANDEL VIOLIN SONATA IN E MAJOR, DEBUSSY BEAU SOIR and SHOSTAKOVICH PRELUDES FILMED IN LONDON, 26 MARCH 1962; BEETHOVEN VIOLIN CONCERTO and BACH SARABANDE FILMED AT THE ORTF, PARIS, 12 MARCH 1966; BRAHMS HUNGARIAN DANCE, PAGANINI CANTABILE and FALLA SUITE POPULAIRE ESPAGNOLE FILMED IN PARIS, 1968. Includes bonus track: LEONID KOGAN AND ELIZAVETA GILELS-KOGAN playing LECLAIR SONATA FOR 2 VIOLINS IN C MAJOR, FILMED IN PARIS, 21 NOVEMBER 1963. EMI’s entry for Leonid Kogan in its Classic Archive™ series draws from BBC (Handel, Debussy, and Shostakovich) and INA films of performances between 1962 and 1968. Henry Roth considered Kogan’s style leaner and more overtly virtuosic (Heifetz was an inspiration) than Oistrakh’s, but also more modern in its relative anonymity. Yet his breathtaking virtuosity, exceptional even in the bygone era of giants, defines a style almost as readily identifiable as his compatriot’s. If he played second fiddle for many years, consider who played first. Both violinists fathered violinist sons, but Oistrakh’s relationship with Igor received far more attention than did Kogan’s with Pavel. Oistrakh, beloved by his colleagues, engaged in chamber music, played the viola, and conducted. Kogan, supposedly feared by his, played the violin. But how he played it! For those who haven’t had the opportunity to observe him, either live or on video, EMI’s collection should come as an exceptionally welcome opportunity. Few violinists (except for Heifetz) conveyed such a sense of easy command simply by the way they held the instrument (and Kogan adopted what Carroll Glenn used to call the “Heifetz twist”). He adapted every motion so efficiently to its goal as to create a sense of poetry. Seeing is believing; hearing Kogan is only part of the show. Kogan chose Brahms’s Violin Concerto for some of the most critical performances in his career, but in Beethoven’s he united purity and power in readings of searching profundity. In his performance with Froment from March 12, 1966, (Paris) he may not have enjoyed the most imposing orchestral support; but the close miking reveals not only the integrity of his musical conception but the warmth as well as the strength of his tone. Unfortunately, the visual and aural images aren’t perfectly synchronized (in the Concerto, in his mesmerizing reading of Bach’s Sarabande, which served as the encore, and, to a lesser extent, in Leclair’s Sonata), so watching can grow irksome. Tully Potter remarked in his notes to EMI’s Oistrakh DVD that Oistrakh was a man for the big occasion—the concerto and the sonata. Whatever the truth of that observation, Kogan’s perspicuous way with miniatures (Brahms, Paganini, and Falla from Paris, 1968, and Debussy and Shostakovich from London on March 20, 1962) shows him to be a gourmet confectioner equal to Milstein, Francescatti, and—dare I say it?—Heifetz himself. In a melodramatic stroke, the London production team placed him on a podium in the shadows for Beau soir, a touch that might have rendered a less haunting and controlled performance almost laughable. Whether or not Handel actually wrote the Sonata in E, Kogan scrubbed away individual mannerisms (the piece was a Heifetz favorite, but one that some think the Grandmaster overpersonalized), the better to reveal the work’s own considerable appeal. Kogan and his wife, Elizaveta Gilels-Kogan, apparently enjoyed Leclair’s Sonatas for Two Violins, and their performance of the Sonata, op. 3/3 (from Paris, November 21, 1963), while not reaching the Oistrakhs’ perfect unanimity, provides a bracing conclusion to the program. Kogan’s long fingers look and move much like those of his most prominent pupil, Viktoria Mullova; and the flashes of steel in her playing recall his dashing machismo. But the pupil received only part of her teacher’s inheritance. The suppleness and grace that only superficially seem so much at odds with that flint and steel completes the bequest, which no one has yet claimed in its entirety. Anybody who admires violin playing as an art in itself should find EMI’s Kogan compilation irresistible, but the performances hold more than voyeuristic interest. Strongly recommended, accordingly, to all kinds of listeners and viewers. Robert Maxham , Fanfare Magazine |
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| Works on This Recording | Back to Top | ||||
| 1. |
Concerto for Violin in D major, Op. 61 by Ludwig van Beethoven | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin)
Conductor: Louis de Froment Orchestra/Ensemble: ORTF National Orchestra Period: Classical Written: 1806; Vienna, Austria |
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| 2. |
Sonata for Violin and Basso Continuo in E major, HWV 373/Op. 1 no 15 by George Frideric Handel | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin),
Andrei Mytnik (Piano)
Period: Baroque Written: London, England |
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| 3. |
Cantabile for Violin and Guitar in D major, Op. 17/MS 109 by Niccolò Paganini | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin),
Naum Walter (Piano)
Period: Romantic |
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| 4. |
Partita for Violin solo no 2 in D minor, BWV 1004: 3rd movement, Sarabande by Johann Sebastian Bach | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin)
Period: Baroque Written: 1720; Cöthen, Germany |
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| 5. |
Canciones populares españolas (7) by Manuel de Falla | ||||
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Performer:
Naum Walter (Piano),
Leonid Kogan (Violin)
Period: 20th Century Written: 1914-1915; Spain |
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| 6. |
Hungarian Dances (21) for Piano 4 hands, WoO 1: no 17 in F sharp minor by Johannes Brahms | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin),
Naum Walter (Piano)
Period: Romantic Written: 1868-1880; Austria |
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| 7. |
Beau soir by Claude Debussy | ||||
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Performer:
Andrei Mytnik (Piano),
Leonid Kogan (Violin)
Period: 20th Century Written: circa 1880; France |
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| 8. |
Preludes (24) for Piano, Op. 34: no 10 in C sharp minor, Moderato non troppo by Dmitri Shostakovich | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin),
Andrei Mytnik (Piano)
Period: 20th Century Written: 1932-1933; USSR |
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| 9. |
Preludes (24) for Piano, Op. 34: no 15 in D flat major, Allegretto by Dmitri Shostakovich | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Piano),
Andrei Mytnik (Piano)
Period: 20th Century Written: 1932-1933; USSR |
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| 10. |
Preludes (24) for Piano, Op. 34: no 16 in B flat minor, Andantino by Dmitri Shostakovich | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin),
Andrei Mytnik (Piano)
Period: 20th Century Written: 1932-1933; USSR |
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| 11. |
Preludes (24) for Piano, Op. 34: no 24 in D minor, Allegretto by Dmitri Shostakovich | ||||
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Performer:
Andrei Mytnik (Piano),
Leonid Kogan (Violin)
Period: 20th Century Written: 1932-1933; USSR |
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| 12. |
Sonatas (6) for 2 Violins, Op. 3: no 3 in C major by Jean Marie Leclair | ||||
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Performer:
Leonid Kogan (Violin),
Elizaveta Gilels (Violin)
Period: Baroque Written: by 1730; France |
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